Arizona Voter Protection, Proposition 105 (1998)
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Proposition 105 sought to Amend the Constitution Relating to Initiative and Referendum.[1] The measure was intended to prevent the legislature or governor from tampering with laws created by the voters through the citizen initiative.
Election results
| Voter Protection | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 476,770 | 52.3% | |||
| No | 435,520 | 47.7% | ||
- Election results from Arizona Elections Department.
Text of measure
The language on the ballot was:
| “ |
Would amend the Arizona Constitution relating to initiative and referendum measures; prohibit governor's veto; prohibits legislative repeal; require three-fourths vote to amend measure, to supersede measure, or to transfer funds designated by the measure, and only if each furthers the purpose of the measure.[2][3] |
” |
Path to the ballot
Proposition 105 came into play in 2009 when the Arizona State Legislature removed $7 million from Early Childhood Development and Health Fund that had accrued as interest and put the money into the state's general operating fund. The board that oversees the fund sued the state in May, and in July, the Arizona Supreme Court sided unanimously with the fund against the state.[4] The Supreme Court relied on Proposition 105 from 1998 in its reasoning.
See also
- Laws governing the initiative process in Arizona
- Legislative tampering
- 1998 ballot measures
- Arizona 1998 ballot measures
External links
References
- ↑ Arizona 1998 election results
- ↑ NCSL ballot measure database, accessed December 31, 2013
- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributed to the original source.
- ↑ Arizona Capitol Times, "Hands off tobacco money - Supreme Court: Legislature can’t sweep First Things First," July 24, 2009
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