Californians appear cool to the idea of putting the state’s ground-breaking climate change legislation on a back burner.
Proposition 23, which aims to delay California’s Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, is trailing among likely voters 48 percent to 32 percent, according to a new Los Angeles Times/USC poll.
The results, based on a sampling of 922 likely voters, show that Democrats and independents oppose Prop. 23 by wide margins. Among GOP likely voters, however, the measure was favored 41 percent to 36 percent, with the rest undecided.
Out-of-state oil companies have provided major financial support for Prop. 23, which has been promoted as a way to postpone costly air pollution emissions restrictions that would damage the state’s already-struggling economy.
Lack of support for the measure is “not so much about how voters feel about the merits of the global warming law itself, but rather the efforts of outside oil companies to pull a fast one,” said Jack Pitney, a professor at Claremont McKenna College.
Prop. 23 would halt the state’s global warming law until unemployment reaches 5.5 percent or less for a full year. California has achieved that economic performance only three times since 1970 and, with the jobless rate currently at 12.4 percent, analysts say the requirement would delay the law for years.
The global warming law, currently is scheduled to be fully implemented in 2012, requires that the state lower carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 through restrictions on businesses and vehicles.
Many voters apparently aren’t convinced that Prop. 23 would help California recover. “It doesn’t make sense that stopping the improvement of air quality would create jobs,” Tobias Martinez, a 45-year-old truck driver, told the Times.
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PROP 26 is just as destructive as PROP 23. Prop 26 is a treacherous, Big Oil rip-off, which “passes the buck” from oil corporation, clean-up fees to the public’s taxes, who will pay the oil recycling fees, the materials hazards fees and other fees. If you do not understand the ambiguities and the intrigues behind Prop 26, then, vote no. BP, Exxon Mobil and Shell are silent partners behind Prop 26. Power to the people.