California Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state officials are moving to enable all inmates on the nation’s largest death row to transfer to other prisons, utilizing a little-observed provision in a voter-approved proposition. Newsom, a Democrat, placed a moratorium on executions in 2019, claiming the death penalty was “a failure.” No executions have been carried out in California since 2006, despite voters in 2016 upholding capital punishment. The proposition also mandated that inmates sentenced to death get prison jobs, with most of the money being conveyed to victims as restitution. That’s not able to happen when the condemned are on death rows at San Quentin State Prison and the California Central Women’s Facility, triggering a two-year pilot program implemented by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation that ended recently with 124 condemned being moved to different facilities or to different parts of the women’s prison, a spokeswoman for the department told …