Filibuster Blocks Ballot Candy in SJR 74

Filibuster Blocks Ballot Candy in SJR 74

Description of Ballot Candy
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News

A record 50-year filibuster in the Missouri Senate blocked passage of a proposal to eliminate the majority rule that has defined Missouri’s citizen initiative process for more than a century. If the two chambers had agree on final language for SJR 74, the Governor was expected to put this constitutional amendment on the ballot in August to require future amendments not proposed by the legislature to receive both a statewide majority AND approval in five of the eight congressional district to pass.

The House voted to have the ballot measure start with misleading provisions about foreign interference in initiative petitions and voting by non-citizens to hide the true impact of the measure and gain support from voters who don't know that those are already banned by law. The citizenship language will go before voters in another resolution passed on the last day, SJR 78.

Senators filibustered to insist that the ballot candy be removed from SJR 74. LWVMO President Marilyn McLeod commends Senators Lauren Arthur, Doug Beck, Karla May, Tracy McCreery, Angela Mosley, John Rizzo, Steve Roberts, Barbara Washington and Brian Williams for that stalwart effort.

"Legislators recognize that the existing citizen’s-initiated petition process is very popular, nonpartisan, and rigorous," LWVMO Board Member Joan Gentry says in a letter to the editor published in the Springfield News Leader. "To counteract this popularity, the legislators responsible for the constitutional amendment changes being considered are attempting to place misinformation in the amendment."

"This proposal violates the principle of majority rule and would make it almost impossible for a citizen initiative petition to pass," says McLeod. "This would squelch the voice of the people and end majority rule."

"We need to protect the direct democracy of the initiative petition process to determine our future in Missouri, not permanently change our constitution to give up our rights," McLeod says. "Simple majority rule is common sense and already the law of the land in Missouri. One person, one vote.”

Protecting the state's initiative petition process is the LWVMO's top legislative priority in 2024. McLeod also testified in both houses against a bill to add more barriers to the initiative petition process. She said HB1749 "includes numerous unnecessary provisions which simply add more barriers to the process."

McLeod says it’s ironic that legislators want to change the citizen IP when just a hundred members of the General Assembly can get a constitutional amendment on the ballot with confusing and deceptive language that just needs a majority vote to pass. Legislators have not suggested that the stricter requirements apply to their own ballot measures that do not require thousands of voter signatures and approval by the Governor.
 

This tool of our democracy goes back to 1907, 12 years before the League of Women Voters was founded. It’s been used by both political parties when the legislature hasn’t addressed things people want, including Medicaid Expansion and medical marijuana.

The initiative petition was used to pass the Hancock Amendment that set taxation and spending limits. As former governor John Ashcroft said in 1992, “It is through the initiative process that those who have no influence with elective representatives may take their cause directly to the people.”

The League believes initiative petitions make Missouri’s democracy work, giving voters a stronger voice in state government. For more information, go to Home - Will of the People Missouri (willofthepeoplemo.com).

Patricia O'Roark talks with Republican Rep. Jamie Gregg.  Hundreds of voting rights advocates in the Capitol Rotunda.

Above, Joplin members Patricia O'Roark and Donna Harlan talk with Republican Rep. Jamie Gregg as part of the Jan. 30 Voting Rights Advocacy Day.

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Missouri