California high court orders proposal to
split up state removed from November ballot
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[July 19, 2018]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The California
Supreme Court on Wednesday ordered the November ballot purged of an
initiative that seeks to split California into three states, citing
significant questions raised about the proposal's validity.
State election officials certified last month that supporters of the
so-called Cal3 measure, also known as Proposition 9, had collected
enough signatures to qualify it for the ballot in the country's most
populous state.
An environmental group, the Planning and Conservation League, challenged
the measure in court, arguing it posed a "revision" of the state
constitution - as opposed to an amendment - that is too sweeping to be
legally subjected to the direct consent of the voters.
Siding with opponents for the time being, the court directed state
election officials to keep the measure off the upcoming November ballot
to allow the justices sufficient time to review and decide the merits of
the case.
The court left open the possibility of allowing the initiative to be put
before voters in the future, saying the "potential harm in permitting
the measure to remain on the ballot outweighs" the harm of its delay.
The initiative was launched by billionaire Silicon Valley venture
capitalist Tim Draper, who has argued that California's size makes it
ungovernable. He failed in two previous bids to qualify a six-way split
of California for the ballot.
Draper decried Wednesday's outcome as indicative of a "corrupted"
political system, saying: "This is not the way democracies are supposed
to work."
Opponents said Draper's partition plan would be chaotic and a costly
waste of time and resources.
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Venture capitalist and CAL 3 Chairman Tim Draper speaks during a
press conference after announcing he has collected more than 600,000
signatures to put the plan to partition California into three states
into the November ballot in San Mateo, California, April 12, 2018.
REUTERS/ Stephen Lam/File Photo
Voter approval of Cal3 would not automatically divide California
into three states. Instead, the governor would be directed to
petition Congress to approve the split, as called for under the U.S.
Constitution, and the president would be required to sign such
legislation into law.
Political experts say Congress is unlikely to embrace the concept of
three Californias and they question whether state voters would take
it seriously.
The last time a state was split apart was during the Civil War, when
a portion of Virginia seceded to form West Virginia.
Under Cal3, California - home to nearly 40 million people - would be
partitioned into "Northern California," comprising San Francisco,
Sacramento and a tract extending to the Oregon border; "Southern
California," including San Diego and inland cities such as Fresno,
Bakersfield, San Bernardino and Riverside; and a new "California,"
consisting of Los Angeles and a coastal swath stretching north to
Monterey.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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