San Francisco Voters Reject CEO Tax Hike 53.6% to 46% as Tech and Mayor Opposed Measure
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 9
San Francisco Voters Reject CEO Tax Hike 53.6% to 46% as Tech and Mayor Opposed Measure
3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 9
Summary
53.6% of San Francisco voters opposed Proposition D, defeating a tax increase on highly paid corporate executives that labor unions had promoted as the “Overpaid C.E.O. Tax.”
The measure would have expanded a 2020 pay-gap tax and raised rates by comparing executive pay with the median wage of all company employees, not just San Francisco workers.
A city analysis projected the proposal could raise $250 million to $300 million a year but also cost about 940 jobs, a trade-off opponents said would drive businesses out and slow recovery.
Mayor Daniel Lurie and tech leaders including Sergey Brin and DoorDash co-founder Tony Xu campaigned against it, underscoring San Francisco’s recent shift toward a more centrist politics.