Yesterday, despite learning that California's proposed Billionaire Tax included a backdoor provision that would apply the tax to all Californians, the referendum gathered enough signatures to be on the November ballot.
Mass exodus fears as California billionaire tax gets enough signatures to go on ballot, backers claim https://t.co/Av5fzIYpGZ pic.twitter.com/aVwTrpKYhr
— New York Post (@nypost) April 27, 2026
This means that all Californians will eventually be subjected to a wealth tax that steals their money based on the value of all their assets, not just their income. Given home prices in the state, it's very possible a lot of people who signed this referendum will learn a very hard lesson in a few years' time, when they're forced to sell their property because they can't afford to pay a tax that was only meant to target billionaires.
But that's not the only economic repercussion this bill will have. A study shows that it will likely kill tens of thousands of jobs and sink revenue, too.
Billionaire tax could kill 100,000 California jobs and sink revenue: study https://t.co/S3IT32Yxen pic.twitter.com/9ndxlqSTBn
— New York Post (@nypost) April 27, 2026
A controversial billionaire tax measure in California — which has secured enough signatures to appear on the November ballot — would devastate the state’s economy, a new study published Monday shows.
More than 108,000 jobs could be lost if the tax goes into effect, the analysis concluded, and $28 billion worth of wages would also be lost in California.
“For everyday Californians, these are not abstract numbers. They represent fewer career opportunities in the state’s most dynamic industries and in the businesses that serve them,” the report said.
The study was commissioned by Stop the Squeeze, a committee run by veteran consultants Dan Newman and Brian Brokaw to oppose the tax initiative. The two have ties to Gov. Gavin Newsom (D), who publicly opposes the tax.
...
However, the study estimated that at least 40 ultra-wealthy Californians would leave the state as a result, meaning half of the $2 trillion held by the state’s billionaires would be gone. Already, a number of them have announced they’ve left California.
When such individuals leave, there is a loss of jobs with offices relocated, a reduction in consumer consumption and disruption to future jobs that would have been created, the report said. Those factors help contribute to the more than 108,000 jobs lost.
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It's entirely possible that the jobs lost will far exceed 100,000.
Not could. Will.
— Cryssie (@CryssieGA) April 27, 2026
That is a safe bet.
Commiefornia gets what it voted for pic.twitter.com/P7X7j5YlxW
— Jimmy Encarnacion (@27vg6gtwh8) April 27, 2026
And they'll get it good and hard, it seems.
After they are done with the Billionaires, Who’s Next? pic.twitter.com/x4NHOWo23N
— Mash (@mashfxd) April 27, 2026
Everyone. The legislature already knows this, hence the back-door provision.
> $1 trillion gone with +40 ultra-wealthy Californians to leave the state
— Rothmus 🏴 (@Rothmus) April 27, 2026
>$28 billion worth of wages lost
>$12 billion in annual personal income tax revenue losses by 2046
>$122 billion cumulative total loss over the next two decades
This is the predictable result of… https://t.co/LINx2AwVBt
"This is the predictable result of ignoring a basic economic reality: new taxes and higher rates on productive people don’t automatically deliver higher revenue," he wrote. "Capital and talent are mobile. When you punish success, it relocates. Middle class, get ready to pay up. The bill for these experiments always lands on those who can’t easily leave."
Editor’s Note: The 2026 Midterms will determine the fate of President Trump’s America First agenda. Republicans must maintain control of both chambers of Congress.
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