The communist Democrats were not only corrupt to the core, but they were also hypocrites and opportunists. Evil liberals do not impose any policy because they care for the people; they push laws according to their interests, according to the time they need it to pull up their ratings and assert their agendas.
Since Gavin Newsom began his term as governor of the Golden State in 2019, he has been boasting that his core advocacy is addressing homelessness. Four years later, the same problems remain unaddressed and even worsened.
Video by Nicholas Pagnotta.
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Last year, 180,000 people were recorded homeless, and 123,000 Californians were unsheltered on any given night in Newsom’s California.
Newsom acts now as if his government is concerned with the growing number of tents, drug addicts, and homeless in his city but allows it to happen under his watch.
Just in Los Angeles’s Skid Row, more than 4,400 men, women, and children were authorized to sleep on the streets as drugs and disease continued to spread in the area.
In 2019, Newsom allocated $24 billion to curb the state’s problem of homelessness. The question wasn’t the funding, but where do these money go?
Now, Newsom vowed to be tougher in addressing these encampments.
He bragged, “There are simply no more excuses.”
For years, his office directed billions of money to address the problem of providing shelter to the people, yet he wasn’t able to solve it.
The democrat douchebag claims this time: ‘no more fooling around,’ knowing that this is the same issue that drags his Party of Communists to the ground.
For California Senate Republicans, this much ado from the California governor is nothing but a ‘PR stunt.”
The California GOP senators railed Newsom in a press statement.
“It’s about damn time! Letting people live and die on the streets or in our parks is unsafe and unsanitary,” said Senate Minority Leader Brian W. Jones, R-San Diego.
“I introduced a proposal earlier this year that would have provided even greater and more immediate solutions. While I am cautiously optimistic that the governor has finally taken note of the urgency of this problem, albeit many years later than needed, Californians deserve government for the people, not the PR hits.”
In recent years, GOP state lawmakers have been introducing several bills to solve the rampant and persisting homeless crisis in California, only to be turned down and criticized by Newsom and the Democrats.
“Homelessness is one of the biggest challenges we face today, and it is imperative we take swift, decisive, and effective action to address it,” said Sen. Roger Niello, R-Fair Oaks.
“This executive order is a good step, but it will require significant follow-through to ensure its effectiveness.”



