My View

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What I Stand For

Economy

  • To improve California’s economy, we will say no to foreign investments coming from China, Quatar, and other countries that could destabilize our local and state economy. I will focus on creating manufacturing hubs funded by state to train our future workforce that will increase the number of jobs available for Californians. One of the biggest steps that I will undertake will be completely rebuilding California’s aging infrastructure, making it more futuristic and efficient. 

Housing affordability

  • As a governor, I will pass a bill to limit corporations investing in apartment buildings and single or multi- family housing projects. By limiting their ability, what that means is I will put a cap on how much property institutional investors could acquire. This will stabilize renter’s market and make rent and housing more affordable for regular people. I will limit the number of purchases that institutional investors could make in the future. In a city like Los Angeles, our research indicates that over 43% of all rental units are owned by corporate entities. If you include trusts and large-scale management vehicles, some estimates suggest that up to 67% of California rentals are under some form of speculative or institutional investment structure, which creates an unfair market monopoly.
Homelessness
  • As a governor, I will once and for all solve homelessness in California. We will target homelessness head on. First, we will segment homeless populations into three classes. The first class is transient homelessness. The second class is permanent homelessness. The third class is homelessness by mental illness/drug use. I will designate Homeless Rehabilitation Centers (HRCs) outside of major cities in California such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Diego. Transient homeless population will be offered stable jobs through local and state-funded programs, which will also offer or guarantee affordable housing.  All the unused and poorly managed state properties will be repurposed for housing of transient homeless population immediately. In return, transient homeless population will need to provide documents to verify their employment and will need to update their information by quarterly. Those who are considered permanently homeless and have been living on the street for a prolonged period of time will immediately be transported to the HRCs. The homeless by mental illness/ drug addiction population will also be transported into HRCs for mental reevaluation. Some of this population will immediately receive medical, mental, and psychiatric help and will be placed in facilities with maximum safety and security, away from access to illegal substances. Homelessness is not going to be a choice in California and will be criminalized. For all homeless people in California, work will become mandatory. Homelessness will be criminalized.

Public Safety

  • Will veto all current and existing bills that limits law enforcement capacity to arrest and charge criminals for shoplifting, damaging private and state property and infrastructure. We will go hard on crime by reevaluating different levels of punishment for committed criminal offenses. Under my policies, we will prosecute state corruption and fraud to the highest capacity of punishment. California prisons will no longer be a vacation hub for criminals. Our state prisons will be reinvented to make inmates contribute to society and work full time while they serve their time. Trade school education will be offered to all inmates. 

Immigration

  • As the Governor and an immigrant, I view immigration as a pressing topic for California. We have a large number of immigrants that benefit and contribute to our local and state economies. While federal policy views immigration as a problem in its entirety, I believe immigration should be rediscovered. My belief lies with population that benefits our state and our economy, generalizing all illegals as a bad part of our community might not be the correct approach. Since many families of unregistered immigrants have deeply rooted ties to California, it would be inhumane to call them criminals since their contribution is greater than their illegal status. My team and I strongly believe that criminally charged noncitizens or illegal aliens should be prosecuted and transported back to their country of origin. But those undocumented residents of California who benefit our state and directly contributing to national development, be given a second chance and be able to apply for permanent residence if it’s deemed eligible. 

Healthcare

  • As a state, we need to improve our healthcare. It’s obvious that our healthcare system is broken. Insurance premiums are rising while our healthcare system offers less efficiency. We will need to look at the healthcare industry under a microscope and analyze how state funds are being allocated for services by healthcare providers. We will do or employ statewide audit to all healthcare providers to find the inefficiencies and inconsistencies with billing. We will reevaluate how state funding and contribution to privately owned or privately ran healthcare providers meets expectation and requirements of services provided. 
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