P&F Campaigns in Marin County
Local Candidates
State Senate
Ian Grimes is the Peace and Freedom Party
candidate for State Senate in the 3rd District, which includes all
of Marin County, most of San Francisco,
and part of Sonoma County.
He came in third of four candidates, behind the Democrat, Carol Midgden,
who was elected and the Republican, but ahead of the Libertarian. He
received 3,524 votes (2.8%) in Marin County, of 12,013 (3.1%) in the
district.
U.S. House of Representatives
There are no Peace and Freedom Party candidates for U.S. House of
Representatives in Marin County.
State Assembly
There are no Peace and Freedom Party candidates for State
Assembly in Marin County.
Local Non-partisan Offices
The webmaster
for this website is not aware of any endorsements of candidates for local
non-partisan offices by the local Peace and Freedom Party organization.
Peace and Freedom Party Central Committees
There are no elected members of the Peace and Freedom Party Central Committees
from Marin County.
Local Measures
The webmaster
for this website is not aware of any endorsements of ballot measures
by the local Peace and Freedom Party organization.
Statewide Candidates
President of the United States
The Peace and Freedom Party's presidential ticket, chosen at our state
convention, held the weekend of July 30th and August 1st in Los Angeles,
consists of Leonard Peltier for President of the U.S.
and Janice Jordan for Vice-President of the U.S.
The Peltier/Jordan ticket came in fifth of six tickets on the ballot statewide,
with 27,607 votes for 0.2%. In Marin County, the Peltier/Jordan ticket came in
fifth with 199 votes for 0.1%. Statewide but not locally, these results were also
ahead of the Nader/Camejo ticket, which received 21,213 (0.1%) statewide and
405 (0.2%) in Marin County as write-ins. For more detailed results, see pages 9 and 10
(of the section, numbered pages 15 and 16 of the Supplement) of the
Presidential section on political districts by county of the Supplement to the
statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 16 to 30 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
United States Senator
The Peace and Freedom Party candidate for U.S. Senator is
Marsha Feinland. She came in third of five
candidates on the ballot statewide, with 243,846 votes for 2.1%.
In Marin County, she came in fourth, edged out by Libertarian Jim Gray for third
place, with 1,915 votes for 1.44%. For more detailed results, see page 1
(of the section, numbered page 52 of the Supplement) of the
U.S. Senate section on political districts by county of the Supplement to the
statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 46 to 60 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
Statewide Measures
There were sixteen propositions on the statewide ballot November 2nd,
assigned proposition numbers 59 to 72, plus 60A and 1A. The
Peace and Freedom Party took positions on most of them.
- Proposition 62 (voter pamphlet summary and arguments available as a
190 KB PDF,
full text as a
301 KB PDF):
"No Choice" initiative would put all candidates from all parties
on a single blanket primary ballot for all partisan offices except President.
Only the top two primary-election candidates with most votes for an office,
whether or not members of the same party, would go on to the general election.
This is similar to the election systems used in France and Louisiana,
resulting in runoffs between open racists like Jacques LePen and David Duke
and corrupt establishment politicians, with no progressive alternative
allowed on that ballot. The proponents of this initiative think it will
guarantee that socially-moderate, pro-business candidates like Democrats
Gray Davis and Dianne Feinstein and Republicans Richard Riordan and Arnold
Schwarzenegger won't lose to labor oriented progressives or religious right
conservatives in their party primaries.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this initiative.
With our opposition, Proposition 62 failed by a statewide vote of
5,136,010 (46.3%) Yes to 5,954,969 (53.7%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 57,440 (48.2%) Yes to 61,714 (51.8%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 35 (of the section, numbered page 146 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 316 to 330 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 66: (voter pamphlet summary and arguments available as a
175 KB PDF,
full text as a
200 KB PDF):
This initiative circulated by FACTS would modify three strikes law by
requiring that second and third strikes be serious or violent felonies and
narrowing definitions of what crimes are "serious or violent" and
when two convictions constitute separate strikes. Applies retroactively to
reduce the long sentences some prisoners received for petty crimes. Also
increases penalties for some sex crimes against children.
Peace and Freedom recommended a YES vote on this initiative.
Despite our support, Proposition 66 failed by a statewide vote
of 5,604,060 (47.3%) Yes to 6,238,060 (52.7%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 77,098 (59.7%) Yes to 52,170 (40.3%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 85 (of the section, numbered page 196 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 376 to 390 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 72: (voter pamphlet summary and arguments available as a
197 KB PDF,
full text as a
187 KB PDF): Referendum on John Burton's
SB 2
(which requires some employers to provide health insurance plans for some
employees).
Peace and Freedom opposed the referendum and supported keeping the law, as a
step forward even though we prefer a publicly funded health care system
not tied to workers' jobs. This meant a YES vote on the ballot.
Despite our support, Proposition 72 failed by a statewide vote
of 5,709,500 (49.2%) Yes to 5,889,936 (50.8%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 63,889 (52.0%) Yes to 59,047 (48.0%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 135 (of the section, numbered page 246 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 466 to 480 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 59: SCA 1,
"Access to government information".
Peace and Freedom recommended a YES vote on this constitutional amendment.
With our support, Proposition 59 passed by a statewide vote
of 9,334,852 (83.4%) Yes to 1,870,146 (16.6%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 106,123 (87.8%) Yes to 14,967 (12.4%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 10 (of the section, numbered page 121 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 256 to 270 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 60: "Election Rights of Political Parties".
Peace and Freedom recommended a YES vote on this constitutional amendment.
With our support, Proposition 60 passed by a statewide vote
of 7,227,433 (67.6%) Yes to 3,478,774 (32.4%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 74,994 (66.4%) Yes to 37,945 (33.6%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 10 (of the section, numbered page 121 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 271 to 285 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 60A: "Surplus Property".
Peace and Freedom decided not to take a position on this constitutional
amendment.
Proposition 60A passed by a statewide vote
of 7,763,116 (73.1%) Yes to 2,860,562 (26.9%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 89,976 (78.7%) Yes to 24,382 (21.3%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 35 (of the section, numbered page 146 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 286 to 300 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 61: Bonds for Children's Hospitals.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this bond measure. The bonds are
for a generally good purpose, but our general opposition to bonds determined
our recommendation.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 61 passed by a statewide vote
of 6,608,149 (58.1%) Yes to 4,769,612 (41.9%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 72,182 (59.6%) Yes to 48,888 (40.4%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 35 (of the section, numbered page 146 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 301 to 315 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 63: (voter pamphlet summary and arguments available as a
143 KB PDF,
full text as a
171 KB PDF):
Tax millionaires to support mental health services.
Peace and Freedom recommended a YES vote on this initiative.
With our support, Proposition 63 passed by a statewide vote
of 6,184,907 (53.7%) Yes to 5,341,969 (46.3%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 79,410 (63.3%) Yes to 45,971 (36.7%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 60 (of the section, numbered page 171 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 331 to 345 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 64: "Limits on Private Enforcement of Unfair Business
Competition Laws".
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure, which would make
it more difficult to go after corporate crime.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 64 passed by a statewide vote
of 6,549,609 (58.8%) Yes to 4,596,046 (41.2%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 57,938 (48.8%) Yes to 60,732 (51.2%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 60 (of the section, numbered page 171 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 346 to 360 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 65: "Local Government Funds, Revenues. State Mandates".
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure. The solution to local
government funding problems is not to lock into place reliance on regressive
taxes that distort land use decisions.
With our opposition, Proposition 65 failed by a statewide vote
of 3,932,201 (37.8%) Yes to 6,449,830 (62.2%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 35,420 (32.7%) Yes to 72,790 (67.3%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 60 (of the section, numbered page 171 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 361 to 375 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 67: Telephone tax to pay for Emergency Medical Services.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure; emergency medical
services should be properly funded, but not by a regressive tax that costs
poor people more than the rich. Peace and Freedom advocates a single-payer
health care system funded by progressive taxation, which would pay for
emergency medical services without the need for any special, dedicated
funding.
With our opposition, Proposition 67 failed by a statewide vote
of 3,243,132 (28.4%) Yes to 8,165,809 (71.6%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 43,265 (35.1%) Yes to 79,828 (64.9%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 85 (of the section, numbered page 196 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 391 to 405 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 68: Casino gambling for card-rooms and race tracks. If
Indian tribes that run casinos don't accept new compacts within 90 days,
this measure would allow sixteen specific card-rooms and race tracks to
run casinos with slot machines.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure.
With our opposition, Proposition 68 failed by a statewide vote
of 1,897,177 (16.2%) Yes to 9,801,284 (83.8%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 12,232 (9.7%) Yes to 113,975 (90.3%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 85 (of the section, numbered page 196 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 406 to 420 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 69: DNA samples from arrestees. This would allow police
to take DNA samples from anyone they arrest for a felony, even if the
case is so weak the District Attorney declines to prosecute it, and
enter it into a statewide database.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 69 passed by a statewide vote
of 7,194,347 (62.1%) Yes to 4,400,826 (37.9%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 73,151 (58.8%) Yes to 51,174 (41.2%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 110 (of the section, numbered page 221 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 421 to 435 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 70: "Tribal Gaming Compacts. Exclusive Gaming Rights.
Contributions to State". This measure would recognize the sovereignty
of California Indian tribes by giving tribal casinos on reservation lands
a monopoly on casino gambling in California, in exchange for financial
contributions to the state government.
Peace and Freedom recommended a YES vote on this measure.
Depite our support, Proposition 70 failed by a statewide vote
of 2,763,800 (23.7%) Yes to 8,880,110 (76.3%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 17,170 (13.8%) Yes to 107,175 (86.2%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 110 (of the section, numbered page 221 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 436 to 450 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 71: Bonds for Stem Cell Research.
Peace and Freedom recommended a NO vote on this measure.
The bonds are for a generally good purpose, but our general opposition to
bonds determined our recommendation.
Despite our opposition, Proposition 71 passed by a statewide vote
of 7,018,059 (59.1%) Yes to 4,867,090 (40.9%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 83,635 (65.6%) Yes to 43,949 (34.4%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 110 (of the section, numbered page 221 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 451 to 465 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
- Proposition 1A: "Protection of Local Government Revenues".
Peace and Freedom decided not to take a position on this constitutional
amendment, which was the governor's and legislature's replacement for
Proposition 65.
Proposition 1A passed by a statewide vote of
9,411,198 (83.7%) Yes to 1,840,002 (16.3%) No.
In Marin County, the vote was 105,480 (85.9%) Yes to 17,332 (14.1%) No.
For more detailed results, see page 10 (of the section, numbered page 121 of the
Supplement) of the
ballot measures section on political districts by county of the Supplement to
the statewide Statement of Vote, and pages 241 to 255 of the
Marin
County Statement of Vote for results by precinct.
This page was last updated on 28 July 2005.
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