The spending plan includes an enrollment freeze to Medi-Cal for adult illegal immigrants.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday signed the state budget that is projected to close a $12 billion deficit through spending reductions on some of the stateโs ongoing programs.
The signing came shortly after lawmakers approved the $321 billion spending plan earlier in the day. The plan includes $5 billion in cuts and $7.1 billion in withdrawals from the stateโs rainy-day reserve fund.
โItโs balanced, it maintains substantial reserves, and itโs focused on supporting Californiansโslashing red tape and catapulting housing and infrastructure development, preserving essential healthcare services, funds universal pre-K, and cuts taxes for veterans,โ Newsom said in a statement announcing the budget.
The governorโs office also blamed โsignificant fiscal pressuresโ on โthe Trump administrationโs reckless economic and immigration policies.โ
Citing the California Department of Finance, it stated that President Donald Trumpโs tariff policies might cost the state an estimated $16 billion in lost general fund revenue through the next fiscal year.
โThe state is delivering a responsible on-time budget in a challenging year focused on fiscal restraint and investing in the people and programs that make this state great,โ Senate President Pro Tempore Mike McGuire said in the statement.
โThis budget prioritizes record funding for our kids and public schools, protects access to health care for millions of the most vulnerable, and will create more housing at a scale not seen in years,โ McGuire added.
Spending Cuts
The budget includes targeted spending cuts to Medi-Cal, the stateโs Medicaid program, by freezing enrollment for adult illegal immigrants, starting next year. It would also implement a $30 monthly premium for adult illegal immigrants who have already enrolled, starting in July 2027, with an exemption for adults aged 60 and above from paying the premium.
In addition, the plan will eliminate funding that helps pay for dental services for low-income people in 2026, and delay implementation of legislation requiring health insurance to cover fertility services by six months to 2026.
State Sen. Caroline Menjivar, a Democrat, said on June 10 that she was removed from a budget subcommittee on health and human services for her โstraightforward opposition to the proposed health cuts to just one demographic.โ