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John Serrano Did Not Vote for Proposition 13

This article reviews the development of my thesis that the California Supreme Court's Serrano decisions, which began in 1971 and sought to disconnect district school spending with local property taxes, led to the fiscal conditions that caused California voters to embrace Proposition 13 in 1978, which radically undermined the local property tax system. I submit that my thesis is most likely true because of Proposition 13’s durability and the absence of alternative explanations that account for its longstanding power over California politics. The article then circles back to John Serrano himself. I want to respectfully suggest that John’s views about the role of public education and my own have more in common than might be suspected. At the very least I want to correct the impression that John supported Proposition 13, which was suggested by the title of my last full article about this topic.

Keywords
Serrano v. Priest; California public schools; Propostion 13; property tax limits
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/1rne-2p26
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Fischel, William A.. (). John Serrano Did Not Vote for Proposition 13. (EdWorkingPaper: -545). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/1rne-2p26

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