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Proposition 13
1media/Prop13_HowardJarvis_1978_01_thumb.jpeg2021-12-03T01:48:12+00:00Gina Leonf0ac362b4453e23ee8a94b1a49fbeeafde2a0a4916Led by a tax fighter The so-called “taxpayer’s revolt” was led by Jarvis, a Utah native born in 1903. By the age of 30, he owned several small newspapers and was active in Republican politics. He moved to California in the 1930s and ran several times unsuccessfully for mayor of Los Angeles on an anti-tax platform. Jarvis gained a reputation as a harsh government critic. He worked for more than a decade to change the state’s property tax laws. Prop. 13, as Jarvis described it in a 1978 press conference, was a way to push back against “the moochers and loafers” in government. “They’re just destroying the country,” said Jarvis. “They’re just like a bunch of locusts going through a grain field and when they get through there, no grain is left.”plain2021-12-03T01:53:44+00:00197819780607080000+0000Paul Gann, left, and Howard Jarvis hold up their hands as their co-authored initiative Propsition 13 takes a commanding lead in the California primary, in Los Angeles, June 7, 1978. (AP Photo)HOWARD JARVIS PROPOSITION 13AELNLOS ANGELESUSAAPHS121ASSOCIATED PRESSAPAP1978XCBGina Leonf0ac362b4453e23ee8a94b1a49fbeeafde2a0a49