Sunday, November 04, 2012
2012 California propositions voter guide
This is the liberal version. For the conservative version, just vote the opposite way.
My two cents: The proposition system in California is asinine. Ostensibly, it's meant to be more democratic-- giving voters a direct say in laws. But that's what the legislature is for, no matter how imperfect it is. Under the proposition system, a special interest group (or a wealthy benefactor) collects the requisite signatures to get the measure on the ballot, and floods the airwaves with ads containing half-truths. Well-meaning voters often end up voting against their own interests. Let's get a proposition on the ballot banning propositions. (End of rant.)
30: Taxes. Raises taxes for those earning over $250k and 1/4 cent sales tax increase. YES
31: State Budget. Too many issues to list. Bad idea overall. NO
32: Political Contributions by Unions. Prohibits unions from automatically deducting paychecks for political purposes. Guess who likes this idea? NO
33: Auto Insurance Rates. Sponsored by car insurance companies. NO
34: End Death Penalty. YES
35: Human Trafficking. Complicated. Helps victims, but also gives ammunition to overzealous DAs. NO ENDORSEMENT
36: 3-Strikes Law. Life sentence for third strike only if third strike is serious and violent. YES
37: Genetically Engineered Foods. Requires labeling of genetically modified foods. YES
38: Tax to Fund Education. Raises taxes on the poor. NO
39: Multistate Business Tax: Requires businesses to pay California income tax. YES
40: Redistricting. Republicans don't like the districts already drawn, so they brought forth this proposition. NO
Labels:
American Politics
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