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When proposition 34 was defeated, Michael Rushford, a death penalty supporter, said the election was a call for California officials to "streamline the appeals process, expand the pool of defense attorneys qualified to handle capital cases, and execute inmates with a single lethal drug instead of the three-drug mixture now used". [2]
Proposition 14 (2010) Passed: Establishing a non-partisan top-two primary in place of semi-closed party primaries. Proposition 19 (2010) Defeated: Legalization of marijuana. Proposition 34 (2012) Defeated: Abolition of the death penalty. Proposition 36 (2012) Passed
Proposition 62 which, as Proposition 34, would have abolished the death penalty, was rejected by a 53–47 margin. The other initiative, Proposition 66, provides the streamlining of the capital appeal process, and also requires death-row offenders to work in jail and pay restitution to victims families, something they were previously exempted from.
Lighter Side. Medicare. News
Prop. 34 is a not-so-veiled attempt to strike back at the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, said Castillo, the veteran strategist. It threatens the financial resources of the organization, he added ...
In November 2012, Ramos campaigned heavily against Proposition 34, also known as the SAFE California Act. [12] Proposition 34 sought to replace California's death penalty with a life sentence with no chance of parole as the maximum punishment for murder. [13] The initiative to repeal the death penalty failed by a narrow margin of 52.8% to 47.2%.
The AHF has called Prop 34 “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.” Proposition 35, permanent Medi-Cal funding: Prop. 35 would make permanent a tax on health insurers, also known as the MCO tax, which ...
Proposition 34 is an initiative statute that would end the death penalty in California. The proposition was eventually defeated with 53% of the vote against it, despite the fact that supporters had spent 6 times more money in the campaign than opponents. [4]