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California’s Newsom Signs a Reparations Study Law But Vetoes Other Racial Justice Proposals

October 16, 2025

California Governor Gavin Newsom has taken mixed action on bills aimed at addressing racial discrimination against Black Americans, signing legislation that allocates $6 million for CSU to study how to identify descendants of enslaved people and creating a Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery, while vetoing several other related proposals. Among the vetoed bills were measures that would have granted university admissions preference to descendants of enslaved people, investigated claims of racially unjust property seizures, and allocated 10% of first-time homebuyer funds for descendants of enslaved people. The vetoed bills were part of a broader legislative effort by the California Legislative Black Caucus to implement recommendations from a state reparations task force report documenting California's history of discrimination against Black Americans.

Who is affected

  • Descendants of enslaved people in California
  • Black Californians with claims of unjust property seizure
  • Black first-time homebuyers who would have benefited from the loan program
  • Black students seeking college admission
  • California State University system
  • The Coalition for a Just and Equitable California and other reparations advocacy groups

What action is being taken

  • $6 million is being authorized for CSU to study confirmation of descendant status
  • The Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery is being created to verify lineage and determine eligibility for possible reparations
  • The California Legislative Black Caucus is introducing legislation inspired by the reparations task force report
  • Advocacy groups are continuing to push for direct compensation for descendants of enslaved people
  • Governor Newsom is signing some bills while vetoing others related to addressing historical discrimination

Why it matters

  • The legislation represents attempts to address California's legacy of racist policies despite entering the union as a free state
  • The bills follow recommendations from a first-in-the-nation state task force on reparations for African Americans
  • These efforts come amid broader national discussions about reparations and addressing historical injustices
  • The vetoes are occurring while, according to Assemblymember Bryan, "the Trump Administration threatens institutions of higher learning and attacks diversity and inclusivity"
  • According to advocates like Chris Lodgson, some of the measures may delay or divert "true reparations"

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint