California
Related: About this forumPoll shows California's Prop 36 crime initiative poised to pass by large margin
Nearly three-quarters of the California electorate plans to vote for a high-profile ballot measure that would increase penalties for some theft- and drug-related crimes, according to a new poll released Wednesday.
Seventy-three percent of likely voters said they would support Proposition 36, the survey from the Public Policy Institute of California found, compared with just 25 percent who plan to oppose it. Thats a slight increase from PPICs September poll, which found 71 percent of likely voters in favor of it.
Support for Prop 36 was the highest among the slate of 10 statewide issue questions appearing on Californians ballots this fall. It was also the measure named by the most voters 28 percent as the one in which they were most interested.
Crime has become a major campaign issue heading into November, in part because of Prop 36s presence on the ballot. The measures support has been fueled by lingering voter concerns since a surge in certain crimes during the pandemic, but faced resistance from leading Democrats like Gov. Gavin Newsom, who warn against a harsh pivot back to tough-on-crime policies.
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/10/24/california-prop-36-crime-initiative-00185192
JohnSJ
(96,336 posts)oldsoftie
(13,531 posts)Long past time to crack down.
Pachamama
(17,008 posts)When I started to read this Proposition I started to have flashbacks to the 3 Strikes your Out law that California had to deal with that filled California prisons.
Anyone who would take the time to study the implications and costs (financially and all around) would realize very quickly that this is a bad law and will cost taxpayers and be a nightmare that will backfire.
I really hope that the stats you quoted are wrong and it fails to pass.
quaint
(3,499 posts)Oooh, more money for private prisons.
MichMan
(13,025 posts)They can just give plea bargains to much lesser crimes if they don't agree with the law