California Common Cause was the advocacy group sponsoring the initiative.
Others supporting the initiative include •
AARP • NAACP California State Conference • The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce • The
League of Women Voters •
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (Republican) •
Former Governor Gray Davis (Democrat) • Former State Controller Steve Westly • California Chamber of Commerce • California Common Cause • California Forward Action Fund • California Business Roundtable • ACLU - Southern California •
Bay Area Council • Bay Area Leadership Council • California Black Chamber of Commerce • California Police Chiefs Association • League of California Cities • California Democratic Council • California Republican Assembly • California Small Business Association • California Taxpayers' Association • California Conference of Carpenters • Central California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce • IndependentVoice.Org • National Federation of Independent Business, California • North San Diego County NAACP • Neighborhoods for Clean Elections • Santa Clara Cities Association • Silicon Valley Leadership Group • Small Business Action Committee • California Association of Health Underwriters
Newspaper Editorial boards in favor • The
Los Angeles Times • The
San Francisco Chronicle •
San Jose Mercury News •
Fresno Bee •
The Torrance Daily Breeze •
San Diego Union Tribune •
Pasadena Now •
LA Daily News •
North County Times •
Stockton Record •
San Gabriel Valley Tribune •
Santa Cruz Sentinel •
Lompoc Record Arguments in favor of Prop. 11 Notable arguments that have been made in favor of Prop. 11 include: • Under current law the legislature draws its own districts which results in 99 percent of incumbents being re-elected • Partisan gridlock caused by the current way of drawing legislative districts has caused the legislature to underperform in its mission of serving the people of California., • State legislative contests held in districts drawn by a Proposition 11 commission would be more competitive, leading to voters electing more moderate legislators.
Donors supporting Prop 11 As of September 24, three campaign committees supporting Prop. 11 have filed officially with the Secretary of State's office. Some donors have contributed to more than one of these committees. The largest donors altogether are: • Gov. Schwarzenegger's California Dream Team, $2,446,000. •
Charles Munger Jr., son of billionaire
Charles Munger, $1 million •
Michael Bloomberg (the mayor of New York City), $250,000. • Howard Lester (of Williams-Sonoma), $250,000. • Brian Harvey, president of Cypress Land Company, $250,000. •
Reed Hastings, founder of
Netflix, $250,000
Path to the ballot Kimball Petition Management was paid $2,332,988 from two separate campaign committees to collect signatures to put this measure on the ballot. Signatures to qualify the measure for the California 2008 ballot measures|November 2008 ballot were submitted to election officials on May 6, 2008. On June 17, the
California Secretary of State announced that a check of the signatures had established that the measure qualifies for the ballot.,
Supporters file campaign financing complaint In late August, supporters of Prop. 11 filed a complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission because the California Correctional Peace Officers Association—a group that opposes Prop. 11—gave contributions totaling $577,000 to the
Leadership California committee, which is a campaign committee associated with state senate leader
Don Perata. The Prop. 11 group said that it was wrong for the police officers union to give the money to the Perata committee rather than directly to the No on 11, and also alleged that the police union was trying to curry favor with Perata. Days later, the FPPC took the rare step of rejecting the complaint without conducting an investigation. ==Opposition==