UC supported two bond measures for the November 2026 ballot: a research bond and a housing bond. As blog readers will know, only the latter made it. But there will be many other propositions on which to vote, a kind of ballot clutter.
There will be, for example, the billionaire tax and some measures designed to be poisoned pills for the billionaire tax. There will be much pro and against advertising on TV and social media. Groups that you might expect to be united for or against various propositions will be split this time in their support or opposition.
With all the confusion, some voters may be tempted to reject everything. But here is what will be offered:
Proposition 1: This $11.25 billion bond measure would fund veterans homeownership and affordable housing programs. The majority of that money, $10 billion, would finance programs to fund affordable rental housing and homeownership programs, and $1.25 billion would finance veterans housing programs. SUPPORTED BY UC.
Proposition 2: This measure would double the amount the state is allowed to tuck away each fiscal year into its mandated “rainy day fund,” from 10% to 20%. Gov. Gavin Newsom has endorsed the measure as “common sense” — a sentiment echoed by Democratic lawmakers, and panned by several Republican members.
Proposition 3: This measure would make permanent voter-approved income tax rates for high earners set to expire in 2031. Backed by several California teachers unions, it would make permanent the tax revenues going toward K-12 schools and community colleges.
Proposition 4: Candidates running for public office would be able to use select public funds when campaigning, if this Democrat-led measure passes. It would not allow candidates to use funds earmarked for education, transportation or public safety, and would set expenditure and use limits.
Proposition 5: This measure would effectively split the current recall process into two. Instead of requiring voters to choose a replacement for the official they are voting to recall, the measure would create a separate election of the official’s replacement.
Proposition 37: This measure would use up to $25 billion in bonds to offer eligible California buyers fixed-rate mortgages for up to 17% of the purchase price of a qualified new home, if they make less than 200% of the area median income.
Proposition 38: This measure would authorize $8.4 billion in state general obligation bonds for immunology and immunotherapy research. (Some of the money would go to UC.)
Proposition 39: The Republican-backed measure would require voters to present government-issued identification at the polls, or to include the last four digits of a government-issued identification number when voting by mail.
Proposition 40: The Billionaire Tax Act would impose a one-time, 5% wealth tax on anyone worth more than $1 billion. It is backed by a powerful union of healthcare workers, but has splintered other unions as well as the Democratic Party. Republicans, meanwhile, are united in their opposition.
Proposition 41: This is one of two measures meant to counteract the billionaire tax. Backed by billionaires, it would ban new state taxes that are excluded from the state’s spending limit.
Proposition 42: This is another measure seeking to neutralize the billionaire tax would ban new taxes on personal property and other financial assets, and prevent new taxes from taking effect retroactively — a key element of the billionaire tax proposal. The measure is being bankrolled by several billionaires who’d be directly impacted by the billionaire tax.
Proposition 43: In a deal struck between the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association and legislators June 25, the measure would increase the voter threshold for citizen-led initiatives for new special taxes, from a simple majority to two-thirds. That high bar would make it virtually impossible for local governments to pass new taxes that would go toward a specific purpose.
Proposition 44: The measure, backed by the SEIU-UHW — the healthcare worker union behind the billionaire tax — would require health clinics to spend 90% of their revenue on patient services.
Proposition 45: The measure would amend the state’s broad California Environmental Quality Act to expedite environmental review of most housing, transportation, health and energy construction projects, and set new limits on courts’ ability to rule on project approvals.
Descriptions from the San Francisco Chronicle: https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/california-ballot-measures-22319723.php.