Voters should get another shot at showing initiative
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Alicia Robinson
Next year’s elections won’t have as lengthy a list of initiatives as
the Nov. 2 ballot, but voters may decide hot-button issues that
affect the makeup of the legislature and how it spends money.
Some voters were overwhelmed by the 16 statewide initiatives in
last month’s election, but they seem to support the concept of voting
on issues directly -- even though it requires some research.
“I personally read [about ballot issues] because I’m interested,”
said Helen McLaughlin of Newport Beach. “I was kind of surprised
myself that people were not flummoxed by the whole thing.”
Perhaps a few of them were. Records from the Orange County
Registrar of Voters show more people who voted on Nov. 2 chose a
presidential candidate than cast ballots on any of the ballot issues.
Of the nearly 1.1 million Orange County residents who voted, 98% of
them voted in the presidential race. Somewhere between 85% and 94% of
them voted on each ballot issue.
California voters may get more choices soon. Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger is reportedly considering a special election next year
to decide how congressional and legislative districts are drawn,
among other issues.
Some politicos point to the heavy use of ballot initiatives as
evidence that they no longer reflect grass-roots concerns because
they can be put forward by anyone with the money to pay signature
gatherers.
“The initiative is a way for the public to impose a check on the
legislature,” UC Irvine political scientist Mark Petracca said. “It’s
not the public which is using it anymore.”
There’s also the risk that voters won’t understand what they’re
choosing, said former Assemblyman Gil Ferguson, who represented
Newport Beach from 1984 to 1994.
“When you have a huge turnout, you get people who haven’t a clue
about the issues,” he said. “People who vote yes on those bond issues
haven’t a clue that that must either raise taxes or cut services
because you have to pay all those bonds back double.”
But to some, the ballot initiative is a safety valve for passing
political reforms that have been held up in a gridlocked legislature.
John Campbell, who was sworn in this week as a state senator
representing Newport-Mesa, takes that view.
“I think you’re seeing more initiatives because the legislature is
just not accountable to the people,” he said.
An initiative Campbell co-wrote that would constitutionally limit
state spending may hit the streets for signatures later this month.
The “Deficit Prevention Act” would prohibit the growth in spending
from exceeding the combined growth of economic inflation and the
state’s population.
Campbell tried to get a bill through the usual channels, but it
never flew.
“I’ve introduced a constitutional amendment every one of the last
three years, and they never get past the first committee,” he said.
One initiative has qualified for the primary and one for the
general election in 2006, and 10 more are in the signature-gathering
stage. They include such weighty topics as how districts are drawn
for state and federal offices, driver’s licenses and other public
benefits for illegal immigrants and sex education for kindergarten
through 12th-grade students.
But the overload of ballot issues last time around hasn’t soured
voters like Jessie Womble on the process.
The Newport Harbor High School senior turned 18 just days before
the election, and she spent those days reading news articles about
what she would see in the voting booth.
“I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing, because it does give
the people a direct, direct, direct influence on government,” she
said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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