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Elections in California. Proposition 30 is a California ballot proposition that appeared in the general election on November 8, 2022. The measure was defeated. The initiative would have raised taxes on the wealthy to fund wildfire management and electric vehicle (and ZEV) incentives and infrastructure. [1]
Elections in California. Proposition 30, officially titled Temporary Taxes to Fund Education, is a California ballot measure that was decided by California voters at the statewide election on November 6, 2012. The initiative is a measure to increase taxes to prevent US$6 billion cuts to the education budget for California state schools.
Proposition 30: Wealth tax for zero-emission vehicle programs This ballot measure would require wealthy Californians to pay an additional 1.75% in personal income taxes on annual earnings above $2 ...
t. e. Proposition 13 (officially named the People's Initiative to Limit Property Taxation) is an amendment of the Constitution of California enacted during 1978, by means of the initiative process, to cap property taxes and limit property reassessments to when the property changes ownership, as well as require a 2/3 majority for tax increases ...
Max Baumhefner, a San Francisco attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, has heard Gov. Gavin Newsom’s claim that Proposition 30 was “devised by a single corporation to funnel state ...
California’s Proposition 30, a measure that would increase taxes on those making more than $2 million dollars a year by 1.75 percent in order to pay for zero-emission vehicles and wildfire ...
t. e. The 2016 Proposition 63, titled Firearms and Ammunition Sales, is a California ballot proposition that passed on the November 8, 2016 ballot. It requires a background check and California Department of Justice authorization to purchase ammunition, prohibits possession of high-capacity ammunition magazines over ten rounds, levies fines for ...
Proposition 30 would spend $30 billion to $90 billion to subsidize the electric car industry over the next 20 years, with the state's highest-income Californians picking up the tab.