Track the money flowing into
Updated
Proposition 31 would ban the sale of certain flavored tobacco products in stores and vending machines. The ban was signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2020 and placed on hold after a referendum by the tobacco industry. It is being supported by Michael Bloomberg, teachers and health associations. Committees in the race have raised more than $71.4 million and largely spent it on petitions and campaign consultants.
Who has raised the most?
Who is supporting each side?
Proposition 31 is backed by billionaire former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg with $33.2 million, $1.1 million from Kaiser Foundation and $250,000 from the California Teachers Assn. Major tobacco companies have poured in millions to oppose the proposition, including the North Carolina-based R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. which gave more than $8.1 million and Philip Morris, which gave $8 million.
How is the money being spent?
support Proposition 31
oppose Proposition 31
The campaign supporting the proposition has spent $2.4 million on campaign consultants, with the remaining money mostly being used for digital promotions and polling.
The largest category of spending for the committee to oppose Proposition 31 was $13.7 million on petition circulating.