List of California ballot propositions
The following is a list of California ballot propositions broken down by decade. Propositions can be placed on the ballot either through the initiative process or by a vote of the state legislature. Propositions were added to the California constitution as part of the ethics reform instituted by Governor Hiram Johnson in the early 1910s.
- List of California ballot propositions 1910–19
- List of California ballot propositions 1920–29
- List of California ballot propositions 1930–39
- List of California ballot propositions 1940–49
- List of California ballot propositions 1950–59
- List of California ballot propositions 1960–69
- List of California ballot propositions 1970–79
- List of California ballot propositions 1980–89
- List of California ballot propositions 1990–99
- List of California ballot propositions 2000–09
- List of California ballot propositions 2010–19
- List of California ballot propositions 2020–29
History
Until 1960, citizen-led initiative measures appeared on general election ballots only. From 1960 to 2012, initiative measures appeared on primary, general, and special election ballots. In October 2011, Governor Jerry Brown signed into law a bill which requires all future ballot initiatives to be listed only in general elections, rather than during any statewide election. Two propositions had already qualified for the next statewide election prior to the signing of the law, making the June 2012 primaries the last statewide non-general election in California to have statewide initiatives on the ballot. Propositions originating in the State Legislature can still appear on non-general election ballots, as was the case with Propositions 41 and 42 in June 2014.
Notable propositions
Some notable propositions which have received a great deal of attention include:Proposition | Status | About |
Proposition 4 | Passed | Granting women the constitutional right to vote in California. |
Proposition 7 | Passed | Establishing the constitutional direct democracy powers of initiative and referendum in California. |
Proposition 8 | Passed | Establishing the constitutional direct democracy power of recall in California. |
Proposition 14 | Passed, then declared unconstitutional | Prohibiting government agencies from denying, limiting, or abridging the right of any property owner to decline to sell, lease, or rent residential real property to any person the property owner, in their absolute discretion, chooses. |
Proposition 6 | Defeated | Barring homosexuality in the public school system. |
Proposition 13 | Passed | Significant property tax reduction and limits; imposing 2/3 vote requirement of the Legislature for state taxes and 2/3 voter approval requirement for local special taxes. |
Proposition 65 | Passed | Notification of hazardous materials. |
Proposition 98 | Passed | School funding. |
Proposition 187 | Passed, then declared unconstitutional | Denying illegal immigrants eligibility to receive public services. |
Proposition 209 | Passed | Banning affirmative action in the public sector |
Proposition 215 | Passed | Legalizing medical marijuana under California law. |
Proposition 218 | Passed | Right to vote on local taxes; assessment and property-related fee reforms; initiative power expansion in regard to local revenue reduction or repeal. Constitutional follow-up to Proposition 13. |
Proposition 22 | Passed, then declared unconstitutional | A statute banning same-sex marriage. |
Proposition 52 | Defeated | Allowing voting registration on Election Day. |
Proposition 71 | Passed | On the use of stem cells in scientific research. |
Proposition 73 | Defeated | Parental notification before abortion. |
Proposition 83 | Passed | Various restrictions of civil liberties for paroled sex offenders. |
Proposition 85 | Defeated | Second attempt at Proposition 73. |
Proposition 8 | Passed, then declared unconstitutional | A state constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage in order to override the In re Marriage Cases decision earlier that year that legalized same-sex marriage. |
Proposition 14 | Passed | Establishing non-partisan blanket primaries in place of closed primaries. |
Proposition 19 | Defeated | Legalization of marijuana. |
Proposition 34 | Defeated | Abolition of the death penalty. |
Proposition 36 | Passed | Reducing the mandatory minimum sentence's for most individuals convicted under the state's three-strikes law. |
Proposition 37 | Defeated | Requiring labeling on raw or processed food offered for sale to consumers if made from plants or animals with genetic material changed in a specified way. |
Proposition 47 | Passed | Redefining some nonviolent offenses as misdemeanors, rather than felonies, as they had previously been categorized. |
Proposition 64 | Passed | Legalization under California law of the adult use of marijuana. |