California voters may again vote on whether to bring back affirmative action, but in limited form
California voters may soon vote on whether they support using state money to fund programs that improve the health, education or economic well-being of specific racial, ethnic and sexual or gender groups.
Didnt we already vote this down in 2020? a voter may rightfully ask, referring to the failed campaign of Proposition 16, which sought to undo Californias voter-approved 1996 ban on using race, sex, national origin and ethnicity as a factor in public university admissions and other state programs.
The latest effort, known as Assembly Constitutional Amendment 7, wouldnt fully overturn Proposition 209, which created the countrys first ban on affirmative action 27 years ago. Instead, it would allow state agencies to send the governor a waiver request to avoid Proposition 209s restrictions, as long as the exception is based on scholarly research.
The aim is to have the constitutional amendment appear as a proposition on the November 2024 ballot, when voters will decide the countrys next president. To get there, the measure needs to clear each chamber in the state Legislature by a two-thirds vote.
https://calmatters.org/education/higher-education/2023/06/affirmative-action-aca-7/