Column: How California helped Trump make English the official national language

Los Angeles Times 

It was the spring of 1985, and Californians were waging civic war on behalf of English. Some Monterey Park residents were pushing their City Council to ban Chinese-language business signs. Voters who had passed Proposition 38 a year earlier were waiting for Gov. George Deukmejian to implement the initiative, which required that he ask the federal government to print election material only in English. Hayakawa, one of Proposition 38's co-authors, was preparing for Proposition 63, which would enshrine English as the state's official language, after Whittier-area Assemblymember Frank Hill introduced a bill proposing just that. Tiny Fillmore in Ventura County had already become one of the first cities in the country to go English-official.

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