Recent referenda on the minimum wage produced some striking results:
The California proposal to raise the minimum wage to $18 an hour in steps by 2026 narrowly failed, 51%-49%. Opponents and backers amassed a combined $1.8 million war chest for the issue — the lowest amount of all the propositions on Californians’ ballots this year, according to The Sacramento Bee. If the measure had passed, it would have made California, along with Hawaii, the highest general minimum wage of any state.
Since 1994, every single state referendum on the minimum wage had passed, even in red states like South Dakota and Nebraska. For instance, the recent election also produced this result in Missouri:
Missouri voters agreed 58%-42% to establish a $13.75-an-hour minimum wage by next year, which would then increase by $1.25 a year until it reached $15 an hour in 2026.
Keep in mind that the cost of living in California is far higher than in Missouri. So what explains the California vote?
I see several factors at work:
- Voters are still angry about high inflation.
- Shoppers are annoyed at the way that tipping has spread to more and more types of businesses.
- California has a separate $20 minimum wage for fast food workers. Most voters are older, and recall working for less money when young, even adjusting for inflation.
But it’s probably not just anger about high prices. California’s rent control proposition was also rejected, and by a far larger margin, nearly 60-40. I suspect that the election results in California partly reflect a backlash against progressivism.
When I was young, California was a red state. The passage of Proposition 13 in 1978 restrained the growth in property taxes. In 1988, California voted for Bush while Massachusetts liberal Mike Dukakis won Iowa by 10 points. In 1994, voters passed Proposition 187, which banned the provision of public services to illegal aliens in California. In the same year, voters approved the “three strikes law”, which mandated long prison sentences (25 years to life) for three felony convictions, even if the third conviction was for a relatively minor offense. Prop 13 remains in effect, but the other propositions were later watered down.
Over time, red states frequently become blue, and vice versa. It’s quite possible than in a few decades West Virginia will be blue and Vermont will be red. Indeed West Virginia was blue when I was young, and Vermont is one of only two states that voted Republican in 1936.  Â
Minimum wages and rent control are not the only areas when California voters shifted to the right:
California voters passed Prop. 36, which increases penalties for retail theft and drug trafficking, and they voted down Proposition 6, which would have paid people in prison for their labor and abolished slavery in any form. Â
In the San Francisco Bay Area, voters ousted the progressive-minded Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price. Democratic socialist San Francisco Supervisor Dean Preston lost his race.Â
In Los Angeles, DA George Gascón was ousted by Nathan Hochman, a candidate who promised he would be a more law-and-order district attorney.
The votes on criminal justice issues did not surprise me, as there is a lot of anger here about the increase in crimes such as shoplifting. But I was mildly (and pleasantly) surprised by the shift in voter sentiment against interventionist economic policies. We’ll see if this is the start of a new trend. California’s Proposition 13 kicked off a national tax revolt that led to the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.Â
READER COMMENTS
Warren Platts
Nov 20 2024 at 5:00pm
What we want is a country where minimum wage laws are superfluous because wages are naturally high…
Scott Sumner
Nov 20 2024 at 6:27pm
Actually, we have that. In Texas, the minimum wage in $7.25, but fast food workers earn far more than that figure.
Jon Murphy
Nov 21 2024 at 4:57am
Same here in Louisiana. Even in my small town, the only place paying mandated minimum wage is the University doing work-study. Everywhere else is paying double minimum wage.Â
Craig
Nov 20 2024 at 6:08pm
Can confusion be ruled out? I ask because I have seen ballot measures where one might be for the general proposition but vote in a way that is contrary because of the wording.
Scott Sumner
Nov 20 2024 at 6:28pm
I agree that it’s sometimes a problem, but probably not in this case. Yes meant a higher minimum wage, and no meant no increase. That’s not very confusing.
Peter
Nov 20 2024 at 7:14pm
Just out of curiosity Scott, who are these people: “there is a lot of anger here about the increase in crimes such as shoplifting”?
I say that because here in Hawaii I constantly hear that same story and yet when I talk to the “average man” it’s really not something anyone cares about, much less anger. Generally the feedback is “victimless crime” or “it’s the businesses fault, if it concerned them maybe they should increase security rather than buy a new Tesla”. I personally know quite a few shoplifters and nobody really cares including the employees and store managers that assist them, the cops, prosecutors, and judges who won’t punish them, nor any of their friends or family or vendors who know or take their ill gotten money.
steve
Nov 20 2024 at 8:35pm
There is often a disconnect between stories about crime and actual incidence. The national retail association published its numbers on shoplifting, retail crime in general, and it’s about the same as it has always been. A closer look showed a bit of variation with rates being up in a couple of large cities. That generated lots of national stories so people thought it was an issue for everyone when it was not.Â
Timing also matters a lot. Crime went up in 2020 associated with the pandemic, when those liberal prosecutors were in office, but it went up everywhere else also. However, it generated a lot of stories since people wanted something or someone to blame. Those same DAs were in office when crime fell but stories about crime falling are back page news while stories about it increasing lead the news.Â
Steve
BC
Nov 20 2024 at 11:39pm
“when I talk to the ‘average man’ [shoplifting]’s really not something anyone cares about…I personally know quite a few shoplifters” Â
Maybe, your circle is not as average as you think. I’ve lived in both blue collar Macomb County, MI, and among white collar professionals in Boston, MA, and I don’t think I’ve ever encountered anyone that wouldn’t be deeply embarrassed to be caught shoplifting. If they shoplift, they definitely hide that from people they know. I also can’t think of any “real life” person that has referred to shoplifting as a victimless crime. That’s something I’ve only heard activists on TV say.Â
Peter
Nov 21 2024 at 6:30am
I think you’d be surprised if you could get them in confidence. I’m not saying everyone condones it but it just doesn’t make them ANGRY nor is it something they dwell like. Like honestly, when was the last time you think any of your friends who didn’t own a retail store stayed up at night not able to sleep enraged because someone somewhere stole a banana from Safeway? Shoplifting is like drugs, most people have did it at least once hence it’s not something people lose sleep over privately. Â
You’ve never walked out a store forgetting to pay and didn’t go back after you realized it? You’ve never as a kid took candy? Never as a teenager stole an item of clothes? Never ordered a meal and walked out on the bill? Never took two items from the take one only samples? Never pirated software, music, movies which is just digital shoplifting? Never noticed the store made an error in your favor and didn’t tell them? Never bought an item with the sole intent to use it once and return it? Etc. Never not even once? Hell even Winona Ryder has shoplifted. My ex shoplifts a non-free coffee refill weekly, I remember doing that myself with fountain soda all the time back in the 80s and I don’t lose any sleep over it today nor do I think my neighbors were back then.
Likewise do you think any of your white collar friends would condone their 15 year old daughter a three year prison sentence because her and her friends stole a blouse as part of a dare / peer pressure? Because California just approved that.
Scott Sumner
Nov 21 2024 at 2:00am
I’ve spoken with a lot of people who are angry. And God help us if telling stores to “increase security” is the solution. How about arresting people and sending people to jail? Stealing is a serious crime.
Voters in LA and Oakland obviously see the problem.
As far as statistics, many stores stopped reporting the crimes because they know the police will do nothing.
Dylan
Nov 21 2024 at 11:10am
Eh…I don’t know that I’d describe it as angry, but I certainly don’t like that I have to wait 20 minutes for a store employee so that I can buy deodorant and laundry detergent.
David S
Nov 22 2024 at 3:05am
California swinging back to the GOP is intriguing, but it would probably take some adjustments in the general attitude of left-leaning voters who could rally behind another Reagan-type politician. California Republicans seem a bit different than the Florida Republicans who are the center of gravity of the party. Could a Matt Gaetz win any type of election anywhere in California?
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