OP|ED - California has led the nation in innovation — from technology to civil rights to democratic reform. Once upon a time, we were the place the nation looked to for a glimpse of the future. One of our proudest achievements was taking redistricting out of politicians’ hands and giving it to an independent commission. That was us at our best: civic, creative, reform‑minded. Now, with Proposition 50, we risk undoing that success.
Remember when we got that one right?
As of late I, like many, assumed the commission was the product of a bipartisan deal, a rare truce in Sacramento. But digging into Proposition 50 reminded me: it wasn’t handed down by politicians. We wrestled it from them. The California Democratic Party fought those reforms tooth and nail. Voters, not parties, made them happen. And it didn’t happen overnight — it took years of organizing, ballot fights, and persistence to square those reforms away. Was all that effort for nothing, to be undone so quickly?
We passed Propositions 11 and 20 and stared down entrenched political power. The system we built is still working: fair, trusted, transparent, more than a decade later. Proof that when Californians lead with principle instead of politics, we get results.
For Los Angeles — home to some of the most diverse districts in the nation — the commission has been proof that fair maps can give every community a voice. Weakening it isn’t just abstract policy; it risks silencing voices in the nation’s most complex, multiethnic city. So why are we about to mess it up?
Before Propositions 11 and 20, the Legislature drew its own districts — politicians picking their own voters. That system bred gerrymandering, protected incumbents, and eroded public trust.
Then came a voter‑led movement: not Democrats, not Republicans. Us.
In 2008, we passed Proposition 11, creating the Citizens Redistricting Commission. Reformers like California Common Cause and the League of Women Voters backed it. It had bipartisan support: Governors Schwarzenegger and Gray Davis stood on the same side for once. The California Democratic Party opposed it. So did Nancy Pelosi and Barbara Boxer. Still, voters said yes — 50.82 percent.
Then in 2010, we doubled down with Proposition 20, extending the commission’s power to congressional districts. Once again, reformers led while party elites resisted. Democratic leaders pushed Proposition 27 to repeal it. Voters rejected that too, and Proposition 20 passed with 61.23 percent. These weren’t partisan wins. They were civic ones. Grassroots corrections to a broken system. Proof that we can build something lasting, even against the headwinds of both parties. And they worked.
Now comes Proposition 50: not voter‑led, not principled, just reactive. A measure triggered not by Californians but by Texas. The Governor wants to flex on the national stage to show that California can punch back. But he’s using our Constitution as a prop in that performance, and that should bother us.
Proposition 50 doesn’t just change redistricting rules. It bakes the reason for changing them into the State Constitution itself. Every time the lines are redrawn, we’ll be reminded that we compromised not out of conviction but out of political expedience — all for a gain that only through political sophistry can any politician claim is ultimately good for us. And that’s not who we are.
If we’re going to amend our Constitution, then let’s mean it. Make it permanent. Own it. Let it become the new normal. Because at least then, one day, we can forget how we got here. But Proposition 50 doesn’t let us forget. It ensures the memory lingers — every cycle, every debate, every map. A little scar in the system that says: this one we didn’t do for us. And let’s be honest: we’re Californians. We don’t get pushed around by other states’ politics. We don’t compromise our principles for short‑term wins.
We’re Californians. We don’t follow, we lead. We don’t copy, we create. That’s what built this state and what rebuilt it, again and again.
So why are we letting national party drama rewrite our Constitution? This isn’t our fight. And it’s not our way.
If Prop 50 passes, it won’t just change the State Constitution — it’ll change the story we tell about ourselves. Yes, we react viscerally at first, but in the end we usually get it right. This is one of those moments.
(Nicholas Consula is a longtime Venice resident, living there since 1999, and a concerned citizen writing about California’s future.)
