California Proposition 93 (2008)
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Proposition 93 was a Californian ballot proposition that sought to amend the term limits law for the California state legislature. Voters rejected it on February 5, 2008.
Proposal
Currently, California allows a person to serve 6 years in the California State Assembly and 8 years in the California State Senate. Proposition 93 would have changed the term limit to 12 years in both houses combined. If passed, the measure would have been the first amendment to the term limits law since Proposition 140 in 1990.[1]
The proposition would have reduced the total number of years a person could serve in the state legislature from 14 to 12 years, while allowing current members to serve 12 years in their current house regardless of prior service. Consequently, some current members of the legislature would have been allowed to serve beyond the 14 years prescribed by current term limit laws.[2]
Results
Proposition 93[3] |
Choice |
Votes |
% |
No |
4,574,826 |
53.59 |
Yes |
3,961,466 |
46.41 |
External links
References
(2007 ←) California elections, 2008 (→ 2009) |
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| February primary election | |
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| June primary election | |
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| November general election |
- Presidential
- United States House of Representatives
- State Senate
- State Assembly
- Propositions: 1A, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12
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| Special elections | |
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| Local elections |
- San Francisco general (February)
- San Francisco general (June)
- San Francisco general (November)
- San Francisco Board of Supervisors
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