When Californians are investigating how they should vote on the often complex statewide ballot measures with which we are presented every other November, it can help to take a look at who is supporting and who is opposing an issue.
Which is often a case study in the old legal, and political, adage: Follow the money.
This is especially the case when the measures involve some genuine complexities out of the realm of issues voters may already know where they stand on — rent control, say, or cleaning up pollution.