As you no doubt remember, the far-left in California was attempting to reinstitute racial discrimination with Proposition 16. Billionaire oligarchs had contributed about 20 million to Proposition 16, whereas opponents raised barely 2 million (95% from Asians) from small contributors.
With 73% of votes reported, the election has been called for the opponents. They are leading with 56% of the vote, outrunning Trump's vote by 23 votes. This is harbinger of what you can expect what will happen if the electorate gets polarized on the lines of identity politics - even California could come in play.
Proposition 16 passed 60-14 in the California Assembly and 30-10 in the Senate. What kind of a political class is this, where you can get a supermajority for something that is overwhelmingly rejected by a majority non-white, very left-wing electorate? Who are they representing? The billionaire oligarchs who were trying to buy this election?
Overall, the props turned out well in CA. Rejected most of the bad, accepted most of the good. I think it shows people are doing their research locally, but they are simply overwhelmed by presidential politics and just vote based on MSM.
Not quite. A proposal to reclassify shoplifting under $950 was rejected (it was opposed by Mark Zuckerberg and Netflix CEO's wife). Another proposition supported by Lyft and Uber passed.
This was the only light spot in California.
People didn't like the DNA collection for misdemeanors on prop 20. Prop 15 got rightfully recognized as a cash grab and rejected. Prop 21 got shot down, which is actually very surprising and hopefully recognition that rent control is shit. Prop 22 was decided through driver opinion. Most people know a driver and asked their opinion. My friend drives for DoorDash and Uber and he wanted Yes and told everyone he knew.
I honestly doubt that the billionaire oligarchs who were funding the opposition to Proposition 20 care about people's privacy. It was Mark Zuckerberg and the wife of the Netflix CEO.
Uber apparently threatened to stop operations if they were required to treat their employees like, well, employees. The amount of money that people make from working for these companies is a pittance.
Hey dipshit, everyone is telling you that most actual drivers supported the prop, yet you keep insisting that they're actually oppressed. Who does that remind you of?