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WSWS : News
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America
Anti-immigrant measure passed in California
By Martin McLaughlin
5 June 1998
A ballot referendum to put an end to bilingual education was
adopted in the state of California, in the most significant result
of primary election voting conducted in eight US states on June
2.
The anti-immigrant measure, Proposition 227, was placed on
the ballot after a petition campaign financed by computer millionaire
Ronald Unz. It mandates a one-year limit on bilingual instruction,
after which children with limited English proficiency will be
forced into classes given in the English language.
California has 1.4 million children with limited English proficiency,
more than half the national total, with 700,000 alone in the huge
Los Angeles Unified School District. More than three-quarters
of these children are Spanish-speaking, although California schools
provide bilingual instruction in another 20 languages spoken by
significant numbers of children.
Proposition 227 passed by a margin of 61 percent to 39 percent,
with a narrow majority of black voters and a substantial majority
of Hispanic voters opposing the antidemocratic measure.
Black and Hispanic civil rights groups announced immediately
after the vote that they would file suit to block enforcement
of the new law on the grounds that it violates federal constitutional
protections. Similar lawsuits have so far blocked enforcement
of an earlier anti-immigrant measure, Proposition 187, which was
adopted by referendum vote in 1994.
A second controversial referendum, Proposition 226, went down
to defeat by a margin of 46 percent to 54 percent. It would have
limited the ability of unions to use dues money for political
purposes, by requiring unions to obtain a signed authorization
from each individual member each year when dues money was used
for anything other than collective bargaining.
Proposition 226 was placed on the ballot by extreme right-wing
groups who have passed or introduced similar measures in at least
a dozen states, and are seeking a federal law as well. The purpose
is to attack the AFL-CIO bureaucracy's ability to funnel money
into political campaigns, largely on behalf of the Democratic
Party, as it did in 1996.
The national and California AFL-CIO, the California Teachers
Association and other union groups poured nearly $20 million into
a massive advertising campaign against Proposition 226. By contrast
the total money spent opposing Proposition 227--very little of
it from the unions--was only $3.2 million.
Also significant was the attitude of the California Chamber
of Commerce and other state business associations, which were
either officially neutral or spent little or no money promoting
the initiative. The Chamber of Commerce reportedly agreed to adopt
this position after the state AFL-CIO agreed not to support limits
on corporate campaign contributions.
The California Democratic and Republican primaries saw an unprecedented
avalanche of money spent largely by millionaire candidates on
behalf of themselves. The three candidates who spent the most
money--Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls Alfred Cecchi and Jane
Harman, and Republican Senate candidate Darryl Issa--all lost.
The total spending in the Democratic gubernatorial primary was
$65 million by three candidates who received a combined total
of 3,225,193 votes, about $20 for each ballot cast.
Only one incumbent officeholder was defeated in the eight states
where voting was held June 2. California Republican Congressman
Jay Kim lost his bid for renomination in a campaign where he was
unable to set foot in his district because he was under house
arrest in Washington, DC after a felony conviction for receiving
illegal campaign contributions. One-third of the Republican primary
electorate voted to return him to office anyway.
The lack of turnover was presented by the big business media
as proof that the great mass of the American people are contented
and complacent. The New York Times claimed, "the overwhelming
message was one of relative satisfaction." But it would be
more correct to say that the predominant mood expressed was one
of indifference, confusion and alienation from the whole electoral
process, as voter turnout fell in state after state.
In California the referendum campaigns and the enormous outlays
on advertising failed to boost the statewide turnout significantly.
Some 5.6 million people voted, 38.3 percent of registered voters
and only 26.5 percent of all those eligible to vote. There has
been a steady downward trend in California primary voting, reflecting
the declining support for the two big business parties, from 46.7
percent in 1978 to 29.1 percent in 1990 and 26.2 percent in 1994.
See Also:
California's ballot initiative
for English-only schools:
An attack on democratic rights
[30 May 1998]
California initiative attacks
AFL-CIO political contributions:
Proposition 226--the issues before workers
[24 April 1998]
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