Millions of dollars spent on redistricting commercials

Spread the love

As the California special election heats up in the weeks leading to voters saying yay or nay on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s congressional redistricting effort, big money continues to fuel campaigns for and against it.

Some of that money is paying for a new pro-Proposition 50 advertising campaign, paid for by billionaire Tom Steyer, featuring a television commercial set in the near future depicting President Donald Trump watching news coverage of the passage of measure. That commercial is part of Steyer’s “Stick it to Trump” campaign encouraging California voters to vote yes on Prop. 50 to pick up five more Democratic seats in the U.S. House. That’s the response by California Democrats to Texas drawing new districts to add five more Republican seats.

In the new commercials, Trump is portrayed by an actor, appearing to throw fast food at the TV and yelling at the screen as results of the Prop. 50 vote, scheduled for Nov. 4, are announced.

Steyer announced last week he would donate more than $12 million to the pro-Prop. 50 campaign, according to media reports. His name is on the “Stick It To Trump” commercials that are now airing.

Steyer’s pro-Prop. 50 ad was released after campaign ads against Prop. 50, paid for in large part by California billionaire Charles Thomas Munger Jr., one of the ballot initiative’s biggest opponents.

Munger has contributed more than $32 million to the Project Voters First Committee, which opposes the proposition, according to the Fair Political Practices Commission.

The anti-Prop. 50 ads Munger paid for depict a large weight being dropped on the phrase “Fair Elections” spelled out in carefully crafted wooden letters, shattering the letters as criticism of the proposition plays out over the screen.

The evocative commercials highlight two sides of what is shaping up to be a contentious battle between supporters and opponents of the redistricting effort, who favor current congressional district lines drawn by the state’s independent Citizens Redistricting Commission. The commission was created in 2008 after voters in California passed the Voters First Act, which authorizes the commission to redraw district lines for California’s state Senate and Assembly districts, as well as State Board of Equalization Districts.

Two years later, California voters authorized the commission to also redraw congressional district lines with the Congressional Voters First Act.

Munger donated $1.4 million to pass Proposition 11, the 2008 measure creating the redistricting commission. And he spent about $12.2 million to support Proposition 20, which expanded the commission’s duties to include drawing congressional districts. He also spent $12.2 million to defeat Proposition 27, a 2010 measure to eliminate the commission.

Prop. 50, or the Election Rigging Response Act, is Newsom’s answer to Texas’s redrawing of congressional district lines and is meant to offset the five congressional seats Texas Republicans have the potential to swing in 2026. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, signed his state’s new congressional redistricting bill into law in August, stating that the move was necessary to ensure fairer representation in Congress for Texas’ voters.

The Texas move was seen by Newsom as an attack on California’s mostly Democratic voters, Newsom said in a news release the same month.

“California and Californians have been uniquely targeted by the Trump Administration, and we are not going to sit idle while they command Texas and other states to rig the next election to keep power — pursuing more extreme and unpopular policies,” said Newsom in that news release. “This proposal would give Californians a choice to fight back — and bring much needed accountability and oversight to the Trump Administration.”

Despite Newsom’s efforts to seek what he sees as a balance representation in Congress, Republican legislators don’t believe Newsom’s redistricting effort will ultimately serve that purpose.

“What will end up happening is you’ll have predetermined elections that I think are bad for Democrats, independents and Republicans,” said state Sen. Tony Strickland, R-Huntington Beach.

“When you already know who the winner is before the election even starts, I don’t think that’s healthy for our democracy, and that’s exactly what will happen,” Strickland told The Center Square Tuesday. “If 50 passes, we’ll have no competitive congressional races in California.”

Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, R-San Diego, weighed in Tuesday about the ballot initiative, as well as the ads promoting and opposing Prop. 50.

“I think it’s telling that we see the ‘yes’ campaign drawing all the attention to the President and away from the actual merits of the measure,” Jones told The Center Square in a statement Tuesday. “Prop. 50 is not an attack on the President; it’s an attack on Californians. On their right to true democratic representation free from political gamesmanship and gerrymandering. It’s an attack on our state constitution and on democracy as we know it in the Golden State.”

“The ‘yes’ campaign can broadcast all the ‘orange-man-bad’ jokes they want,” Jones said. “At the end of the day, they know they’re on the wrong side of history and I believe the voters know that too and that it’ll show on November 4th.”

Biggest donors for and against Prop. 50

The Fair Political Practices Commission’s Prop. 50 database shows that as of Tuesday, more than $43.9 million has been contributed by the effort’s top supporters toward the passage of Newsom’s congressional redistricting effort. More than $40.8 million has been contributed toward opposing the proposition by its most ardent detractors.

According to the Fair Political Practices Commission, the single biggest contributor raising money for the ballot initiative, the D.C.-based HMP for Prop 50, gave more than $10.9 million through Sept. 20 for Prop. 50’s passage. By comparison, $5 million was contributed in opposition by another D.C.-based group, No on Prop 50 Congressional Leadership Fund.

Again, media reports have cited Seyer, a Democrat who ran for president in 2020, announcing he would contribute more than $12 million for the campaign to pass Prop. 50.

However, the single biggest contributor against the ballot initiative, Munger, has so far spent $32,790,000 against Prop. 50’s passage, according to the Fair Political Practices Commission. No one single individual has matched that figure in supporting Prop. 50, the FPPC portal shows, but several other committees and groups together have contributed more than $41.4 million to advance the proposition.

Some of these top contributors include New York-based Fund for Policy Reform, which has contributed $10 million, followed by the California Nurses Association and the California Teachers Association Issues PAC, which have given $3.2 million and more than $3 million, respectively.

Other top contributors toward passage of Prop. 50 include the D.C.-based National Education Association, which has so far contributed $3 million, and Newsom for Governor 2022, which contributed $2.6 million. Consumer Attorneys of California Issues Political Action Committee and Working for Working Americans Sponsored by United Brotherhood of Carpenters each separately contributed $2 million.

Two of the top individuals who gave outsize donations to the passage of Prop. 50 included just two people — Michael Moritz, a Californian, and Gwendolyn Sontheim, a resident of Minnesota, according to the Fair Political Practices Commission.

In opposition to Prop. 50, some of the top contributors included the D.C.-based No on Prop. 50 Congressional Leadership Fund, which put in $5 million; the Maryland-based Kevin McCarthy for Congress, which contributed $1 million, and Thomas M. Siebel, a California resident, who gave $1 million.

Other contributors to the No on Prop. 50 – Stop Sacramento’s Power Grab Committee included the Wisconsin-based Jim Jordan for Congress, which gave $300,000; the Ken Calvert for Congress/Eureka Political Action Committee, which gave more than $276,000; Redding Rancheria, which gave $150,000, and Vince Fong for Congress, Ranch Management LLC and Jay Obernotle for Congress, which each gave $100,000.

Calvert, Fong and Obernolte are Republican congressmen in California. Calvert is among the five Republican congressmen in California at risk of losing their seats if Proposition 50 passes, as The Center Square previously reported.

Other top contributing committees to the effort to pass Prop. 50 include the Advocacy Action Fund, consisting of Wendy and Eric Schmidt, listed as California residents. That committee has raised $1 million in support of Prop. 50, and the Progressive Era Issues Committee, which also supports Prop. 50, has raised $1.52 million, according to the most recent filings available from the Fair Political Practices Commission.

“California will not be a bystander to Trump’s power grab,” said Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Salinas, in a news release from Newsom’s office in August. “We are acting to defend our state from his attacks, by taking it directly to the voters. Californians believe in democracy and freedom, and we will not stand by while the House is hijacked by authoritarianism.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois legalizes physician-assisted suicide; critics warn of moral, safety risks

Illinois legalizes physician-assisted suicide; critics warn of moral, safety risks

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed Senate Bill 1950, prompting strong backlash from medical, disability, religious and...
Casey Westfield Warriors logo graphic.2

Fast start, defensive intensity carry Casey-Westfield past Red Hill

A dominant first quarter and a standout performance from senior Lucy Moore propelled the Casey-Westfield Lady Warriors to a gritty 29-20 victory over Red Hill in girls’ high school basketball...
IL Dem touts 'great job' on transit, GOP candidate laments 'bailout' for Chicago

IL Dem touts ‘great job’ on transit, GOP candidate laments ‘bailout’ for Chicago

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Taxes and tolls will rise for many Illinoisans in 2026 if Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs legislation to...
Bill designed to protect school kids from sexual misconduct

Bill designed to protect school kids from sexual misconduct

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square A new bill meant to protect children was introduced by U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Texas, called the National Educator Safety and Accountability Act of 2025....
Illinois quick hits: More bills enacted into law; former ComEd CEO seeking Trump pardon

Illinois quick hits: More bills enacted into law; former ComEd CEO seeking Trump pardon

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square More bills enacted into law Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office announced more than a dozen bills were enacted Friday. Aside from the...
Pritzker enacts bills, including measure decoupling IL from federal tax code

Pritzker enacts bills, including measure decoupling IL from federal tax code

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office announced more than a dozen bills were enacted Friday. Aside from the medical...
Judge overreached in ordering hundreds of illegal immigrants released

Judge overreached in ordering hundreds of illegal immigrants released

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A Biden-appointed Chicago federal judge went too far in using a deal struck between the Biden administration and pro-immigrant activists to issue...
WATCH: California co-leads suit over $100,000 H-1B visa fee

WATCH: California co-leads suit over $100,000 H-1B visa fee

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Democratic attorneys general from California and 18 other states sued the Trump administration Friday over its new $100,000 fee on H-1B visas. President Donald Trump...

WATCH: Trump outlines AI order, calls Pritzker ‘totally unreasonable’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Although it remains to be seen how President Donald Trump’s executive order on artificial intelligence will affect...
Entrepreneur's supporters say case law may result in release

Entrepreneur’s supporters say case law may result in release

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Arizonans think a situation involving Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia should result in the release of a Phoenix area business owner facing deportation. Garcia is the...
GOP lawmakers silent on Trump's EO punishing state AI guardrails

GOP lawmakers silent on Trump’s EO punishing state AI guardrails

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Frustrated with Congress failing to enact national artificial intelligence regulations, President Donald Trump took matters into his own hands Thursday night and signed an executive...
Gabbard: 2,000 Afghan refugees in U.S. have ties to terrorism

Gabbard: 2,000 Afghan refugees in U.S. have ties to terrorism

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square An estimated 2,000 Afghan nationals admitted to the United States following the deadly 2021 pullout of American forces from Afghanistan have ties to terrorism, according...
Op-Ed: No more CDL mills: Trump’s DOT puts safety back in the driver’s seat

Op-Ed: No more CDL mills: Trump’s DOT puts safety back in the driver’s seat

By Steve Cortes | League of American WorkersThe Center Square As families prepare for the holidays, America’s truck drivers are doing what they always do – keeping promises to working...
Illinois Gov. Pritzker signs assisted suicide bill

Illinois Gov. Pritzker signs assisted suicide bill

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed Senate Bill 1950 to legalize physician-assisted suicide in Illinois. The governor announced...
Hochul weighs AI regulations as Trump sets federal rules

Hochul weighs AI regulations as Trump sets federal rules

By Chris WadeThe Center Square New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is weighing plans to regulate the state's artificial intelligence sector, even as President Donald Trump seeks to restrict states from...