Brown vs. Brown on the Value of California's Initiative Process

That's Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown and former Calif. Assembly Speaker Willie Brown. In two unrelated L.A. Times articles, Gov. Brown credits the initiative system for making the state governable while former speaker Brown is opposed to direct democracy.

2 minute read

October 30, 2013, 11:00 AM PDT

By Irvin Dawid


Evan Halper writes that Gov. Brown's praise for direct democracy, implemented by Calif. Gov. Hiram Johnson in 1911, was expressed during a presentation he gave in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 24, explaining California's fiscal turnaround.

“The people themselves through the initiative actually broke a decade of dysfunction and laid the foundation for a government that works,” he said. 

Halper writes that "Brown credited California’s turnaround to a series of ballot measures. The measures allowed a state budget to get passed with a simple majority of lawmakers [Prop. 25, 2010], put an independent commission in charge of voting boundaries [Proposition 11 of 2008], and raised taxes by billions of dollars [Prop. 30, 2012].

On the other hand, "(f)ormer speaker Willie Brown would drop the state's direct democracy initiative process altogether", writes 

PPIC's October report on the initiative process, Reforming California's Initiative Process, indicates that "Californians are highly supportive of the initiative process but see room for improvement."

Monday, October 28, 2013 in Los Angeles Times

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