California voters will have the opportunity to weigh in on Proposition 50, also known as the Election Rigging Response Act, during a specia
Slightly over half of California voters support Gov. Gavin Newsom’s ballot measure determining whether the state’s congressional districts are redrawn in the November special election. A new Emerson College poll released on Friday shows 51% of voters saying they plan to vote in favor of Proposition 50 to help California fight against Republicans’ own redistricting
The city of Sausalito will hold a special election Nov. 4 on two measures that it says will maintain the city's compliance with the state housing element law. Opponents argue that one of the measures is not needed.
The measure would change California's congressional maps mid-decade, and both parties are pouring millions into campaign ads aimed at swaying voters.
A statewide special election in California this fall, in which a redistricting question will be on the ballot, could cost over $280 million. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) and California Democrats are putting a ballot question before voters in November,
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposal on the Nov. 4 ballot to reshape California’s U.S. House districts to add five Democratic seats in advance of the 2026 midterm elections is not a sure sale, even in a state where Democrats outnumber registered Republicans by nearly 2-to-1.
On Nov. 4, California voters will decide whether to redraw political boundaries to create more Democratic seats. The ballot measure aims to counter an effort by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and President Donald Trump to add an equal number of Republican seats in that state.
President Donald Trump has for years told outlandish lies about elections in Democratic-dominated California. Trump made more false claims on the subject in a Fox News interview
California faces a significant financial burden with a special election costing around $282 million statewide.
About 1.7 million civil servants and retirees are eligible to vote in the election. CalPERS is overseen by a 13-member board. Six are elected by members and seven are either elected officials or are appointed by the governor or Legislature.
Tim Dupuis will retire from two major roles in Alameda County following two critical reviews of his performance, and several major elections missteps in recent years.