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Prop. 50 a short-term win, but at what cost?
Los Angeles Times
|November 06, 2025
One of the great conceits of California is its place on the cutting edge — of fashion, culture, technology, politics and other facets of the ways we live and thrive.
CHRISTINA HOUSE Los Angeles Times
IRVINE resident Kimberly Cobb observes the signature verification process at the Orange County Registrar of Voters on Wednesday.
Not so with Proposition 50.
The redistricting measure, which passed resoundingly Tuesday, doesn’t break any ground, chart a fresh course or shed any light on a better pathway forward.
It is, to use a favorite word of California’s governor, merely the latest iteration of what has come to define today’s politics of fractiousness and division.
In fact, the redistricting measure and the partisan passions it stirred offer a perfect reflection of where we stand as a splintered country: Democrats overwhelmingly supported it. Republicans were overwhelmingly opposed.
Nothing new or novel about that.
And if Proposition 50 plays out as intended, it could make things worse, heightening the country's polarization and increasing the animosity in Washington that is rotting our government and politics from the inside out.
You're welcome.
The argument in favor of Proposition 50 — and it's a strong one — is that California was merely responding to the scheming and underhanded actions of a rogue chief executive who desperately needs to be checked and balanced.
The only apparent restraint on President Trump's authoritarian impulse is whether he thinks he can get away with something, as congressional Republicans and a supine Supreme Court look the other way.
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