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Arizona Constitutional Textual Terminology, Proposition 101 (2000)

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Arizona Constitution
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Articles
PreambleIIIIIIIVVVIVI.IVIIVIIIIXXXIXIIXIIIXIVXVXVIXVIIXVIIIXIXXXXXIXXIIXXVXXVIXXVIIXXVIIIXXIXXXX

Contents

Arizona Proposition 101, also known as the Constitutional Amendment Relating to Constitutional Textual Terminology, was on the November 7, 2000 election ballot in Arizona, where it was approved. [1]

Election results

Constitutional Textual Terminology
ResultVotesPercentage
Approveda Yes 886,774 61.9%
No546,43938.1%

Text of measure

The language that appeared on the ballot:

(summary from Arizona Legislative Council) Proposition 101 would amend several sections of the Arizona Constitution to modernize certain out-of-date language including references to people with disabilities.

Proposition 101 would also amend the Arizona Constitution to change certain voting requirements to conform with the United States Constitution and other federal laws. Proposition 101 would change the minimum voting age to 18 and eliminate the one-year residency requirement for voting. Under Arizona law, there is a twenty-nine day residency requirement, which remains unchanged. These changes are already enforced in Arizona pursuant to federal law.

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