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Prop. 32, measure to increase minimum wage to $18 an hour, trails in early polls

A pile of U.S. dollars in various denominations
Proposition 32, which would have raised the minimum wage to $17 immediately for larger employers and to $18 starting in January 2025.
(Mark Lennihan / Associated Press)
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A measure to increase California’s minimum wage to $18 was trailing according to early polling results as of Tuesday night but remained too close to call.

Early results showed a slight majority of voters statewide opposed Proposition 32, which would raise the minimum wage to $17 immediately for larger employers and to $18 starting in January. Smaller employers will be required to do the same but at a slower rate.

State law already mandates that fast-food workers earn $20 an hour and healthcare workers earn at least $25 an hour — industry-specific minimum wages lobbied for by employee unions.

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The California Labor Federation and Service Employees International Union supported the measure, which was spearheaded by millionaire investor and anti-poverty activist Joe Sanberg.

California’s minimum wage is more than twice the federal rate — and cities such as West Hollywood have imposed local mandates requiring more than $19 an hour — but supporters of Proposition 32 said that a new standard was necessary to cope with the state’s exorbitant cost of living.

The campaign estimated that more than 2 million California workers, including those in retail and delivery jobs, stood to benefit from the measure.

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Proposition 32 was opposed by business groups including the California Chamber of Commerce and California Restaurant Assn., which warned it would force closures because of cost pressures.

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