After California voters passed Proposition 50, the sides were even.
Coveragetap to expand ▾Spectrum: Mixed🌍US: 1 · Other: 1
- Gavin Newsom spent hundreds of millions of dollars that California doesn't have when he passed Proposition 50 to gerrymander the state's congressional districts, drawing Republicans out of office.
- Texas had likely eliminated four Democrat seats; California had likely eliminated the same number.
Gavin Newsom's decision to pass Proposition 50 in California has ignited a political and financial controversy. The measure, which involved spending hundreds of millions of dollars, aimed to gerrymander the state's congressional districts to counteract similar efforts in Texas that favored Republicans.
This move temporarily sidelined California's independent redistricting commission, allowing the dominant Democratic Party to control the process. Newsom justified Proposition 50 as a necessary response to Texas's redistricting, which had likely eliminated four Democrat-held seats.
In turn, California's redistricting under Proposition 50 is believed to have removed an equivalent number of Republican-held seats. Critics have raised concerns about the financial implications of this decision, arguing that the state cannot afford such expenditures.
The debate highlights the ongoing partisan battles over congressional district boundaries and the financial priorities of state governance.
Left- and right-leaning outlets are covering this story differently — in which facts to emphasize, which context to include, and how to frame causes and consequences.

