SPECIAL ELECTION MESSAGE FROM VOTERS:
CUTS AREN'T THE ANSWER FOR BUDGET MESS
Survey reveals voters defeated Prop. 1A because they
are tired of gimmicks, not because it extended tax increases
SACRAMENTO, CA -- Proposition 1A failed because voters want real solutions and an end to political gimmicks, not because the measure extended tax increases, a survey conducted by a leading California research firm demonstrates. The survey of 1000 California voters, conducted May 16 to May 20, reveals that voters are deeply distrustful of Sacramento's elected leaders, with 74% of voters believing the special election is another example of the Governor and Legislature's failure to do the job they were elected to do....
Driving Tuesday's low voter turnout and the overpowering opposition to Prop. 1A was the fact that voters simply do not trust the leadership in Sacramento....
Revenue options supported by a strong majority of voters include:
* Increasing taxes on alcoholic beverages (75% support)
* Increasing taxes on tobacco (74% support)
* Imposing an oil extraction tax on oil companies just like every other oil producing state (73% support)
* Closing the loophole that allows corporations to avoid reassessment of the value of new property they purchase (63% support)
* Increasing the top bracket of the state income tax from nine point three percent to 10 percent for families with taxable income over $272,000 a year and to eleven percent for families with taxable incomes over $544,000 a year (63% support)
* Prohibiting corporations from using tax credits to offset more than fifty percent of the taxes they owe (59% support)
While voters strongly support these options to help California increase its revenue, voters are strongly against specific spending cuts proposed by Governor Schwarzenegger.
* 76% oppose cutting public school spending by $5.3 billion
* 73% oppose cutting funding for state colleges and universities by $1.2 billion
* 68% oppose cutting the state's funding for health care services by $1.1 billion
* 62% oppose cutting the state's funding for homecare services by $494 million