would be tochange state lawto make it easier to place people living on the street intoconservatorships— an arrangement in which a person’s legal and financial affairs are entrusted to someone else.

Compelling people to receive treatment and housing, he said, should be accompanied with stricter enforcement of anti-camping laws. “They don’t have to live on the street,” he said of unhoused Californians. “They can go and live in the mountains.”

Cox said he would call a special session of the Legislature solely to tackle housing costs and homelessness. Other policy changes he’d like to see include stripping down astate environmental quality lawthat is often used to block new development, and reducing delays and fees imposed on developers by local governments. Butzoning, he said, should remain the purview of local government.

‘A lot of advantages to developing natural gas and oil’

For decades,California has stood out for its aggressive policies on climate change. That’s includedcapping greenhouse gasemissions statewide,loading up our electricity portfolio with renewablesandphasing out the use of gas-powered cars.

Cox has a different idea: Rather than focus on its own carbon footprint, California should do what it can to reduce emissions in industrial powerhouses China and India. And the best way to do that, he said, would be to export liquified natural gas across the Pacific, providing those countries with a cleaner alternative to coal.

“We ought to be talking about what we can do to fix global pollution, not just make symbolic gestures,” he said.

‘I’ll have to go around them and get other people elected’

It’s not lost on Cox that no matter what happens, California’s Legislature will remain in firm Democratic hands.

What’s a conservative Republican governor to do? Cox said he would first try to persuadelegislators to back his policy agenda by appealing to their “common sense.” But if that fails he has a Plan B: hit the campaign trail next year and while running for re-election, urge voters to boot the hold-outs out of office in 2022.

‘Oh yeah, you’re the guy with the bear!’

It’s fair to say that Cox is sick of taking questions about the Tag the Kodiak. Yes, it was a stunt to get people to pay attention. And no, Cox said, it’s not “beneath me to parade around with a bear.”

He recalled talking to a hotel valet in Santa Barbara who evidently had no idea who he was — until Cox mentioned the bear.

“So if that’s needed to reach the voters who should have a say, but who don’t have the time or the inclination to pay attention to politics, I’m all for it,” he said. But for all the attention that Tag has received, he added, “the bear didn’t talk. I talked.”

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