Tuesday, November 6, is Election Day in California. To find your polling place, click here to access the Secretary of State’s voter information page, or contact your county elections office. Click here for a list of county elections offices. You can also call the Secretary of State’s toll-free Voter Hotline at (800) 345-VOTE (8683).
Below are the official endorsements and ballot recommendations of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association political action committee for statewide, state legislative, U.S. Congressional, state Board of Equalization and county supervisor offices. This information can also be found on our website at: http://www.hjta.org/election-information/for-voters.
Polls open at 7:00 a.m. and close at 8:00 p.m. Thank you for voting!
Sincerely,
Jon Coupal
President, HJTA
Endorsements and ballot-measure recommendations:
Click here for a printable PDF of the below endorsements!
The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association PAC
has endorsed these candidates
for the November 6, 2018, Statewide General Election:
STATEWIDE RACES
John Cox
Governor
Steven Bailey
Attorney General
STATE ASSEMBLY
Kevin Kiley
Assembly District 6
Melinda Avey
Assembly District 8
Joseph Grcar
Assembly District 20
Alexander Glew
Assembly District 24
Vicki Nohrden
Assembly District 29
Jay Obernolte
Assembly District 33
Vince Fong
Assembly District 34
Tom Lackey
Assembly District 36
Dante Acosta
Assembly District 38
Henry Nickel
Assembly District 40
Ronda Baldwin-Kennedy
Assembly District 44
Roxanne Beckford Hoge
Assembly District 46
Burton Brink
Assembly District 49
Toni Holle
Assembly District 52
Phillip Chen
Assembly District 55
Mike Simpfenderfer
Assembly District 58
Bill Essayli
Assembly District 60
Alexandria Coronado
Assembly District 65
Frank Scotto
Assembly District 66
Melissa Melendez
Assembly District 67
Steven Choi
Assembly District 68
Honor “Mimi” Robson
Assembly District 70
Tyler Diep
Assembly District 72
Matthew Harper
Assembly District 74
John Moore
Assembly District 79
STATE SENATE
Jim Nielsen
Senate District 4
Andreas Borgeas
Senate District 8
Robert Poythress
Senate District 12
Baron Bruno
Senate District 26
Rita Topalian
Senate District 32
Pat Bates
Senate District 36
U.S. CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Doug LaMalfa
U.S. Congressional District 1
Andrew Grant
U.S. Congressional District 7
Jeff Denham
U.S. Congressional District 10
Lisa Remmer
U.S. Congressional District 12
Rudy Peters
U.S. Congressional District 15
Ronald Kabat
U.S. Congressional District 20
Steve Knight
U.S. Congressional District 25
Sean Flynn
U.S. Congressional District 31
Kenneth Wright, M.D.
U.S. Congressional District 33
Kimberlin Brown Pelzer
U.S. Congressional District 36
Young Kim
U.S. Congressional District 39
Mimi Walters
U.S. Congressional District 45
Diane Harkey
U.S. Congressional District 49
BOARD OF EQUALIZATION DISTRICT
Ted Gaines
Board of Equalization District 1
Mark Burns
Board of Equalization District 2
G. Rick Marshall
Board of Equalization District 3
Joel Anderson
Board of Equalization District 4
RIVERSIDE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS DISTRICT
Karen Spiegel
Riverside County Board of Supervisors District 2
Jeff Hewitt
Riverside County Board of Supervisors District 5
Local and Regional Measures
Los Angeles County Measure W – Stormwater Parcel Tax
NO
Why we’re against it: The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted 4–1, with only Kathryn Barger voting no, to place this new parcel tax before the voters on the November ballot. It would put a new tax on property in L.A. County based on satellite photography of each individual parcel of land. The tax would cost property owners 2.5 cents for each square foot of “impermeable surface” — driveways, patios, parking lots, buildings, etc. — as determined by the satellite image analysis.
The tax would raise $300 million annually for stormwater capture and cleanup infrastructure and programs. The money would be divided between cities in the county and regional watershed areas, with $30 million per year reserved for programs including “drought education” and workforce training.
This new property tax would be very costly for businesses, like supermarkets with large parking lots, and could result in higher prices. It would also affect apartment buildings and could result in higher rents. It would directly raise property tax bills for homeowners.
L.A. County already captures and cleans enough water runoff to provide for the water needs of 10 percent of the population. The cost of capturing more is unaffordably high.
We recommend a NO vote on Measure W.
Statewide Measures
Proposition 5
YES
Why we’re for it: Proposition 5 would allow homeowners age 55 and older to sell their current homes, purchase a replacement property anywhere in the state and transfer the property tax assessment from the home they sold to the home they bought. This measure would remove restrictions in existing law that limit these transfers by putting conditions on the price and location of the replacement property. It would also allow older homeowners to transfer their base-year property tax assessment more than once.
We support this measure, which helps homeowners who want to downsize or move, but who stay put because of the high property taxes on a replacement property. Proposition 5 will likely result in more homes coming on the market, which will help new homebuyers by increasing the supply of available housing.
We recommend a YES vote on Proposition 5.
Proposition 6
YES
Why we’re for it: Proposition 6 repeals Senate Bill 1, the 2017 tax increase on gasoline, diesel fuel and vehicle registrations. It also amends the state constitution to require voter approval of all future increases in fuel and vehicle taxes or fees.
Proposition 6 will save the typical family of four over $700 per year in direct and indirect costs. It will repeal the tax increase of 12 cents per gallon on gasoline and 20 cents per gallon on diesel fuel, as well as the $25 to $175 increase in the annual cost of registering a vehicle.
California has the highest poverty rate in the nation, over 20 percent when the cost of living is taken into account, and one contributing factor to that is the higher cost of transportation. The tax increase on diesel fuel raises the price of everything that is transported by truck, including food. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the inflation rate in California cities is higher than the national average of other U.S. cities. The higher cost of transportation is one reason for that.
The backlog of delayed road and bridge repairs, estimated by state officials to be $150 billion, is evidence that state lawmakers have not made road safety a priority. Instead of funding transportation infrastructure and maintenance, the politicians have diverted the revenue from transportation taxes to fund other priorities, or pet projects.
SB 1 raised taxes without reforming the well-documented waste and inefficiency at Caltrans. Taxpayers in California pay the highest taxes in the nation and suffer with roads in the worst condition. Taking more money from the wallets of California families to fund more of the same is not the answer. What’s needed is a new funding plan that spends all transportation-related tax and fee revenue on transportation.
We recommend a YES vote on Proposition 6.
Proposition 10
NO
Why we’re against it: Proposition 10 would repeal the 1995 Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act, a state law that protected property owners from new rent-control ordinances, moderated radical rent control and secured new construction in cities throughout California. If Costa-Hawkins is repealed, cities would be able to pass any type of rent-control law, including rent control on single-family homes, garage apartments, duplexes and small apartment buildings. For example, Proposition 10 would allow new rent-control bureaucracies to require every property owner to register and pay an annual fee so the city can track how many housing units exist and whether they are rented or owner-occupied.
Proposition 10 would discourage investment in rental housing, leading to less new construction and more tightening of an already squeezed housing market in California. Faced with the threat that rent control could be enacted at any time, some owners of existing apartment buildings might choose to evict the tenants and sell the property rather than stay in a business with rising costs and uncertain revenue.
Proposition 10 is the wrong answer to the high price of housing. What’s needed is more construction, not less.
We recommend a NO vote on Proposition 10.
For more information about the measures on the November ballot, including the official ballot arguments for and against each, please visit HJTA’s informational website, CAInitiatives2018.com.
Paid for by Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association State PAC
Paid for by No New Taxes, a Project of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association
Paid for by Vote Yes on Prop 6, committee major funding from Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association