Pubdate: Sat, 4 Dec 2010 Source: Orange County Register, The (CA) Copyright: 2010 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321 Author: Martin Wisckol Referenced: The survey http://www.ppic.org/content/pubs/survey/S_1210MBS.pdf Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Proposition+19 Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) NOVEMBER VOTERS' 'BIG TURNOUT'? 44% A higher percentage of the state's registered voters made it to the Nov. 2 polls than in any gubernatorial general election since 1994, when Republicans celebrated an even bigger victory as they took both the House and the Senate from Democrats. Of course, California didn't help the GOP takeover of the House this time. The state became even more blue, maintaining Democratic majorities in both houses of the Legislature and in the congressional delegation, and sweeping every statewide office. And while the 59.5 percent turnout among registered voters topped every gubernatorial election since 60.5 percent of voters turned out in 1994, it's hardly a number to crow about. Especially when you consider only 73 percent of eligible adults are registered, meaning just 43.6 percent of eligible adults cast ballots. Registered voters in Orange County were far more active than the rest of the state in the 1994 (66.2 percent) and 1998 (61.4 percent) general elections, but they trailed the state turnout this year, with 55.4 percent casting ballots. More than half of those county votes were cast by mail ballots, a new record for a gubernatorial general election here. Mail voting shot way up after the 2002 change of law, which eliminated the requirement that you had to provide a reason for why you couldn't make it to the polls if you wanted to be a permanent mail voter. In the 2002 general election, 29 percent of the county cast mail ballots. That had leaped to 48 percent in 2006, and crept up to 52 percent this time. Marijuana Voters A post-election survey found that 43 percent of voters said they were more enthusiastic than usual about voting in the November election, and 23 percent said they were equally enthusiastic as usual. The poll by the Public Policy Institute of California found that 29 percent of voters were less enthusiastic than usual. Proposition 19, the failed measure to legalize marijuana, was unsurprisingly the ballot measure stirring the most interest, with 38 percent of voters saying it was on the top of their list. Next was Proposition 23, the failed effort to delay implementation of the state's new greenhouse gas law, named by 16 percent of voters. "Similar to Proposition 19, those who voted 'no' on Proposition 23 are much more likely than those who voted 'yes' to call the outcome of the vote on the measure important," reads the PPIC report. Those voting against Prop. 19 were Republicans (73 percent opposed), Latinos (60 percent), whites (53 percent), women (58 percent), and older voters (58 percent). Supporters included Democrats (56 percent), independents (55 percent) and voters ages 18 34 (62 percent). But there are indications that voters are growing wary of the state's initiative process, which some experts blame in part for budget difficulties because some past measures mandate spending. "Two-thirds of voters said the wording of the initiatives on the ballot was too complicated or confusing," says the report. "And for the first time in a PPIC post-election survey, less than half say they have confidence in their fellow voters to make public policy decisions at the ballot box." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake