Times Endorsements
The Times endorses selectively, on a case-by-case basis. Here are recommendations for today’s election.
Measures and Propositions
Los Angeles County Measure A: Yes. Half-cent sales tax hike to fund law enforcement would get more cops on the street.
Los Angeles City Measure O: Yes. The $500-million bond would fund cleanups of storm-sewer runoff, an urgent need.
Proposition 1A: Yes. Restricts the state’s ability to raid local government treasuries, helping to keep them solvent.
Proposition 59: Yes. Amends the state Constitution to guarantee more public access to government meetings and decisions.
Proposition 60: No. Locks the current primary system into the state Constitution, assuring more paralysis in Sacramento.
Proposition 60A: No. Requires applying proceeds from state property sales to bond debt. Shouldn’t be in the Constitution.
Proposition 61: No. Seeks $750 million in bonds to build and remodel 13 children’s hospitals, with no guarantees of more medical coverage for the needy.
Proposition 62: Yes. Establishes a blanket primary in which all voters select candidates from a single list, helping reduce partisanship in the Legislature.
Proposition 63: No. Would impose a 1% tax on incomes over $1 million a year, to fund mental health services. Would hobble the state’s ability to adjust income tax rates.
Proposition 64: Yes. Would require plaintiffs in lawsuits to show they had actually been harmed by defendants, helping to end shakedown suits against businesses.
Proposition 65: No. A draconian local finance measure, disavowed by its creators and superseded by Proposition 1A.
Proposition 66: Yes. Limits third strikes to serious or violent felonies, correcting a costly, unevenly applied law.
Proposition 67: No. Tortured funding mechanism would raise phone surcharge to pay for emergency room services.
Proposition 68: No. A ploy by nontribal card rooms and racetracks to grab a big share of casino gambling.
Proposition 69: No. Would require the state to collect a DNA sample in felony arrests, not convictions, clouding presumption that one is innocent until proved guilty.
Proposition 70: No. Removes limits on slot machines and games at Indian casinos, in exchange for payment of 8.25% of net income to the state. Would compound gambling problems.
Proposition 71: Yes. By generating $3 billion for research into embryonic stem cells, this measure could lead not just to cures but innovations that would bolster the state’s economy.
Proposition 72: No. Forces more California employers to provide healthcare to their workers, at the cost of new jobs.
*
U.S. Senate
Barbara Boxer.
*
Judicial Races
Office No. 18: Mildred Escobedo.
Office No. 29: Lori Jones.
Office No. 52: Laura Priver.
Office No. 53: Daniel Zeidler.
Office No. 69: Donna Groman.
*
For more detailed recommendations, see www.latimes.com/endorsements.
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.