2025 California Proposition 50

Amendment to California's Constitution From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

California Proposition 50, officially known as the Election Rigging Response Act,[4] is an amendment to the constitution of the U.S. state of California, which was passed by voters in a special election ballot on November 4, 2025. At the urging of California governor Gavin Newsom, the proposition was put on the ballot by the Democratic-controlled California State Legislature. Approved by 64.4% of voters, the proposition's purpose was to redraw the state's congressional districts, replacing the ones drawn by the bipartisan California Citizens Redistricting Commission during the earlier 2020 redistricting cycle. The new districts will be used for the 2026 United States House of Representatives elections through the 2030 elections.[5] Following the 2030 census, congressional redistricting authority will return to the independent commission under the normal decennial process.

Quick facts Results, Choice ...
Proposition 50
November 4, 2025 (2025-11-04)
Authorizes Temporary Changes to Congressional District Maps in Response to Texas' Partisan Redistricting. Legislative Constitutional Amendment.[1]
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 7,453,339 64.42%
No 4,116,998 35.58%
Valid votes 11,570,337 99.88%
Invalid or blank votes 14,056 0.12%
Total votes 11,584,393 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 23,093,274 50.16%
[2][3]
Close

The map defined in Proposition 50 is a Democratic gerrymander claimed to intend to offset the gerrymander by Texas Republicans, both of which are part of the broader 2025–2026 United States redistricting effort. It redraws several congressional districts to incorporate larger shares of urban and suburban Democratic voters, increasing Democratic registration advantages in competitive districts and converting several Republican-leaning seats into Democratic-leaning ones.[6] Republicans have responded to Proposition 50 with legislation, their own propositions, and litigation.

Republicans challenged the proposition in court both before the election, as well as after it was passed by the voters, but all their legal efforts failed and were exhausted in February 2026 when the Supreme Court of the United States refused to hear the appeal.

Background

In June 2025, Republican lawmakers in Texas first proposed gerrymandering the state's congressional district lines to favor Republicans.[7] In July, Greg Abbott, the Governor of Texas, called a special session of the Texas Legislature to discuss redistricting.[8] Texas Democrats in the state House of Representatives fled the state in an effort to break quorum and stall the redistricting effort.[9]

Gavin Newsom, the Governor of California, first proposed that California could gerrymander its own congressional district maps to favor Democrats in an effort to offset potential gains from Texas's gerrymandering.[10] The California Citizens Redistricting Commission is an independent bipartisan body that currently handles redistricting in the state. The commission was first established in 2008 by Proposition 11 with a mandate for drawing districts for the State Legislature and the Board of Equalization.

With the passage of Proposition 20, the commission's power was expanded in 2010 to also draw congressional districts. Newsom proposed that a special election be called to temporarily pause the commission and return redistricting power to the California Legislature until the end of the decade. Because both Propositions 11 and 20 were voter-approved amendments to the state constitution, any such changes to the redistricting power would also require a voter-approved constitutional amendment.[11]

On August 11, 2025, Newsom sent a letter to Donald Trump, stating that California would pause any mid-decade redistricting effort if other states called off their efforts.[12] Two days later, Newsom announced that the deadline had passed and he would move forward with his own redistricting effort.[13]

Passed map

Map of California's congressional districts as set by the California redistricting commission (effective 2023–2027)
Interactive map version
Passed map under California Proposition 50 (effective 2027–2033 starting with the 2026 elections)
Interactive map version

The new map was drawn by Democratic redistricting expert Paul Mitchell,[14] and formally submitted to the legislature by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.[15] Proponents of the maps argued that the map was more compact than the previous map, with fewer city and county splits, and with the majority of districts changed by less than 10%,[15] although certain cities, such as Lodi, will be newly split.[16] Non-partisan observers saw it as a gerrymandering; for example, analyst Nathaniel Rakich described the maps as an "aggressive Democratic gerrymander" that will more than double the bias in the current map as a result of simultaneously cracking Republican districts and unpacking extremely Democratic districts through absorbing more-Republican areas.[17]

It targets five seats currently held by Republicans:[18][19][20]

The new map will also decrease the competitiveness of several swing districts held by Democrats:[19]

As a result of cracking Republican votes, many districts will become less Democratic-leaning. In six districts, the Democratic voter registration advantage will decrease by a margin of more than 10 percentage points:[19]

However, all six districts will still favor the Democrats.

The new map is expected to help one Republican who represents a swing district:

  • Young Kim (CA-40). The district will lose many cities in Orange County, while gaining many Republican-leaning areas of Riverside County from the current 41st and 48th districts. As a result, the Republican advantage will increase by 9.7 percentage points, effectively being repurposed into a Republican pack.[19]

In 23 districts (out of 52), the change will be 2 percentage points or less.[19]

In terms of the impact of the new maps on protected groups under the federal Voting Rights Act, a study from Caltech and Cal Poly Pomona found that the number of Latino majority districts will stay the same and two additional districts where Latinos make up 30–50% of the citizen voting age population will be added.[21][22] The UCLA Asian American Studies Center found that the number of Asian American/Pacific Islander plurality districts will increase from three to five.[23]

Legislative history

Three actions were necessary to place Proposition 50 on the ballot:[24][25]

  1. Pass Assembly Constitutional Amendment 8, which is the amendment submitted for approval to California voters to redistrict the state
  2. Pass Senate Bill 280 to call the election, assign the proposition number, and prohibit any candidate from using the title "incumbent" in the June 2026 congressional election should the measure pass
  3. Pass Assembly Bill 604 to assign each census block within the counties to a congressional district.

SB 280 was introduced on August 18,[a] and a legislative vote occurred in both chambers on August 21. A two-thirds supermajority was needed to place the measure on the ballot.[28][29] The California State Assembly surpassed the 54 votes needed for a supermajority by passing the bill on a 57 to 20 vote.[b] Hours later, the California State Senate surpassed the 27 votes needed for a supermajority by approving the bill on a 30 to 8 vote.[31][c] Governor Newsom signed it into law later in the day.[32] ACA 8 also passed by that same vote tally, although as a legislative constitutional amendment it did not need the governor's signature.[33] ACA 8 was chaptered by the Secretary of State on August 21, 2025, at Resolution Chapter 156, Statues of 2025.[33] AB 604, which set the boundaries of the districts, passed 56 to 20 in the Assembly and 30 to 9 in the Senate.[34][d][e]

Republican response

Legislation

California State Assembly minority leader James Gallagher, along with a few other Republican cosponsors, introduced a joint resolution to split California into two states.[37][38]

Counter-propositions

A couple of different attempts were made to put propositions on the 2026 general election ballot for amendments to the state's constitution in response to Proposition 50. To put a proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot requires gathering signatures of voters, with the minimum number set at 8% of the number of valid votes cast in the previous gubernatorial election (874,641 signatures). The signatures must be collected within 180 days, but turned in no later than 131 days before election day (June 25, 2026).[39]

  • On October 22, 2025, the Secretary of State authorized Republican Assemblyman Carl DeMaio to begin gathering signatures for a proposed proposition of a constitutional amendment to target state lawmakers who supported the proposition. Titled "Penalize Politicians Who Manipulate Their Own Districts Initiative,"[40] DeMaio's proposal would bar any state lawmaker who voted in favor of Proposition 50 from running for office for ten years.[41] DeMaio's deadline to gather the 874,641 signatures needed to place the proposition on the ballot is April 20, 2026.[41]
  • The day after the Proposition 50 passed, Republican activist and attorney James V. Lacy filed paperwork for a constitutional amendment to undo Proposition 50 and revert for the 2028 and 2030 congressional elections to the district lines that were drawn in 2021 by the Citizens Redistricting Commission.[42]

Litigation

Pre-election

Four California state legislators (state senators Tony Strickland and Suzette Martinez Valladares and assemblymembers Tri Ta and Kate Sanchez) filed a lawsuit with the California Supreme Court asking the court to block the vote in the State Legislature on the ground that state law required a 30-day waiting period before voting on the bill. On August 20, the California Supreme Court rejected the motion by the four legislators, paving the way for a vote the following day.[43] On August 25, after the bill became law, the same four legislators sued again in the state Supreme Court. In their emergency lawsuit, the legislators claim that the proposition is a violation of citizens' rights to have the California redistricting commission draw congressional districts. The California Republican Party announced that it was backing the plaintiffs, who were represented by a law firm founded by U.S. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon.[44] The California Supreme Court also rejected the second lawsuit.[45]

On September 4, political advisor Steve Hilton, a Republican candidate in the 2026 California gubernatorial election, filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, asking them to stop Proposition 50, arguing that the proposition did not account for changes in the state's population since the 2020 Census and would hence violate the "one-person, one vote". On September 25, Hilton asked for an injunction with the court, after Governor Newsom and Secretary of State Shirley Weber failed to respond to the suit within 21 days, as typically required by federal law. An official within the office of Governor Newsom told the Fresno ABC affiliate KFSN-TV that they did not respond because they were not properly served.[46] On October 3, Hilton's preliminary injunction was filed with the district court.[47] On October 24, Judge Kenly Kato denied the petition to enjoin the proposition, stating that the lawsuit could continue after the election if the proposition passes.[48]

On September 5, U.S. Representative Ronny Jackson (R-TX) sued both Newsom and Weber in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, arguing that the legislation risked "diluting Plaintiff's legislative power and the voice of Texas voters".[49] A petition for a temporary injunction was denied, and the case was dismissed on October 23 by Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk for inability to demonstrate a cognizable injury.[50][51] A second lawsuit filed by Jackson, which only differed from the prior suit with the addition of California U.S. Representative Darrell Issa (R) as a co-plaintiff, was dismissed by Kacsmaryk on October 31 on the same grounds.[52]

On August 25, the day that the four Republican state legislators filed their second lawsuit, President Trump announced that he will ask the United States Justice Department to sue in federal court to block Proposition 50. Newsom responded in a tweet, "BRING IT".[53]

Post-election

California Republican Party

The day after Proposition 50 passed, the California Republican Party, represented by Harmeet Dhillon, filed a lawsuit to block implementation of the new map, alleging that it favored Hispanic voters, in violation of the U.S. Constitution's Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.[54][55][56] Eighteen individuals joined the California Republican Party as plaintiffs in the case including Assemblymember David Tangipa, Walnut city councilmember Eric Ching, former San Benito County supervisor Peter Hernandez, and McFarland mayor Saul Ayon.[57][58] On November 13 the United States Department of Justice intervened as a plaintiff, with United States Attorney General Pam Bondi characterizing Proposition 50 as "a brazen power grab that tramples on civil rights and mocks the democratic process".[59][60][61]

Governor Newsom, who is a defendant in the lawsuit, responded to the lawsuit through a spokesperson saying that "these losers lost at the ballot box and soon they will also lose in court."[61]

The lawsuit was heard by a three judge panel in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The members of the panel included Josephine Staton, an Obama appointee, Wesley Hsu, a Biden appointee, and Kenneth K. Lee, a Trump appointee. Deliberations began December 15 and on January 14, 2026, two of the three judges on the panel, Staton and Hsu, voted to uphold the passed map, and Lee dissenting. Lee based his decision on statements made by Paul Mitchell, a redistricting expert who drew up the maps, who said that District #13 was drawn up with race being a predominant factor. Staton and Hsu called the focus on District #13 (out of 52 districts) a strawman argument.[62][63]

Immediately after the ruling was announced, the California Republican Party announced that it will seek an emergency injunction from the Supreme Court of the United States to block implementation of the new maps.[63] The defendants, in their brief to the Supreme Court, cited the Supreme Court's order in the 2025 Texas redistricting case which explicitly calls out the redistricting proposed by Proposition 50 as constitutional, and they also cited Bondi's characterization of Proposition 50 as a "power grab".[64] On February 4, the Supreme Court denied the appeal without comment or dissent.[65][66][67]

On December 4, 2025, the Virginia-based conservative legal group called Public Interest Legal Foundation filed a lawsuit in Federal Court seeking to block the implementation of Proposition 50. In their lawsuit, the group alleges that Proposition 50 violates the 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution as well as the Voting Rights Act.[68]

The Public Interest Legal Foundation also filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in the case against Proposition 50 in which the California Republican Party was the plaintiff (see subsection above).[69]

Election logistics

A postcard with election information that was sent to voters in Sonoma County for the special election

The initial estimated cost for the special election was $282 million, of which $251 million would be incurred by the counties to conduct the election and reimbursable by the state.[70]

Vote by mail ballots were sent out to all 23 million California voters, with the first ballots being returned on October 6. By October 24, 18% of the ballots mailed out (about 4 million) were already returned.[71] Although the California Republican Party was urging Republican voters to mail their ballots back as soon as possible, on October 26 Donald Trump urged voters not to mail their ballots back, but to vote in person instead.[72]

Voter information guide error

Image of a postcard mailed by the California Secretary of State to voters who received a voter information guide with a typo

The initial version of the voter information guide contained a typographical error in the labeling of one of the congressional districts. Eight million copies of the voter guide had already been sent out before the error was discovered. Voters who had received the erroneous voter guide received a postcard with a correction. The rest of the voters received a revised version of the voter guide. Secretary of State Shirley Weber blamed the Legislative Analyst's Office for the error, and said that the office would bear the estimated $3 to $4 million for the additional costs incurred as a result of the error.[73]

Sacramento County return envelope issue

A Proposition 50 mail-in ballot sent to voters in Los Angeles County

In mid-October, voters in Sacramento County reported that the return envelopes they received along with their mail-in ballots could reveal their marked choices through a small hole in the envelope if the ballot is folded such that the hole is lined up with the markings on the ballot. County election officials confirmed the reports and explained that the small holes had various purposes, chief among them to be able to see whether the return envelope contains the ballot. To avoid exposing the marked choices on the ballot, county election officials recommended that voters fold their ballot with the markings inside the fold.[74]

Steve Hilton, a Republican candidate for the 2026 gubernatorial election who had previously filed a lawsuit challenging the validity of the special election, demanded the election be cancelled due to the flawed design of the envelopes in Sacramento County. Hilton described the issue as "another example of the corruption and incompetence rigging California's elections".[75]

Allegations of federal intimidation

In response to a request by Corrin Rankin, chair of the California Republican Party, the Trump administration announced on October 24 that the Department of Justice would deploy election monitors to polling sites in California. Rankin's request cited "reports of irregularities" which she feared would "undermine either the willingness of voters to participate in the election or their confidence in the announced results of the election". California Secretary of State Shirley Weber criticized the move as voter intimidation "masquerading as oversight".[76][f]

Another dispute came up when Governor Newsom raised the possibility that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) might raid polling places as an intimidation tactic. ICE officials responded that they were "not planning operations targeting polling locations", but would not be deterred from going to a polling place if "a dangerous criminal alien" were to approach a polling center.[77]

Campaign

Support for the measure was expected to be highly partisan, with supporters of the measure likely being members of the Democratic Party, while those in opposition were expected to be members of the Republican Party.[78]

Support

The ballot measure was proposed by Governor Newsom, who emerged as its most vocal champion.[79][6] Other prominent supporters include former President Barack Obama,[80] former Vice President Kamala Harris,[81] U.S. Senators Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff,[82] and the California AFL-CIO.[83] Newsom, Padilla, and former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi signed the ballot argument in favor.[84]

Within a month after the special election was called, Newsom's political action committee (PAC) supporting the proposition raised $70 million, with $10 million coming from George Soros and his family.[85] Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez appeared in an ad produced by the PAC, speaking in support of the proposition and telling Californians that it "levels the playing field" and "gives power back to the people".[86] The Newsom-led ballot committee announced on October 28 that it reached its fundraising goals and took the unusual step of stopping its fundraising activities. In the announcement, the committee noted that $38 million of the amount raised came from 1.2 million supporters.[87]

A couple of other committees also spent money promoting the proposition. One, by the House Majority PAC, a Super PAC of House Democrats spent $10 million (as of Mid-October) and worked closely with Newsom's committee. The other committee, headed by liberal activist Tom Steyer, spent $12 million (as of mid-October) but did not coordinate with Newsom's committee. While some Democrats expressed chagrin over Steyer's efforts, others expressed the opinion that his work is "more likely to help than harm".[88]

Combined spending to support the proposition was $138 million.[89] The liberal think tank Center for American Progress, which is normally in favor of independent redistricting commissions, stated that redistricting commissions should be put on hold until Congress "establishes federal standards for redistricting that all states must abide by".[90]

Opposition

"No on Prop. 50" signs in Southern California

Two main committees were formed in opposition to the proposition: one named "Stop Sacramento's Power Grab", backed by former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, and the other named "Protect Voters First", backed by Charles Munger Jr.[91] Arnold Schwarzenegger, the state's most recent Republican to have served as governor, backed Munger Jr.'s efforts, but did not formally join the latter's campaign committee,[92] and was later called "cowardly" by Republican officials for not being a more active opponent.[89] McCarthy announced that he planned on raising $100 million for his committee, with immediate past chair of the California Republican Party, Jessica Millan Patterson, tapped to lead McCarthy's committee.[93] However, as of two weeks prior to the election, McCarthy had only raised $11.4 million of that amount.[94]

Both Schwarzenegger and Munger played a significant role in bringing about the California Citizens Redistricting Commission, with Munger having spent $12 million on the proposition to create the commission.[95][96][97] Munger donated $10 million to start his committee, and ultimately contributed $32 million in opposition, although his committee ceased advertising weeks prior to the election.[89] Both committees distanced themselves from Donald Trump, and Trump did not make any comments about the proposition prior to election day.[89] Ultimately, $58 million was raised in opposition among both committees.[89]

Democratic State Assembly member Jasmeet Bains, who is running against incumbent Republican Congressman David Valadao in 2026, also came out in opposition to the proposition.[98]

Neutral

Common Cause issued a statement that it "will not pre-emptively oppose mid-decade redistricting in California".[99] As a result, multiple advisory board members resigned.[100]

The League of Women Voters of California, a leading proponent of Proposition 20 in 2010, had initially issued a statement opposing the redistricting,[101] but changed its position to neutral after the State Legislature voted to put Proposition 50 on the ballot.[102] The Charles Munger Jr.-formed committee used quotes from the original opposition in mailers that it sent out, without mentioning that the league had dropped its opposition.[103]

Endorsements

Yes
Executive branch officials
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State senators
State representatives
National party officials
Local officials
Individuals
Political parties
Labor unions
Organizations
Newspapers
Government bodies
No
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State senators
State representatives
Individuals
Political parties
Local officials
Local party officials
Organizations
Newspapers
Government bodies

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Phrasing Support Oppose Unsure
Berkeley IGS[227][228] October 20–27, 2025 4,946 (LV) ± 2% "The special election includes a statewide ballot measure about redistricting, Proposition 50. The following is a summary of Proposition 50 exactly as it appeared on the election ballot.

...
(How did)/(If you were voting today, how would) you vote on Proposition 50?"

60% 38% 2%
8,141 (RV) 54% 33% 13%
Emerson College[229] October 20–21, 2025 900 (LV) ± 3.2% "On November 4, 2025, there will be an election for Proposition 50, which Authorizes Temporary Changes to Congressional District Maps in Response to Texas' Partisan Redistricting. If the election for Proposition 50 were held today, would you vote yes (support) or no (oppose)?" 57% 37% 6%
60%[i] 40%
CBS News/YouGov[230] October 16–21, 2025 1,497 (LV) ± 3.6% "If the election were held today, how would you vote on Proposition 50, which 'authorizes temporary changes to congressional district maps in response to Texas' partisan redistricting'?" 62% 38%
Public Policy Institute
of California
[231]
October 7–14, 2025 943 (LV) ± 4.1% "If the election were held today, would you vote yes or no on Proposition 50?" 56% 43% 1%
co/efficient (R)[232][233] September 29 – October 1, 2025 976 (LV) ± 3.1% "Do you support or oppose California's constitutional amendment known as Proposition 50?" 54% 36% 10%
"Proposition 50 authorizes temporary changes to congressional district maps in response to Texas' partisan redistricting. This constitutional amendment requires temporary use of new congressional district maps through 2030, directs the independent Citizens Redistricting Commission to resume enacting congressional district maps in 2031, establishes policy supporting nonpartisan redistricting commissions nationwide; and has a one-time cost to counties of up to a few million dollars statewide. If the special election were held today, would you vote yes or no on Proposition 50?" 56% 39% 5%
Emerson College[234] September 15–16, 2025 1,000 (RV) ± 3.0% "In November 2025, there will be an election for Proposition 50, which authorizes temporary changes to California's congressional district maps in response to Texas' partisan redistricting. If the election for Proposition 50 were held today, would you vote yes (support) or no (oppose)?" 51% 34% 15%
Harper Polling (R)[235][236][A] August 25–27, 2025 600 (LV) ± 4.0% Question phrasing not available, described as "testing the Proposition 50 language". 54% 29% 17%
Berkeley IGS[237][238] August 11–17, 2025 4,950 (RV) ± 1.5% "Suppose a statewide ballot measure to change the way California Congressional District lines are drawn was put before voters in a special election later this year. The measure would ask voters to allow the state to temporarily replace the Congressional district lines drawn by the state's independent citizens commission after the last census in 2020 for use in next year's elections, if Texas goes forward with its own partisan mid-term redistricting plan. The measure would also return the authority to redraw California's Congressional district lines to the state's independent citizens commission for the next census in 2030. If you were voting today, would you vote YES or NO on this proposed ballot measure?" 48% 32% 20%
David Binder Research (D)[239][B] August 10–14, 2025 1,000 (LV) ± 3.0% Question phrasing not available, described in Axios as: "Proposition 50 allows new maps to be designed on a temporary basis, triggered by partisan action in other states such as Texas, and retains the independent redistricting commission". 57% 35% 8%
Citrin Center/Possibility Lab/Politico[240][241] July 28 – August 12, 2025 1,445 (RV) ± 2.6% "In both 2008 and 2010, California voters passed initiatives to give an Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission the power to draw the state's legislative and congressional districts, in order to reduce the influence of politicians. Governor Newsom has suggested returning congressional line drawing authority back to the Legislature, citing concerns that redistricting efforts in Republican states would give them a partisan advantage." 36%[j] 64%[k]
Emerson College[242] August 4–5, 2025 1,000 (RV) ± 3.0% "Do you support or oppose the proposal to redraw California's congressional map ahead of the 2026 Midterm Elections?" 33% 25% 42%
Close

Results

More information Choice, Votes ...
2025 California Proposition 50
Choice Votes %
Referendum passed Yes 7,453,339 64.4
No 4,116,998 35.6
Valid votes 11,570,337 99.9
Invalid or blank votes 14,056 0.1
Total votes 11,584,393 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 23,093,274 50.2
Source: [243]
Close
More information Proposition 50 results (excluding invalid votes) ...
Proposition 50 results (excluding invalid votes)
Yes
7,453,339 (64.4%)
No
4,116,998 (35.6%)

50%
Close

By county

  • Of the 24 counties where over 100,000 ballots were cast, all but three voted for the proposition
    • The proposition won in the top 15 counties with the highest number of ballots cast
  • Of the 34 counties where less than 100,000 ballots were cast, all but ten voted against the proposition
    • The proposition lost in all but two of the bottom fourteen counties with the lowest number of ballots cast
More information County, Yes ...
County Yes No Ballots
cast[l]
Turnout
# % # %
Alameda 409,30180.6%98,65319.4%508,73052.6%
Alpine 36864.4%20335.6%57161.2%
Amador 6,23934.1%12,07765.9%18,33468.0%
Butte 34,28845.9%40,36954.1%74,72158.4%
Calaveras 7,22334.2%13,88565.8%21,11863.1%
Colusa 2,09836.4%3,66563.6%5,77852.6%
Contra Costa 294,13771.2%118,70128.8%413,21256.6%
Del Norte 3,27741.1%4,70258.9%7,98951.2%
El Dorado 37,84441.7%52,99558.3%90,94165.6%
Fresno 121,35652.2%111,04547.8%232,72343.8%
Glenn 2,49430.2%5,76969.8%8,27158.6%
Humboldt 30,41564.0%17,09336.0%47,54054.9%
Imperial 20,15459.7%13,58440.3%33,79736.0%
Inyo 3,35048.1%3,61851.9%6,97564.6%
Kern 83,37144.9%102,45855.1%186,01939.9%
Kings 12,26541.9%16,98158.1%29,27050.1%
Lake 10,35049.9%10,39950.1%20,76353.7%
Lassen 1,74819.6%7,18580.4%8,93458.8%
Los Angeles 1,950,06874.3%673,05925.7%2,625,51044.9%
Madera 17,70643.6%22,92256.4%40,65649.5%
Marin 95,49580.7%22,86919.3%118,49568.1%
Mariposa 2,96238.4%4,74661.6%7,70864.0%
Mendocino 19,66163.6%11,27936.4%30,98157.5%
Merced 31,23954.0%26,63046.0%57,97142.5%
Modoc 71122.2%2,48777.8%3,19859.8%
Mono 2,67758.7%1,88541.3%4,56556.8%
Monterey 74,31468.5%34,12931.5%108,53249.6%
Napa 35,68268.1%16,69231.9%52,40960.7%
Nevada 28,08754.4%23,57345.6%51,72366.3%
Orange 554,43055.5%444,96344.5%999,91852.3%
Placer 82,91044.3%104,28155.7%187,33663.0%
Plumas 3,21238.0%5,24362.0%8,47861.9%
Riverside 369,56556.3%286,99543.7%657,32245.9%
Sacramento 312,10462.0%191,12138.0%503,68755.0%
San Benito 12,33460.4%8,08539.6%20,43251.7%
San Bernardino 311,74857.4%231,49542.6%543,72444.2%
San Diego 646,35861.2%409,78138.8%1,056,87352.3%
San Francisco 251,05885.3%43,28814.7%295,23255.5%
San Joaquin 101,89254.1%86,41945.9%188,44346.7%
San Luis Obispo 66,29754.7%54,89145.3%121,30566.4%
San Mateo 186,93476.0%58,88524.0%246,00355.1%
Santa Barbara 89,68065.0%48,29735.0%138,10455.1%
Santa Clara 393,62571.5%156,69028.5%553,63751.8%
Santa Cruz 82,50877.8%23,55822.2%106,24461.3%
Shasta 19,13829.1%46,69170.9%65,91756.5%
Sierra 52235.3%95764.7%1,48067.9%
Siskiyou 6,21837.4%10,38662.6%16,61259.1%
Solano 92,37063.7%52,71436.3%145,29452.6%
Sonoma 153,84073.5%55,39326.5%209,45065.3%
Stanislaus 68,07649.3%70,00850.7%138,20846.1%
Sutter 11,28437.9%18,52562.1%29,85353.7%
Tehama 5,37926.3%15,03973.7%20,44154.3%
Trinity 1,84040.6%2,68859.4%4,52860.5%
Tulare 43,50344.9%53,40855.1%96,99343.1%
Tuolumne 8,80738.2%14,21961.8%23,04063.2%
Ventura 178,30561.3%112,43938.7%290,92055.3%
Yolo 51,56069.5%22,57530.5%74,18460.2%
Yuba 8,96238.5%14,31161.5%23,30150.5%
Totals 7,453,33964.4%4,116,99835.6%11,584,39350.2%
Close

See also

Notes

  1. A bill numbered SB-280 was introduced February 5, 2025. On August 18 the content of the original bill was removed and replaced with the bill as passed into law (with very minor modifications) on August 21.[26][27]
  2. In the State Assembly, all 57 votes for the bill were from Democrats. All Republicans, joined by one Democrat, Jasmeet Bains, voted against. Two Democrats, Dawn Addis and Alex Lee did not cast a vote[30]
  3. In the State Senate, two Republicans (Marie Alvarado-Gil and Kelly Seyarto) did not cast a vote. All other state senators voted along party line with Democrats voting for the bill, and Republicans voting against the bill.[30]
  4. Similar to SB-280, AB-604 was introduced February 13, 2025, and on August 18 the content of the original bill was removed and replaced with the bill as passed into law on August 21 with no additional modifications.[35][36]
  5. The differences between the roll-call votes for SB 280 and AB 604 were: in the Assembly Mia Bonta did not cast a vote for AB 604 but voted for SB 280, and in the Senate, Kelly Seyarto voted no on AB 604 and did not cast a vote on SB 280.
  6. The Trump administration's announcement also included sending similar monitors for the concurrent elections in New Jersey.
  7. Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  8. Undecided pushed
  9. Phrased as "support returning congressional redistricting authority to state legislators"
  10. Phrased as "support keeping the independent redistricting commission"
  11. including invalid ballots
Partisan clients
  1. Poll sponsored by the United States Justice Foundation
  2. Pollster has conducted surveys for Gavin Newsom.

References

Further reading

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