California
Proposition 22

Proposition
22
On
March 7, 2000, the people of California voted on Proposition 22,
a proposal to enact a state "Defense of Marriage Act"
as an initiative statute. The text of Prop 22 reads:
“Only marriage between a man and a woman
is valid or recognized in California.”
Proposition 22 was ratified by an overwhelming majority of
California voters, prevailing by a 23-point margin. Statewide, 4,618,673
votes were cast in favor of the proposition, comprising 61.4% of
the total vote. Opponents garnered 2,909,370 votes, for 38.6% of
the vote.
Final vote counts revealed that Proposition 22 won in 52 of California's
58 counties, including all of the major metropolitan areas except
for San Francisco. The six counties which did not approve
Prop. 22 were all in the immediate San Francisco Bay area, including:
Alameda county, Marin county, San Francisco county, Santa Cruz county,
Sonoma county, and Yolo county.
Full
election returns are available on the
California Secretary of State website (PDF - 73KB).
|
 |
 |
|
©
2001
Marriage Law Project
All rights reserved. |
Home | About
Us | The Issues | In
the Courts | Links | Media
State-by-State | Publications
| Current News | Get
Involved |
 |
 |
 |
 |