14 propositions that could remake California taxes, housing, healthcare and elections

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Set us as preferred California voters will decide 14 statewide propositions in the Nov.3 election, measures placed on the ballot mostly by either powerful interest groups or lawmakers that will affect the lives of millions of Californians.While a proposed tax on state billionaires has dominated headlines, voters will also have a chance to weigh in on a number of consequential issues, from healthcare to voter identification requirements and more.Californians are accustomed to legislating by the ballot and often face a list of propositions.

But even by the standards of the state’s direct democracy process, the 2026 election stands out.The campaigns supporting and opposing the ballot measures have already collected more than $100 million in contributions, and are expected to use their money to inundate the television airwaves, livestreams and social media feeds and to flood mailboxes with glossy campaign mailers over the coming months.

Here are the measures on the Nov.3 ballot: Spurred by the state’s affordable housing shortage, state lawmakers are asking voters to approve an $11.25-billion bond to boost affordable housing construction around the state.Advocates say the funds would help build more than 40,000 shovel-ready affordable homes that are unable to move forward because of a financing gap and help preserve thousands of other existing units.Proposition 1 includes specific funding for high-need groups, including $1.25 billion for a veterans’ home loan program, $1.15 billion for supportive housing for homeless people, $350 million for student housing at state universities, $450 million for farmworker housing and $200 million for Native American tribes.“In California, we don’t turn away from the needs of our people — we meet them head-on,” said Gov.

Gavin Newsom in a statement about the measure.“We ar...

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Publisher: Los Angeles Times

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