The Future of California Is Libertarian

Phil Jr.
4 min readNov 9, 2020

In a recent article from the National Review entitled smugly “Californians Not as Crazy as We Thought?” They dive into the interesting results from the 2020 election.

Outside of the national election, there are still results and indications of where California is going as a state with its electorate.

In the National Review article, they point out that in a surprising manner, Californians when confronted with proposition ballot measures that are for lower taxes and free market, they actually support them.

Take for example Prop 15 which sought to raise property taxes on commercial properties. It’s no surprise every election cycle Democrats push to chip away at Prop 13, a ballot measure passed in the 70’s to prevent huge spikes in property taxes. It’s the last frontier in terms of a tax base for California. With sky rocketing property prices all over the state, raising property taxes would be result in an avalanche of tax revenues flowing into the state’s coffers.

But Californians rejected it. They habitually reject anything that tampers with Prop 13. Every election cycle Democrats try, and every election cycle it gets voted down by large margins. Californians don’t want their property taxes raised. Simple as that.

Another example is the pro-free market Proposition 22. It sought to further drive the stake into Lorena Gonzalez’s much maligned AB5, which essentially bans independent contractors across the state. Ironic the state that was ground zero for a technology driven gig economy, now seeks to destroy it. If only to drive employees into unions (which then donate to Democratic candidates) and increase payroll tax revenues. Voters soundly voted in favor of Prop 22 and thus voting for the free market. Allow workers to make a living how they choose and leave them alone was the response from Californian voters.

Other measures that didn’t pass were allowing 17 year olds to vote in primaries (again another voter grab by Democrats), mandating dialysis centers to have doctors or registered nurses administer dialysis, and the rejection of allowing public agencies and the government to discriminate based on race. They seem like kooky measures from the outside and are always fodder for ridicule to the rest of the nation, but quietly among all the chaos of the national election, Californians voted pretty conservatively.

Let’s roll the calendar back top 2016. When the home coming queen Prop measure that year was Prop 64, the vote to legalize marijuana for recreational sale. It was passed in 2016 when it had failed previously for one reason, Republicans began to support the idea of selling marijuana and allowing the market to take advantage of the growth of a new economic sector in California. Whether that has come to fruition or not is not subject of this article, but it does give us an important glimpse into the changing sentiments of Republican voters in California, they are becoming more socially liberal. Prop 64 would not have passed if more Republicans didn’t support it, it’s that simple. But in 2016, Republicans voted like Libertarians and it passed.

I have said this repeatedly on my podcast that California Republicans if they are to have a prayer of staying relevant in this state need to begin incorporating libertarian ideals into their Party platform. I use the small “l” because the Libertarian Party has a bad image problem and is not marketable to the masses. But as we see in recent elections, libertarian ideals are something Californians seem to get behind.

Using completely anecdotal evidence from my experience here in Southern California, when Democrats are pressed on their beliefs, they find they are actually more libertarian than they believe. They are socially liberal, but in the end don’t like higher taxes paying for a bloated and ineffective government.

Basically, the Californian mentality can best be described as “Leave me alone to live my life and prosper.”

If the CAGOP were smart, they would read the writing on the wall and start to position themselves in this way. A California Republican should be much more different than a Nebraska Republican. They would drop Reagan era and neo con positions and begin to focus on building a big tent party whereby they propose free market solutions, lower taxes, and stop nagging people about abortions or gender issues.

It is not too hard to do this either. The voters are already there. They just need to figure out how to revamp their messaging and reach more voters.

Californians continue to show they support free market, lower tax measures in this state. It’s time for the CAGOP to actually listen to them, instead of to their over paid consultants, and build a worthy alternative to the Democratic Party here that has enjoyed one-party rule for too long.

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Phil Jr.

Attorney in California. I have lots of thoughts outside of law, and sometimes I like to write them down for other people to read.