Newspaper edi­to­r­i­al boards in California are over­whelm­ing­ly sup­port­ing a November bal­lot ini­tia­tive to abol­ish the state’s death penal­ty and replace it with life with­out parole plus resti­tu­tion, and are uni­form­ly reject­ing an oppos­ing ini­tia­tive that pur­ports to speed up the appeals process. At least eight California news­pa­pers have pub­lished edi­to­ri­als sup­port­ing Proposition 62 and oppos­ing Proposition 66, and Ballotpedia reports that it is aware of no edi­to­r­i­al boards that have sup­port­ed Proposition 66. A Los Angeles Times edi­to­r­i­al char­ac­ter­izes the death penal­ty as both immoral and inhu­mane,” adding, “[e]ven those who do not object to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on prin­ci­ple ought to sup­port abo­li­tion because of the system’s inef­fi­cien­cy, exor­bi­tant costs and long delays. Proponents of Proposition 66 say they can speed up the process and make the death penal­ty work, but there are seri­ous doubts that their pro­pos­al would achieve the kind of fast-track­ing they promise, and crit­ics argue per­sua­sive­ly that the sys­tem might become even more expen­sive.” The San Francisco Chronicle writes that all sides agree [California’s death penal­ty] has pro­duced enor­mous legal bills, no sem­blance of deter­rence to would-be mur­der­ers and too lit­tle jus­tice to vic­tims’ loved ones over the past four decades.” It says Prop. 62 offers a straight­for­ward and cer­tain solu­tion,” while crit­i­ciz­ing Prop. 66 as a high­ly com­plex, prob­a­bly very expen­sive and con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly ques­tion­able scheme for stream­lin­ing the appeals process.” Many of the edi­to­ri­als are par­tic­u­lar­ly crit­i­cal of Prop. 66’s pro­pos­al to con­script appel­late lawyers to rep­re­sent death row inmates. The (Santa Rosa) Press Democrat’s cri­tique is rep­re­sen­ta­tive: Rather than fund­ing an expan­sion of the state pub­lic defender’s office, which han­dles almost all death penal­ty appeals, Proposition 66 would require all attor­neys who prac­tice in California appel­late courts, regard­less of spe­cial­ty and train­ing, to accept judi­cial appoint­ments to cap­i­tal cas­es. Claims of inat­ten­tive and incom­pe­tent coun­sel already are com­mon in death penal­ty appeals, and con­script­ing lawyers would only invite more such chal­lenges.” The Bakersfield Californian, which offered no opin­ion on Prop. 34, California’s pri­or bal­lot ini­tia­tive to abol­ish the death penal­ty, has also weighed in on the death penal­ty this year, call­ing for an end to the state’s cost­ly, tooth­less death penal­ty.” Other news­pa­pers urg­ing vot­ers to vote yes on Prop. 62 and no on Prop. 66 includ­ed Monterey Herald, the Bay Area News Group (Mercury News and East Bay Times), and the Santa Clarita Valley Signal. [UPDATE: Additional edi­to­r­i­al boards have come out in favor of Proposition 62 and against Proposition 66 (see below). To date, we are unaware of any edi­to­r­i­al sup­port for Proposition 66.]

(Editorial, Props 62 and 66: California vot­ers should end the death penal­ty, not speed it up,” Los Angeles Times, September 3, 2016; Editorial, Fight crime, not futil­i­ty: Abolish death penal­ty,” San Francisco Chronicle, August 25, 2016; Editorial, Death penal­ty: Yes on Prop 62, No on Prop 66,” The Press Democrat, September 15, 2016; Editorial, End tooth­less, cost­ly death penal­ty: Yes on Prop. 62; no on 66,” The Bakersfield Californian, September 18, 2016; Editorial, Death penal­ty: Yes on 62, no on Prop. 66,” Monterey Herald, September 8, 2016; Editorial, Our View: Yes on Prop 62,” Santa Clarita Daily Signal, August 20, 2016; Editorial, Abolish the death penal­ty; Vote yes on Proposition 62,” Bay Area News Group, July 14, 2016.) [UPDATE — Additional edi­to­ri­als: Editorial, Yes on Proposition 62, no on Proposition 66,” Chico Enterprise-Record, October 5, 2016; Editorial, Prop. 62 (Death Penalty) • Yes Prop. 66 (Death Penalty. Procedures) • No,” Santa Barbara Independent, October 6, 2016; Editorial, End the Illusion: Abolish the Death Penalty,” Sacramento Bee, October 7, 2016. See Editorials and Recent Legislation.

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