Overview
- Proposition 50 would pause the independent redistricting commission and use Legislature-drawn congressional lines for 2026–2030 before reverting after the 2030 census.
- Campaign finance records show more than $200 million raised, with supporters reporting roughly $132 million and opponents about $78 million, including major union backing and a $32 million donation from Charles T. Munger Jr.
- A co/efficient survey of likely voters finds 54% support, 36% opposition and 10% undecided as the Nov. 4 special election approaches.
- Nonpartisan reviews say the proposed map is more overtly partisan but similar on other representation measures; PPIC estimates a Democratic gain of about four seats, and Princeton graded the new map an “F” on partisan fairness versus a “B” for the current map.
- The fight has been nationalized with high-profile surrogates and events, including an Oakland phone bank by Democratic leaders, while opponents highlight voter-approved commission reforms and mobilize a late push.