Why Voting "No on Prop 50" Makes SensePeter Coe Verbica, U.S. House of Representatives Candidate, California's 19th Congressional District, Weighs in on the November 2025 Special Election
By: Peter Coe Verbica Of course, power is a heady cocktail; John Adams cautions, "When economic power became concentrated in a few hands, then political power flowed to those possessors and away from the citizens, ultimately resulting in an oligarchy or tyranny." California is effectively a one-party state. Now, entrenched Sacramento politicians point to Texas but that's a bogus argument. A head-fake. Here's why: Texas' legislative redistricting approach uses established legislative authority without temporary constitutional exceptions: no ad hoc ballot measure is needed. Texas' redistricting does not suspend voter-enacted independent commission reforms. It has lower administrative costs versus running a $200 million ballot campaign, has a clear legal pathway and does not involve reversal of prior principles. Sacramento's pointing to Texas also fails because Texas has had a huge population migration, with much of the inflow (ironically!) Here's why: growth in Texas justifies redrawing districts to equalize district populations; For those who also argue that Prop 50 is a "temporary" response, informed voters know better. Look no further than sales tax; it was originally set at just 2%. Now sales tax in the City of Santa Cruz, by way of example, is nearly 5 times that, standing at 9.75%! Despite this, the City is reportedly +$250 million in unfunded liabilities and the County's unfunded liabilities stand at reportedly +$729 million. Middle class Californians want a return to smaller government, personal accountability and safe neighborhoods. Are they interested in a Frankenstein gerrymandering act? Not in the least. That's why I stand with my fellow Republicans and common-sense Democrats who enthusiastically urge voters to cast a "NO" vote for Prop 50. *According to a citation in "How much would CA's new redistricting plans cost?" by CalMatters on August 18, 2025. (Image Source: Midjourney 2025 with inputs by P. Verbica.) www.peterverbica.com Paid for by Verbica for Congress. Contact Peter Coe Verbica, Verbica for Congress ***@peterverbica.com Photo: https://www.prlog.org/ End
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