Although most of the exciting propositions this calendar
year will be on the ballot in November, two will be on the June primary
ballot. In fact, they are already on
that ballot and absentee ballots have been mailed. One is a tobacco tax earmarked for cancer
research. While that sounds like a sure
thing to pass since smokers are a decreasing minority and no one favors cancer,
tobacco companies are putting major bucks in a campaign against the proposition
(Prop 29). They don't think it's a sure thing to pass. Dueling TV ads can be seen
below. Tobacco companies have had some
successes in California in the legislature and regarding ballot propositions in
the past.
In any event, it the tobacco tax fails in June, that failure
will be taken as a sign of anti-tax sentiment.
The June primary is the presidential primary. Democrats have no real choice or controversy
about their presidential candidate.
Romney has essentially won the GOP nomination but conservatives who
preferred other candidates might show up to cast protest votes. The voter profile in June could be different
from the voter profile in November.
Brown has not endorsed Prop 29 – the tobacco tax – perhaps because
if it fails he doesn’t want to be identified with it. He did remove the doc who appears in the ad below from a state panel. See:
http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2012/05/on-hold-brown-to-eliminate-doctor-from-state-health-board.html
http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2012/05/on-hold-brown-to-eliminate-doctor-from-state-health-board.html
Here are the TV ads
against and for Prop 20:
No on Prop 29
Yes on Prop 29
And then there is:
Here's my comment. Did you read this initiative? Notice how UCLA has been left out? Maybe you should look up the California Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research -- the Chancellors of each participating institution get a seat on the 9-member panel that controls the money.
ReplyDeleteUCLA isn't in this Institute. This is just a Bay-area revenue grab (Hint: the southernmost institution in the Institute above is UC Santa Cruz.)
Good idea to tax tobacco. Too bad the people writing this initiative had to be greedy a-holes just like the ones running tobacco companies.
Don't vote for this nonsense. Joke of the month: How many Bay-area PhDs and lawyers does it take to change a lightbulb or write a fair-minded ballet proposition? (Answer: For the latter, apparently more than they had this time.)