Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Politics

California Voters Sign Off On Lawmakers Cutting Peers' Pay

UPDATE: 9:50 p.m. June 7, 2016

California voters on Tuesday gave state lawmakers the ability to suspend their colleagues' pay along with their voting power when legislators are accused of wrongdoing while in office.

It was the lone, statewide ballot measure in the primary and was proposed by lawmakers who asked voters to give them greater latitude to judge their peers' qualifications.

Advertisement

Voters agreed, with 77 percent favoring the measure.

Proposition 50 will allow legislators to suspend their colleagues' privileges in the state Senate or Assembly.

UPDATE: 8:23 p.m. June 7, 2016

Early results show Proposition 50 with 79 percent yes votes and 21 percent no votes.

Original post:

Advertisement

California voters will decide Tuesday whether state lawmakers should be able to suspend their colleagues' pay along with their voting power when they are accused of wrongdoing while in office.

California's lone, statewide primary ballot measure was proposed by lawmakers who are asking voters to give them greater latitude in their power to judge their peers' qualifications.

Proposition 50 would allow legislators to suspend their colleagues' privileges in the state Senate or Assembly.

Lawmakers pursued the change after suspending Democratic Sens. Leland Yee, Ron Calderon and Rod Wright as they faced felony accusations in 2014, when all three faced criminal charges but had not yet been convicted. A state law prohibiting lawmakers' pay from being reduced meant the three Democrats continued receiving paychecks while on suspension.

The proposal, if approved by voters, would permit harsher punishment, but also makes it more difficult to pull off.

The 40-person Senate or 80-person Assembly currently can suspend a member with pay with a simple majority of votes. Proposition 50 would raise the voting threshold to two-thirds to suspend a member without pay.

David A. Carrillo, executive director of UC Berkeley Law's California Constitution Center, said increasing the number of lawmakers that must agree to the suspension would be "making it harder for the Legislature to apply this kind of self-discipline."

"Proposition 50 is actually a reduction of the Legislature's existing power to discipline its ranks," Carrillo said in an email.

Only one senator voted against the 2014 suspensions.

Sen. Joel Anderson, R-Alpine, said he opposed the suspensions because empty seats in the statehouse result in taxation without representation.

He argued Proposition 50 is an ineffective political maneuver that cannot correct lawmakers' rare criminal behavior.

"This is another slick, hide-the-pea maneuver," Anderson said.

Get general information about the election, news coverage, an interactive ballot guide and results on election day.