Chicago Sun-Times

Affirmativ­e action referendum failing in liberal California

- BY JANIE HAR

SAN FRANCISCO — The campaign to reinstate affirmativ­e action in overwhelmi­ngly Democratic California had money, momentum and big- name backers, including Black celebritie­s Issa Rae and Ava DuVernay, but voters in the most populated state rejected the measure.

Supporters of Propositio­n 16 signaled before Election Day that the race would be tight, saying they didn’t have enough time to sway voters on the touchy topic of government granting preference­s in public hiring, contractin­g and college admissions based on race, ethnicity or gender even during a national reckoning on race.

The measure was passing in Los Angeles and five San Francisco Bay Area counties that are liberal and losing everywhere else. With more than 11 million votes tallied, 56% opposed Propositio­n 16 as of Wednesday.

James Taylor, a political science professor at the University of San Francisco, said the propositio­n suffered from several factors: the coronaviru­s pandemic and racial justice protests that have left voters stressed and uncertain; the lack of a high- profile champion such as Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris, and younger voters who may not know much about the issue.

Then again, the vote is in keeping with a state that has welcomed cheap labor of all colors but then demanded they “go back” when no longer needed, Taylor said. California was founded as a free state but sanctioned ownership of Black people.

“It’s both a liberal bastion, but it’s also a place where you had Los Angeles burning in 1965 and the Black Panther” party founded out of frustratio­n in Oakland, Taylor said. “That duality and that duplicity is part of the character of California.”

Supporters said in a statement Wednesday that they would wait for every vote to be counted but vowed that California would lead the country in rooting out barriers to advancemen­t. The campaign acknowledg­ed needing to “enlist more champions in the fight against structural racism and gender discrimina­tion.”

Democratic lawmakers placed Propositio­n 16 on the ballot in June following the death of George Floyd, a Black man, by Minneapoli­s police and the nationwide protests that followed. They pointed to his death as evidence of the barriers that hold back Black Americans and other people of color.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States