LOS ANGELES (CNS) – Tuesday is the final day to cast ballots in the special election on Proposition 50, the statewide congressional redistricting proposal.
Vote centers will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
A complete list and map of vote centers in Los Angeles County is available at locator.lavote.gov, including optional GPS tracking to identify the location nearest at the time of the query.
Additionally, eligible voters who missed the registration deadline can visit any vote center, complete a conditional voter registration, and cast a provisional ballot.
More information is available at www.lavote.gov/home/voting- elections/current-elections/find-my-election-information.
The Orange County Registrar of Voters will have 66 vote centers open on Election Day from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Residents can find their nearest vote centers by visiting ocvote.gov/votecenter.
Voters can also use one of 124 secure ballot drop boxes or three ballot drop-off locations in the county, which can be found at ocvote.gov/dropbox.
Voters will be asked whether to approve the temporary redrawing of California’s congressional district lines in an effort to create more Democratic seats in the House — an effort Gov. Gavin Newsom says will offset a similar move in Texas designed to create more Republican seats.
Proposition 50, dubbed by supporters as “The Election Rigging Response Act,” would establish new congressional district maps for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections. An analysis by the election news website Ballotpedia said it would shift five Republican-held congressional districts toward Democrats.
Democrats hold a 43-9 advantage in the state’s House delegation.
The measure came in response to an effort in Texas for a mid-decade congressional redistricting that analysts said would give Republicans five additional seats.
Other Republican-controlled states such as Florida, Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, New Hampshire, Nebraska and South Carolina are also considering efforts to approve mid-decade redistricting.
Backers of the measure say it “draws fair maps that represent California’s diverse communities and ensure our voices aren’t silenced by Republican gerrymandering in other states.”
Opponents say Proposition 50 “creates one of the most extreme partisan gerrymanders in modern American history” and is a “threat to democracy and fair elections in California,” according to the campaign against the measure.
In a telephone interview with City News Service, Assemblyman Carl DeMaio, R-San Diego, urged Californians to vote “no” on Proposition 50.
“I’m urging them not to get manipulated by California Democrat politicians who are just trying to seize power to protect their own a—,” DeMaio said, who is also the chairman of the Reform California political group. The group has waged a campaign against Proposition 50 and qualify a voter ID initiative for the 2026 November ballot.
“They need to protect their election because they’ve done such a miserable job in this state on the issues that matter to voters: cost of living, homelessness, and job losses,” DeMaio added.
According to the legislator, California Democrats are using President Donald Trump as an excuse to get what they want.
“If Prop 50 passes, it is a fatal blow to the whole concept of fairness and the very foundation of our democracy undermined,” DeMaio told CNS.
He described Proposition 50 as gerrymandering — the political manipulation of electoral districts to advantage a party, group or socioeconomic class.
He opposed both efforts by California and Texas, and criticized any other state attempting to the do the same.
“What we are about to see is the silencing of millions of voters in California, ripping apart communities, and there’s no justification for that,” DeMaio said.
In October, Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and a group of Los Angeles County Democratic legislators conducted a news conference to call on residents to vote yes on Proposition 50 and to “stop Trump’s attacks on LA’s immigrants and economy.”
In a phone interview on Oct. 2, Rivas, D-Hollister, told CNS that his message to voters across the political spectrum was the same.
“Prop 50 is so important because at a time when this president and this administration are bullying other states, led by Republicans, to redistrict congressional lines mid-decade to create an advantage and the opportunity for Republicans to remain in power, we have no choice as a state but to fight back and to advance our own plan to counter this nonsense,” Rivas told CNS.
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