• Walters: Newsom jabs at DOGE but will he use AI to deliver efficiency?

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Fri May 23 00:18:38 2025
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.politics.republicans, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.misc

    https://www.mercurynews.com/2025/05/06/walters-newsom-jabs-at-doge-but- will-he-use-ai-to-deliver-efficiency/

    California governor’s new proposal to transform state government ignores underwhelming past promises.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom staged a news conference in Los Angeles last week to
    tout the adoption of artificial intelligence to improve the efficiency of
    state government.

    That’s pretty dull stuff, so Newsom goosed its news value by contrasting California’s AI program with President Donald Trump’s slashes of federal services via his Department of Government Efficiency, headed by Newsom’s erstwhile pal, industrialist and inventor Elon Musk.

    “I could have easily come in here with sunglasses and chainsaws — you know where I’m going — and gotten your attention,” Newsom told reporters.
    “We’re DOGE but better.”

    He took another potshot at Trump and Musk, saying, “They haven’t come
    close to the savings they’ve asserted. I think it’s been very damaging.”

    Newsom’s remarks on Trump, Musk and DOGE represent his latest political repositioning, from a harsh critic after Trump recaptured the White House,
    to making nice with Trump as the state sought $40 billion in wildfire
    recovery grants, to entertaining prominent pro-Trump figures on his new podcast, and now to reclaiming the role of resistor-in-chief after taking
    heat from other Democrats for cozying up to Trump.

    Newsom contrasting DOGE with California’s AI is not just a metaphoric
    stretch. Whether the latter will lead to an existential improvement in
    state government efficiency is open to question.

    “GenAI is here,” Newsom said about generative AI, “and it’s growing in importance every day. We know that state government can be more efficient,
    and as the birthplace of tech it is only natural that California leads in
    this space. In the Golden State, we know that efficiency means more than cutting services to save a buck, but instead building and refining our
    state government to better serve all Californians.”

    The state’s initial employment of the new technology will help improve
    highway congestion, traffic safety and services in the Department of Tax
    and Fee Administration, he said.

    Will it?

    The state’s sorry record of implementing information technology prior to
    the emergence of AI as a tool warrants skepticism.

    Although Newsom wrote “Citizenville,” a book touting technology as a transformative factor in government, state tech projects have not fared
    well during his governorship, essentially continuing a record of failures
    and setbacks than began many years ago.

    There’s another aspect of Newsom’s new embrace of AI that’s also troubling because of the state’s spotty record on tech — a change in the way the
    state implements AI projects that could make it more difficult for
    legislators and the public to know whether they are working as promised.

    Coincidentally or not, as Newsom was touting AI in Los Angeles, the Legislature’s budget analyst was issuing a report that raises red flags.

    The topic is wonkish to the max, but basically the state is changing the
    way it approves certain types of technology projects.

    It has been using a contracting and implementation process aimed at
    providing a whole picture of technology projects as funds are sought from
    the Legislature, but Newsom’s new process would do the projects in phases,
    and “Some information currently available … such as a project’s total
    baseline cost, schedule, and scope might not be as readily available (in
    the new system) while other information might be made confidential sooner during project planning,” the Legislative Analyst’s Office is telling the Legislature.

    Implicitly the LAO report is warning the Legislature that a project’s shortcomings might not be known until it is too late to stop its adoption. “Therefore, to help the Legislature evaluate and understand the new
    process over a more reasonable time frame, we recommend the Legislature
    require reporting on completed project planning activities, and limit the
    new process to a small subset of projects (with additional reporting) over
    the next fiscal year.”

    Complex though it may be, the change in implementation could result in
    even worse tech disasters than keeping the current process.

    Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.


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