SACRAMENTO, Calif., Oct. 21, 2016 -- A new poll shows that voter support for Proposition 60, the adult film initiative, has fallen to just 40%, according to the Free Speech Coalition. The Capitol Weekly poll, to be published Monday, shows support down 13 points from a September LA Times poll (which had support for the measure at 53%). Prop 60 would allow any resident of the state to sue if they see a film without a visible condom, and has been called the most controversial measure on the 2016 ballot.
|
|||||
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/a76a70f1-3afd-43e5-ba82-6203edc81e7e
“The more voters learn about this dangerous measure, the more they dislike it,” said Eric Paul Leue, campaign manager for No on Proposition 60, Californians Against Worker Harassment. “Rather than protect performers, Prop 60 exposes them to harassment suits, privacy violations and financial exploitation. Prop 60 has been opposed by nearly every political organization in the state, and by all seven of the state’s largest papers — and, most importantly, the performers themselves.”
Proposition 60 has been opposed by the California Democratic Party, the California Republican Party, the California Libertarian Party, and over fifty county and municipal political parties. It has been opposed by the LA Times, the Sacramento Bee, the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News, the San Diego Union Tribune, the Orange Country Register and over a dozen other major editorial boards.
Proposition 60 has faced consistent and vocal opposition from the adult performer community, APAC, the leading performer group, opposed the measure soon after it was announced, saying it would make working conditions more dangerous for performers.
Performers organized a large protest in Hollywood earlier this week, demanding the sole proponent and funder of the initiative, Michael Weinstein, meet with them to discuss their concerns. Weinstein has spent nearly $5 million on the campaign, which would give him the power to sue performers directly when a condom isn’t visible. He has repeatedly refused to meet with performers.
Since then, performers have taken to print, radio and television to raise awareness of an initiative which would allow every day viewers to sue them directly based solely on the type of movies they make.
The full poll data is expected to be released on Monday.
MEDIA CONTACT: Mike Stabile Communications Director, No on 60 [email protected] 818.650.1973


BlackRock-Backed Global Ports Deal Faces Uncertainty Amid Cosco Demands
AstraZeneca’s LATIFY Phase III Trial of Ceralasertib Misses Primary Endpoint in Lung Cancer Study
Roche CEO Warns US Drug Price Deals Could Raise Costs of New Medicines in Switzerland
California Regulator Probes Waymo Robotaxi Stalls During San Francisco Power Outage
Google and Apple Warn U.S. Visa Holders to Avoid International Travel Amid Lengthy Embassy Delays
Moore Threads Unveils New GPUs, Fuels Optimism Around China’s AI Chip Ambitions
FDA Approves Mitapivat for Anemia in Thalassemia Patients
Saks Global Weighs Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Amid Debt Pressures and Luxury Retail Slowdown
Warner Bros Discovery Weighs Amended Paramount Skydance Bid as Netflix Takeover Battle Intensifies
Novo Nordisk Stock Surges After FDA Approves Wegovy Pill for Weight Loss
Bridgewater Associates Plans Major Employee Ownership Expansion in Milestone Year
Waymo Plans Safety and Emergency Response Upgrades After San Francisco Robotaxi Disruptions
Italy Fines Apple €98.6 Million Over App Store Dominance
Uber and Baidu Partner to Test Robotaxis in the UK, Marking a New Milestone for Autonomous Ride-Hailing
Trump Signals Push for Lower Health Insurance Prices as ACA Premium Concerns Grow
Seatrium Reaches $475 Million Settlement With Maersk Over Offshore Wind Vessel Project
Texas App Store Age Verification Law Blocked by Federal Judge in First Amendment Ruling 



