Proposition 41|
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| Choice | Votes | % |  
|  Yes | 2,708,933 | 65.39% |  
|  No | 1,434,060 | 34.61% |  
| Total votes | 4,142,993 | 100.00% |  | 
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 | 
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| For
   70–80%    60–70%    50–60%  | Against
   50–60%   
 |  | 
2014 California Proposition 41, also known as Prop 41 and Veterans Housing and Homeless Prevention Bond, was a California ballot proposition intended to approve California to give $600 million in bonds for housing for veterans and families of veterans and to use money from the state's General Fund to pay off any debt from the bonds.[1][2][3] The proposition classified "low-income" as "those who earn less than 80 percent of average family income, as adjusted by family size and county." It was on the ballot as a bond issue and passed in the June 2014 California elections.[4][5] Opponents of the proposition included the Green Party of California,[6] California Tea Party Groups[7] and the California Federation of Republican Women.[8] Supporters of the proposition included Governor Jerry Brown, Mark Wyland, Marty Block, the California Democratic Party and the California Republican Party.[4]
Result
| Result | Votes | Percentage | 
| Yes | 2,708,933 | 65.39 | 
| No | 1,434,060 | 34.61[4] | 
References