After the
Mexican–American War lasting from 1846 to 1848, most of Alta California was partitioned into five
U.S. states, with the western portion of Alta California admitted to the United States as the present-day State of California, and later partitions of Alta California to become
Nevada,
Utah, and parts of
Arizona and
Wyoming.
Baja California Territory would absorb what was left of Alta California (which included the modern-day cities of
Tijuana and
Mexicali) and remained under
Mexican rule. The territory was subsequently divided into two
Mexican states in 1931. In 1888, under the government of President
Porfirio Díaz, Baja California became a federally administered territory called the North Territory of Baja California ("north territory" because it was the northernmost territory in the Republic of Mexico). In 1952, the northern portion of this territory (above 28°N) became the 29th state of Mexico, called Baja California; the sparsely populated southern portion remained a federally administered territory. In 1974, it became the 31st state of Mexico, admitted as
Baja California Sur.
The territory that became the present state of California was acquired by the U.S. as a result of American victory in the
Mexican–American War and subsequent 1848
Mexican Cession. After the war, a confrontation erupted between the
slave states of the South and the
free states of the North regarding the status of these acquired territories. Among the disputes, the South wanted to extend the
Missouri Compromise line (
36°30' parallel north), and thus slave territory, west to
Southern California and to the Pacific coast, while the North did not.[4]
Starting in late 1848, Americans and foreigners of many different countries entered into California in unprecedented numbers, for the
California Gold Rush, rapidly increasing the population. In response to growing demand for a better, more representative government, a
Constitutional Convention was held in 1849. The delegates there unanimously outlawed slavery, and therefore had no interest in extending the
Missouri Compromise Line through California; the lightly populated southern half had never had
slavery and was heavily
Hispanic.[5] Delegates applied for statehood with the current boundaries. As part of the
Compromise of 1850, Congressional representatives of the
American South reluctantly acceded to having California be a
free state, and it
officially became the 31st state in the union on September 9, 1850.
In 1855, the
California State Assembly passed a plan to trisect the state.[6] All of the southern
counties as far north as
Monterey,
Merced, and part of
Mariposa, then sparsely populated but today containing about two-thirds of California's total population, would become the State of Colorado (the name Colorado was later adopted for
another territory established in 1861), and the northern counties of
Del Norte,
Siskiyou,
Modoc,
Humboldt,
Trinity,
Shasta,
Lassen,
Tehama,
Plumas, and portions of
Butte,
Colusa (which included what is now
Glenn County), and
Mendocino, a region which today has a population of less than a million, would become the State of Shasta. The primary reason was the size of the state's territory. At the time, the representation in Congress was too small for such a large territory, it seemed too extensive for one government, and the state capital was too inaccessible because of the distances to Southern California and various other areas. The bill eventually died in the
California Senate as it became very low priority compared to other pressing political matters.[6]
In 1859, the legislature and governor approved the Pico Act (named after the bill's sponsor
Andrés Pico, state senator from Southern California) splitting off the region south of the
36th parallel north as the
Territory of Colorado.[7][8][9] The primary reason cited was the difference in both culture and geography between Northern and Southern California. It was signed by the
State governorJohn B. Weller, approved overwhelmingly by voters in the proposed Territory of Colorado, and sent to
Washington, D.C., with a strong advocate in Senator
Milton Latham. However, the secession crisis and
American Civil War following the election of Lincoln in 1860 prevented the proposal from ever coming to a vote.[6][10][11][12]
In the late 19th century, there was serious talk in Sacramento of splitting the state in two at the
Tehachapi Mountains,[citation needed] because of the difficulty of transportation across the rugged range. The discussion ended when it was determined that building a highway over the mountains was feasible; this road later became the
Ridge Route, which today is
Interstate 5 over
Tejon Pass.
20th century
Since the mid-19th century, the mountainous region of northern California and parts of southwestern
Oregon have been proposed as a separate state. In 1941, some counties in the area ceremonially seceded, one day a week, from their respective states as the
State of Jefferson. This movement disappeared after America's entry into
World War II, but the notion has been rekindled in recent years.[13]
The California State Senate voted on June 4, 1965, to divide California into two states, with the
Tehachapi Mountains as the boundary. Sponsored by State Senator
Richard J. Dolwig (R-San Mateo), the resolution proposed to separate the seven southern counties, with a majority of the state's population, from the 51 other counties, and passed 27–12. To be effective, the amendment would have needed approval by the State Assembly, by California voters, and by the United States Congress. As expected by Dolwig, the proposal did not get out of committee in the assembly.[14]
In 1992, State Assemblyman
Stan Statham sponsored a bill to allow a referendum in each county on a partition into three new states: North, Central, and South California. The proposal passed in the State Assembly but died in the State Senate.[15]
In the wake of the
2003 gubernatorial recall, Tim Holt and Martin Hutchinson proposed in separate newspaper
op-eds that the state should split into as many as four new states, dividing distinct geographically and politically defined regions as the
Bay Area,
North Coast, and
Central Valley, as well as the historic
Shasta/Jefferson region, into their own states.[16][17]
In early 2009, former State Assemblyman
Bill Maze began lobbying to split thirteen coastal counties, which usually vote Democratic, into a separate state to be known as either "
Coastal California" or "Western California". Maze's primary reason for wanting to split the state was because of how "conservatives don't have a voice" and how Los Angeles and San Francisco "control the state". The counties that would make up the new state would be
Marin,
Contra Costa,
Alameda,
San Francisco,
San Mateo,
Santa Clara,
Santa Cruz,
San Benito,
Monterey,
San Luis Obispo,
Santa Barbara,
Ventura, and
Los Angeles Counties. It has also been proposed that the state be split in two simply at the straight divide of the
120th meridian west, much like its border with the state of
Nevada.[18]
In June 2011, Republican
Riverside County Supervisor
Jeff Stone called for Riverside,
Imperial,
San Diego,
Orange,
San Bernardino,
Kings,
Kern,
Fresno,
Tulare,
Inyo,
Madera,
Mariposa and
Mono counties (see map, highlighted in red) to separate from California to form the new state of South California. Officials in
Sacramento responded derisively, with governor
Jerry Brown's spokesperson saying "A secessionist movement? What is this,
1860? It's a supremely ridiculous waste of everybody's time."[19] and fellow supervisor Bob Buster calling Stone "crazy", suggesting "Stone has gotten too much sun recently."[20]
In September 2013, county supervisors in both
Siskiyou County and
Modoc County voted to join a bid to separate and create a new "
State of Jefferson".[13] Mark Baird, spokesperson for the Jefferson Declaration Committee, is reported to have said the group hopes to obtain commitments from as many as a dozen counties, after which they will ask the state legislature to permit formation of the new state based on Article 4, Section 3 of the US Constitution. In January 2014, supervisors in
Glenn County voted in favor of separation,[21] and in April 2014,
Yuba County supervisors voted to become the fourth California county to join the movement.[22] On June 3, 2014, residents in
Del Norte County voted against separation by 58 percent to 42 percent;[23] however, voters in
Tehama County supported a separation initiative by 57 percent to 43 percent.[24] On July 22, 2014, Sutter County voted 5–0 to join the State of Jefferson.[25]
Six Californias: On December 19, 2013,
venture capitalistTim Draper submitted a six-page proposal[26][27] to the
California Attorney General to split California into six new states, citing improved representation, governance, and competition between industries.[28] On February 19, 2014,
Secretary of StateDebra Bowen approved the proposal allowing supporters to start collecting signatures in order to qualify the petition for a ballot. A total of 807,615 registered voters were needed by July 18, 2014, for the proposal to appear on the ballot.[29] On July 14, the petition organizer announced that the proposal received enough signatures to be placed on the ballot in two years;[30] however, it was determined that only about two thirds were valid and the petition fell short of qualifying for the November 2016 ballot.[31]
New California: On January 16, 2018, the 501(c)(4) organization New California, organized by
conservative radio talk show host Paul Preston, published its proposed state's Declaration of Independence. As motivation for the split, Preston said that he rated California "around 48th or 50th" among states for business climate; he also mentioned what he said were high taxes. His proposed New California would have included the rural counties that make up most of the state's area, leaving the more heavily populated areas around
San Francisco,
Sacramento, and
Los Angeles.[32] New California would also include the urban areas of
Contra Costa County,
Orange County, and
San Diego County, bringing the population to around 20 million.[32][33] In December 2020, the proposed state filed an
amicus brief in support of Texas in
Texas v. Pennsylvania alongside
New Nevada, claiming to be an aggrieved party due to the expansion of
mail-in voting in California and alleged differences in voting rules between California counties.[34][35]
In April 2018, the
Cal 3 organization announced it had more than 600,000 signatures to place an initiative on the November 2018 ballot proposing that California should be split into three separate states.[36] The signatures must be verified before the proposal qualifies for the ballot[37] - this was achieved by June 13, 2018.[38] In July 2018, the
California Supreme Court pulled the Cal 3 proposal from the ballot for further state constitutional review.[39]
In 2020, "
Move Oregon's Border For a Greater Idaho" proposed breaking off most of
Oregon's area and some of Northern California and join it with
Idaho. The areas proposed to break off of Oregon and California vote
Republican but in a state whose legislatures are dominated by
Democrats. Douglas and Josephine counties in Oregon approved language for petitions to put a measure on the ballot. Even if passed by voters, it would still need approval from all three state legislatures.[40][41]
In August 2022, the
San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors began an approval process for a possible secession measure to be added to the November 2022 general election ballot. Proponents of including the ballot measure cite dissatisfaction in the county's share of state and federal funding.[42][needs update]
Union with other states
Ecotopia
Writer
Ernest Callenbach wrote a 1975 novel, entitled Ecotopia, in which he proposed a full-blown secession of Northern California, Oregon, and Washington from the United States in order to focus upon environmentally friendly living and culture. He later abandoned the idea stating: "We are now fatally interconnected, in climate change, ocean impoverishment, agricultural soil loss, etc. etc. etc."[43]
The premise was borrowed / adapted by
Starhawk for her novel The Fifth Sacred Thing (1993), which pitted the eco-feminist inhabitants of a future, independent San Francisco against a rival, right-wing polity centered on Los Angeles.
While mostly consisting of
Washington,
Oregon,
Idaho and
British Columbia in Canada, proposals for an independent Cascadia often include portions of northern California.
Reunification with Baja California
The reunification of the Californias or Greater California is the
irredentist idea of a united California often consisting of modern-day California,
Baja California, and
Baja California Sur, or largely based on the former lands previously governed by the
Province of Las Californias (1767-1804), including much of the
American Southwest. There were fears during the
Magonista rebellion of 1911 from both Americans and Mexicans of a
Magonista expansion into California from, then Magonista-controlled, Baja California that would establish anarcho-communism across the Californias and inspire rebellions by
Indigenous Californians against the US and Mexican governments.[44]
California independence
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Numerous organizations advocate for the independence of California as a sovereign state. Common arguments in support of independence are often based on the fact of California having the
fifth-largest economy in the world,[45][46][47] and for being home to the global centers of entertainment (
Hollywood) and technology (
Silicon Valley).[48][49]
The California Freedom Coalition is a political group, founded in 2017, advocating for the political, economic, and social empowerment of Californians. It supports
universal healthcare for Californians, greater representation for California in the
U.S. Congress, and more funding for
education in California, as well as the possibility of California independence.
In the wake of
Republican nominee
Donald Trump's winning the
2016 presidential election, a fringe movement organized by
Yes California, referred to as "Calexit"—a term inspired by the successful 2016
Brexit referendum—arose in a bid to gather the 585,407 signatures necessary to place a
secessionist question on the 2018 ballot.[52] In July 2018, the objectives of the Calexit initiative were expanded upon by including a plan to carve out an “autonomous
Native American nation”[53] that would take up the
eastern part of California, and "postponing its ballot referendum approach in favor of convincing Republican states to support their breakaway efforts."[53] "Yes California" was founded by
Louis J. Marinelli.
^
abcEllison, William Henry (October 1913). "The Movement for State Division in California, 1849-1860". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 12 (2): 101–139.
JSTOR30234593.
^California, Historical Society of Southern; California, Los Angeles County Pioneers of Southern (1901).
The Quarterly.
Archived from the original on June 28, 2014. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
^Sandefur, Timothy (April 2009).
"Hindsight". Callawyer.com. Archived from
the original on October 6, 2011. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
^Draper, Timothy.
"Six Californias". Initiative Measure Submitted Directly to Voters.
Archived from the original on August 3, 2015. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
^Draper, Timothy.
"Six Californias". Website.
Archived from the original on December 20, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
^Helsel, Phil (June 13, 2018).
"Proposal to split California into three states earns spot on November ballot". nbcnews.com. NBC News.
Archived from the original on June 13, 2018. Retrieved June 13, 2018. Voters in the massive state of California, touted as having an economy larger than most countries, could decide whether to support a plan calling for The Golden State to be split into three. An initiative that would direct the governor to seek Congressional approval to divide California into three states has enough valid signatures to be eligible for the Nov. 6 ballot, the Secretary of State's office said Tuesday. If the initiative is not withdrawn, it will be qualified for the ballot on June 28. Even if approved by voters, it faces the hurdle of approval by Congress.
^Egelko, Bob (July 18, 2018).
"Splitting up California: State Supreme Court takes initiative off ballot". San Francisco Chronicle.
Archived from the original on July 19, 2018. Retrieved July 19, 2018. [T]he court issued a unanimous order removing the measure from the ballot and ordering further legal arguments on whether it should be placed on another ballot in 2020 or struck down altogether