In November 2005, the electorate rejected
Proposition 77 which called for a panel of three retired judges to draw boundaries for
California's Senate,
Assembly,
congressional and
Board of Equalization districts. It had been viewed with suspicion due to its
Republican backers.
FairVote suggested that independent redistricting would help avoid
gerrymandering, but the major reform needed was the replacement of
single member districts with multi-member districts. This would make it possible to implement
single transferable vote or other
proportional representation systems. In November 2008, voters in California passed
Proposition 11 to reform how electoral districts are drawn in the state. The proposition called for a commission of fourteen non-politician voters to draw boundaries for the Senate, Assembly, and Board of Equalization districts. The commission is to be made up of five Democrats, five Republicans, and four commissioners from neither major party.{{cite news In November 2010,
Proposition 20 was passed, which put the commission in charge of drawing United States House of Representatives districts in California. ==Nonpartisan blanket primaries==