2012 California Proposition 31

The 2012 California Proposition 31 was officially titled "State Budget. State and Local Government. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute." It was a California ballot measure in the November 2012 California elections. The initiative would have established a two-year state budget, allowed the governor to make budget cuts in fiscal emergencies, prevented the state state legislature from spending more than $25 million without creating spending cuts or other budget offsets, and allowed local governments the ability to transfer certain amounts of property taxes among themselves instead of the state.[2][3] Although the law was supported by the California Republican Party, multiple conservative groups came out against proposition 31, including members of the Tea Party movement who viewed the law as a way to undermine property rights.[4][5][6]

Proposition 31
November 6, 2012 (2012-11-06)
Two-Year State Budget Cycle Initiative
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 4,642,088 39.48%
No 7,115,166 60.52%
Valid votes 11,757,254 100.00%
Invalid or blank votes 0 0.00%
Total votes 11,757,254 100.00%
No
  60-70%
  50-60%
[1]

Analysis

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If Proposition 31 had passed, it was estimated that the state government would have suffered a loss of $200 million, as these funds would have been transferred to local governments.[7]

Editorial endorsements

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Newspaper Position
Bay Area Reporter[8] Oppose
Fresno Bee[9] Support
Los Angeles Daily News[10] Support
Los Angeles Times[11] Oppose
Modesto Bee[12] Support
Orange County Register[13] Oppose
Sacramento Bee[14] Oppose
San Diego Union-Tribune[15] Support
San Francisco Bay Guardian[16] Oppose
San Francisco Chronicle[17] Support
San Jose Mercury News[18] Support
Ventura County Star[19] Oppose

References

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