California's Next Governor Opposes Billionaire Tax–On The Ballot Anyway
Summary
A proposal to tax California billionaires was qualified to appear on the November 2026 ballot despite opposition from Governor Gavin Newsom and leading candidates to replace him. The tax would charge a one-time 5% fee on residents with a net worth over $1 billion, but opponents warn it could cause wealthy people to leave the state and harm California’s economy.Key Facts
- The ballot initiative proposes a one-time 5% tax on Californians worth more than $1 billion as of January 1, 2026.
- The initiative qualified after supporters gathered over 875,000 valid signatures, submitting around 1.5 million in total.
- The Service Employees International Union–United Healthcare Workers West (SEIU-UHW) filed the measure, citing the need to offset healthcare funding cuts linked to President Trump’s legislation.
- Governor Gavin Newsom and the top candidates to replace him, Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican Steve Hilton, oppose the billionaire tax.
- Newsom argues the tax could drive wealthy residents, including over 80 billionaires in California, to leave, reducing overall tax revenue.
- Newsom’s office supports California’s existing progressive tax system, which taxes high earners more without targeting billionaires directly.
- Becerra supports extending temporary tax increases on high-income earners through other ballot measures instead of this new wealth tax.
- Opponents fear the billionaire tax could harm California’s economy by discouraging investment and business activity in the state.
Read the Full Article
This is a fact-based summary from The Actual News. Click below to read the complete story directly from the original source.