The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, November 8, 2006 - 9A PROP 5 From page IA sity a 3-percent increase in funding after three straight years of cuts. State appropriations current- ly compose about 25 percent, or $325,796,300, of the University's general fund. Ken Macgregor, spokesman for the K-16 Coalition, the group that backed the proposal, said Mon- day that by guaranteeing. funding increases, the proposal would have reduced pressure on the University to raise tuition. Experts on education and state policy like former University Pro- vost Paul Courant said it is impos- sible to predict what the proposal's impact on the University budget would have been in the long run. In Ann Arbor, voters in predomi- nantly student precincts voted 57.41 percent in favor of the proposal. Several students voting in the Michigan Union last night said they learned about the proposal for the first time when reading the ballot. LSA freshman Edmund Zagorin said he hadn't heard much about it, but ultimately voted for the ini- tiative because it seemed good for education funding. "I struggled with that one a little more than Proposal 2," said Zago- rin, who voted against the initiative that would have banned affirmative action programs in Michigan. First-year MBA student Purvi Ravani also voted for the proposal. "I would rather have money ear- marked for educationthananything else," she said. GOVERNOR From page IA sentiments. "We wish Michigan the best the next four years," DeVos said. "There are many challenges to face. There are many issues to cover. And we wish the governor the best." DeVos, the former chief execu- tive of direct sales firm Amway, spent almost $35 million of his own money on his campaign. The economy dominated the race. Michigan has the second highest unemployment rate in the nation, and exit polls showed that four out of five voters think the state economy is struggling. In the campaign, DeVos said he would cut taxes and bureaucracy to create a more business-friendly environment in Michigan. Gran- holm derided this approach, saying Michigan needed to spend money on education and infrastructure to attract businesses. That's what made the differ- ence for LSA sophomore Gayam de Silva. He said he preferred a candidate with "the ability to provide more technology-based jobs." De Silva voted for Granholm. Voters in predominantly student precincts joined dt Silva, voting for Granholm over DeVos 79.96 to 16.6 percent. Higher education was a central element of Granholm's campaign. At campaign stops in Ann Arbor and on campus in the days before the election, she emphasized her plan to use money the state won in settlements with tobacco com- panies to give $4,000 to everyone who graduates from a Michigan high school. In her victory speech last night, Granholm said passing the scholar- ship plan was "the first order of busi- ness when we get back to Lansing." DeVos opposed the plan. Granholm came under fire from many at the University for slash- ing higher education funding in her budgets for the 2004 and 2005 fiscal years. She increased funding slightly in the 2006 budget. Ryan Werder, spokesman for the University's chapter of the College Democrats, said he was thrilled with the outcome. "It's a good day to be a Demo- crat," he said. Werder said the College Demo- crats played a big part in the vic- tory. "We turned out the vote in an incredible way, and it's really pay- ing off," he said. "This campus is one of Granholm's bases, and we're thrilled with how it worked out." Rob Scott, chair of the Uni- versity's chapter of the College Republicans, said that while he was disappointed with the race's outcome, almost half the state sup- ported DeVos's message, and that will resonate in Lansing. "The state still has a lot of serious problems," Scott said. "Those didn't change. 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