WHERE THINGS STAND IN CALIFORNIA

As of July 2026

In 2026, two things have been happening in the California state legislature with respect to the Corporate Power Reset strategy.

  • A bill intended to enact the Coporate Power Reset strategy was introduced.
  • A Joint Resolution is currently being considered.

The Joint Resolution

Currently, a Joint Resolution called SJR 18 (“Senate Joint Resolution 18”) is being considered by the legislature, i.e. by our elected state representatives.

A Joint Resolution does not have force of law. However, it would make it easier to pass a law next (as explained below).

In order to pass, a Joint Resolution, like a bill, goes through committees before reaching the floor of a chamber, and it needs to pass both chambers. Unlike a bill however, it does not require the Governor's attention.

SJR 18 has now passed the Senate and the Committee(s) it was ascribed in the Assembly. Next it needs to be debated and voted upon on the floor of the Assembly, which will likely happen after the state representatives' summer recess i.e. in August (the legislature will reconvene on August 3rd).

Dive Deeper

Resolution SJR 18: Key Dates
  • May 14, 2026 – Introduced in the CA Senate by Senator Jerry McNerney; referred to Com. on Rules.
  • May 27, 2026 – Re-referred to Senate Committees on Elections & Constitutional Amendments and Judiciary.
  • June 2, 2026 – Amended by the author; read second time; re-referred to the Elections & Constitutional Amendments Committee.
  • June 9, 2026 – Passed the Judiciary Committee (Ayes 4, Noes 0); passed the Elections Committee, ordered to third reading (Ayes 10, Noes 2).
  • June 11, 2026 – Passed the Senate (Ayes 28, Noes 8). Transmitted to the Assembly.
  • June 15, 2026 – Referred to the Assembly Committee on Elections.
  • July 1, 2026 – Passed the Assembly Elections Committee (Ayes 6, Noes 2); ordered to third reading.

Currently pending a floor vote (third reading) in the Assembly.

Resolution SJR 18: Links to Official Documents

Bill History (CA Legislative Information): view here

The chronological record of every action taken on SJR 18 — introduction, committee referrals and votes, amendments, and floor votes — in both the Senate and the Assembly.

Bill Text (CA Legislative Information): view here

The full text of the resolution, including all prior versions (as introduced, and as amended). This is where you can read the actual whereas clauses and resolved clauses of SJR 18.

Bill Status (CA Legislative Information): view here

A snapshot summary page showing the resolution's author, coauthors, current location, and latest action, without the full action-by-action history.

Bill Analysis (CA Legislative Information): view here

Staff analyses prepared for each committee hearing on SJR 18, explaining the resolution's background, arguments for and against, and vote counts at each committee stage.

Two Ways to Pass a Law

California has two ways to pass policies, i.e. to make them into laws:

  • bills, which get passed by the state legislature, i.e. the elected state representatives.
  • ballot initiatives, which ordinary citizens can vote on directly during elections.

To find out what the process is for each option, see our How to Pass State Laws page.

It is expected that a bill for the Croporate Power Reset will be introduced during the next legislative cycle, probably in January 2027.

Our goal is to get such a bill to pass. Indeed, unlike the Joint Resoltuion being curently considered, it would have force of law.

What It Takes to Pass a Law

Getting an important policy like the Corporate Power Reset to become law typically requires several attempts, that is several bills introduced in successive legislative cycles.

A first bill is introduced in one of the two state chambers, either the Assembly or the Senate, and starts following the process necessary to pass (for more detail see To Pass a Bill). To be successful, it needs to complete the entire process before the end of the legislative cycle during which it was introduced (cycle which lasts 2 years in California).

Generally, it first fails along the way: the bill “dies”. However, the policy this bill incarnates only dies in the same sense as character does in a video game character: it can be resurrected, only it goes back to square one. During a following legislative session, a new bill (with a new name) can be introduced to again attempt to pass the policy, starting its journey back at square one.

Like a respawned game character, the policy typically gets further the next time around. That is because the process gives it the opportunity to gain support: more and more legislators get to debate it and often amend how the bill is written, making it less objectionable in the process.

 Animated pixel-art diagram of a bill's legislative journey as an arcade game. 
        A character labeled Bill climbs 3 levels of stacked platforms representing steps required to pass the bill. 
        The 3 levels are Chamber 1, Chamber 2, and Governor. The level Chamber 1 has steps labelled Introduced, Taken up by committee(s), 
        Sent on by committee(s), Passed on the floor, the level Chamber 2 has steps labelled Taken up by committee(s), 
        Sent on by committee(s), Passed on the floor, and the level Governor has one step labelled Avoid Governor's veto. 
        As Bill climbs, it accumulates support (shown as hearts, like extra lives). On some platforms Bill dies, 
        and it then respawns on the bottom step, illustrating how a bill that fails can be reintroduced in a next legislative cycle, 
        but starts the process all over again. Bottom text reads [Insert Support to Continue Legislating], 
        echoing an arcade Insert Coin to Continue prompt.

Where We Stand With the Bill

And this game has already begun: a first bill incarnating the Corporate Power Reset was introduced in the California State Assembly earlier this year, in February 2026. It is called AB 1984, and it has now “died”. In this first round:

  • its text was amended, which should help its successor bill gain support more easily next time.
  • it gained support among representatives. The simplest way to measure support among legislators is to look at the number of co-authors a bill has: a co-author is a representative who formally backs a bill. AB 1984 went from 1 to 12 co-authors.
 Animated pixel-art diagram of the legislative journey for bill AB 1984 represented as an arcade game. 
        A character labeled AB 1984 climbs 3 levels of stacked platforms representing the steps required to pass this bill. 
        The 3 levels are Assembly, Senate, and Governor. 
        The level Assembly has steps labelled introduced, heard by 1st committee, sent on by committee(s), 
        passed on the floor, the level Senate has steps labelled taken up by committee(s), sent on by committee(s), 
        passed on the floor, and the level Governor has one step labelled avoid Governor's veto.
        The animation shows AB 1984 climbing up one step onto the heard by 1st committee platform, and dying there. 
        However a frame appears indicating increased support, from 1 co-author at the start to 12 at the end.

The Joint Resolution SJR 18 was introduced notably so that the process of gathering support for the policy can continue and gain momentum, to help pass its next bill incarnation.

Dive Deeper

Bill AB 1984: Key Dates

AB-1984 – Key Dates

  • Feb 13 – Introduced in the CA Assembly by Assemblymember Chris Rogers (District 2).
  • Mar 2 – Referred to Banking & Finance and Judiciary Committees.
  • Apr 6 – Heard by Banking & Finance for testimony only (no vote taken).
  • Apr 16 – Bill amended to address 501(c)(4) nonprofit concerns.
  • Apr 20 – Re-referred to Banking & Finance; no hearing scheduled.
  • May 15 – Deadline to reach the Assembly floor: not met.

Bill killed – session ends before the bill passes.

Bill AB 1984: Links to Official Documents

Bill History (CA Legislative Information): view here

The chronological record of every action taken on AB 1984 — introduction, committee referrals and votes, amendments, and floor deadlines — since it was introduced in the Assembly.

Bill Text (CA Legislative Information): view here

The full text of the bill, including all prior versions (as introduced, and as amended April 16 to address 501(c)(4) nonprofit concerns).

Bill Status (CA Legislative Information): view here

A snapshot summary page showing the bill's author, coauthors, current location, and latest action, without the full action-by-action history.

Bill Analysis (CA Legislative Information): view here

Staff analyses prepared for the Banking & Finance and Judiciary Committee hearings on AB 1984, explaining the bill's background, arguments for and against, and any vote counts.