@ChadBianco Sheriff Bianco, this isn’t about who would make the better governor. It’s about who has the best path to victory. If polling eventually shows another candidate has a significantly stronger chance of winning statewide, I hope you’ll do what’s best for California and unite behind that candidate. Statesmanship is knowing when to lead—and when to rally behind a larger cause.
Strong majorities of Americans — including many Democrats — support requiring photo ID to vote and proof of U.S. citizenship for voter registration.
The SAVE America Act, which would mandate documentary proof of citizenship for federal elections and photo ID, has passed the House multiple times but remains stalled in the Senate.
With 80–95% backing for basic verification measures, why is securing election integrity still so difficult?
#ElectionIntegrity #VoterID
I love the Tesla, but I ! test drove it last year and it was fantastic except when I went down Chautauqua down to the coast Highway and it made a left turn into oncoming traffic. Everybody saw the predicament I was in and kind of stopped to let me manually pull over, but that was pretty insane.
California didn’t lose its beauty—just its balance.
•Our kids deserve a future here, not an exit plan.
•Hard work used to build a life here—now it barely holds one together.
•This isn’t politics—it’s people feeling squeezed out.
•When families can’t stay, something’s broken.
•Opportunity shouldn’t be a luxury item.
•People aren’t leaving California—they’re being pushed out.
•You can feel it: something isn’t working anymore.
•A great state shouldn’t feel this heavy to live in.
•We didn’t fail California—California is failing its people.
•If success means leaving, we’ve lost the plot.
•This state built dreams—now it prices them out.
•It’s not left or right—it’s right or wrong.
•The middle class shouldn’t be disappearing here.
•When staying becomes sacrifice, people walk away.
•California should lift people up—not wear them down.
•Everyone feels it—even if they don’t say it out loud.
•This isn’t anger—it’s disappointment.
•We all know something has to change.
California didn’t lose its beauty—just its balance.
•Our kids deserve a future here, not an exit plan.
•Hard work used to build a life here—now it barely holds one together.
•This isn’t politics—it’s people feeling squeezed out.
•When families can’t stay, something’s broken.
•Opportunity shouldn’t be a luxury item.
•People aren’t leaving California—they’re being pushed out.
•You can feel it: something isn’t working anymore.
•A great state shouldn’t feel this heavy to live in.
•We didn’t fail California—California is failing its people.
•If success means leaving, we’ve lost the plot.
•This state built dreams—now it prices them out.
•It’s not left or right—it’s right or wrong.
•The middle class shouldn’t be disappearing here.
•When staying becomes sacrifice, people walk away.
•California should lift people up—not wear them down.
•Everyone feels it—even if they don’t say it out loud.
•This isn’t anger—it’s disappointment.
•We all know something has to change.
In 1978, Proposition 13 cut and stabilized property taxes. In 2024, Proposition 36 changed the facts on the ground for habitual retail thieves. Initiatives can fix what's broken in California when elected officials refuse to respond to a crisis (that they created). 1/2
@carldemaio California’s latest fight over how to pay for roads has erupted into a full‑blown backlash, with drivers accusing Democrats (cannibalizing themselves ) plotting a per‑mile tax that would drain their wallets. The anger is real !
@KevinKileyCA California’s latest fight over how to pay for roads has erupted into a full‑blown backlash, with drivers accusing Democrats of plotting a #per‑mile tax that would drain their wallets. The anger is real……. VOTE them OUT !