Defend Democracy, Vote for Prop 50

by Trena Turner / Cal-Matters / Sept. 19, 2025

As a California redistricting commissioner, I have witnessed firsthand the careful, deliberate and transparent process that drew our congressional lines to reflect the real people of our state. The work was not easy, but it was honorable — and it safeguarded the principle that every community deserves fair representation.

Which is why I am both alarmed and deeply disappointed at the way conversations around Proposition 50, California’s mid-cycle redistricting measure, have often been reduced to a single, shallow question: “What will it cost?”

Yes, this special election carries a financial cost. But if we view it only through dollars and cents, we ignore the greater risks. An estimated 3.4 million Californians stand to lose health care coverage due to Medicaid cuts, and another 3.1 million people — children, veterans and families — face the loss of vital nutrition assistance through SNAP.

There are measurable consequences of this moment that will reshape the health and stability of our state, while steadily eroding the foundations of our democracy.

We cannot ignore the reality that this year’s map-redrawing in Texas and other states, at President Trump’s urging, has been widely challenged as racial gerrymandering. This continues a generational pattern in many states where lines are drawn to weaken Black, brown, immigrant and working-class voices so politicians can pick their voters.

The Constitution is clear: The role of Congress is to make laws and act as a check and balance to the executive branch. But the Republican-led Congress has failed to fulfill that role. Instead of standing as a safeguard, Congress has abdicated its responsibility and has been a rubber stamp for the president’s unconstitutional whims.

The burden for checking this abuse of power has now shifted to the states and to the people themselves. That is why California must do everything within its power to counter. Midterm redistricting is a moral necessity. We need to pass Prop. 50 and do what we can to hold the line.

The real cost of inaction shows up when children go hungry because their communities are drawn out of political power and their needs are ignored.

The real cost shows up when working families are silenced, while wealthy donors and entrenched politicians redraw maps to protect themselves.

The real cost shows up when generations of struggle for fair representation are erased by a pen stroke that divides neighborhoods and dissolves communities of interest.

And ultimately, the greatest cost is borne by our democracy itself. If we refuse to act because we are afraid of the dollar amount for a special election, then we are complicit in paying a far higher price in human dignity and democratic erosion.

Serving as a redistricting commissioner meant listening to thousands of Californians: parents, farmworkers, business owners, pastors, students, seniors and more. They shared stories of who they are and how their communities function, from the Central Valley to the coast, from urban cities to rural towns.

We honored the state Voting Rights Act, respected communities of interest and built maps in the open for everyone to see. It was democracy in action. It was Californians proving that independent, transparent redistricting is not only possible but necessary.

Now, faced with deliberate racial gerrymandering in other states and unchecked executive overreach at home, California must respond with equal determination.

Democracy is never free. Every generation is asked to invest something in its survival. But the question before us is not whether midterm redistricting is expensive. The question is whether we will further enable the unchecked cost of inhumane laws, unconstitutional abuses and far-reaching executive orders affecting ordinary Californians.

We’ve watched this presidential administration dismantle DEI programs and send the National Guard into our cities under false claims of “rampant crime” — all while cutting the very programs that reduced it. He has targeted and criminalized vulnerable people under the guise of “public safety.”

It is shortsighted for Californians to think only about California at this moment. To stand by and allow more of the same is to surrender to authoritarianism in slow motion. The safeguards we once believed would protect us simply aren’t holding.

Now is not the time for neutrality. If reversing course is what it takes to protect representation, equity and democracy itself, then we must act.

The price of justice will always be less than the price of injustice. That is the truth we must remember before we decide what “cost” really means. It is why I urge every voting-age Californian to back Prop. 50, so we can temporarily set aside the 2020 congressional maps and do our part to stand against authoritarian overreach.

Trena Turner served on the California Citizens Redistricting Commission in 2020. She is an ordained minister and the executive pastor of Victory In Praise Church in Stockton.

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5 thoughts on “Defend Democracy, Vote for Prop 50

  1. There is no way that the five additional gerrymandered Democratic congressional seats that California’s Proposition 50 would harvest will overcome the many more seats now being redistricted in many GOP red states across the country. Do the math.
    If Prop 50 passes — no matter how feisty Gavin makes its sound –we will have thrown away a truly democratic citizen-based nonpartisan electoral reform.
    I am voting No on 50.

    1. Come on Old School Frances. Chuck? Hakeem? DCCC? Any next-in-line? Nothing works against the billionaires who have free reign to control elections and the repugnant prostitutes who have sold their $ouls. JB! Jasmine! Gavin! Zohran! Elizabeth! Playing by the rules the conservative side of SCOTUS have set.

    2. Frances – if Prop 50 passes, it will not throw away “a truly democratic citizen-based nonpartisan electoral reform. Your argument that Prop 50 cannot possibly counter efforts by red states is, basically, giving up in advance. If voters don’t use absolutely every tool necessary to fight back against Republican efforts to skew elections in their favor, we can kiss our democracy goodbye.

      Prop 50 will make a TEMPORARY CHANGE to the existing Citizen’s Redistricting Commission – will be in effect only for elections in 2026, 2028 & 2030. Following the 2030 census (IF in fact the current administration doesn’t totally screw it up in their favor), redistricting will revert to the Citizen’s Redistricting Commission.

      The State of California is not the only “blue” state that is planning their own redistricting to counter Texas, Idaho and other “red” state mid-cycle redistricting. We’re not talking about only 5 California seats. To use a well-known phrase, we all must be prepared to fight fire with fire, not simply acquiesce because some believe we can’t win by pushing back.

  2. Frances I can’t disagree with you more. Those five seats give Dems a real chance to take the house and with other states where Dems could gerrymander – IL, NY, MD – they’re getting cold feet (cowards). The Dem Party put forward the John Lewis Voting Rights Act that would outlaw partisan gerrymandering and not a SINGLE R voted in favor of it. The only way to end partisan gerrymandering is to get a trifecta by 2028, throw out the filibuster and end partisan gerrymandering forever. Dems are finally fighting back and you saying they should just continue to play by a rulebook that the GOP burned a long time ago is severely shortsighted. I hope you stand with democracy and change your mind. The rules of the game have changed, time to change too.

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