Arizona Proposition 100 (1974)
Proposition 100 appeared on the November 5, 1974 ballot in the state of Arizona as a legislatively-referred constitutional amendment, where it was defeated.
The measure, according to the text of the proposal, relates to the Executive Department. The text of the measure states that the formal title of the bill given by the Arizona Legislature was Senate Concurrent Resolution 1020.[1]
Election results
| Proposition 100 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 232,276 | 50.37% | |||
| Yes | 228,928 | 49.63% | ||
Results via the Official Canvass of 1974 Results
See also
References
State of Arizona Phoenix (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Ballot measures |
List of Arizona ballot measures | Local measures | School bond issues | Ballot measure laws | Initiative laws | History of I&R | Campaign Finance Requirements | |
| Government |
Arizona State Constitution | House of Representatives | Senate | Joint Legislative Budget Committee | Legislative Council | Auditor General | |
| State executive officers |
Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | Superintendent of Public Instruction | Director of Insurance | Director of Agriculture | Commissioner of Lands | Director of Labor | Chairman of Corporation Commission | State Mine Inspector | |
| Elections |
Recalls | Vote fraud | |
| Judiciary |
Arizona Supreme Court | Arizona Court of Appeals | Arizona General Jurisdiction Court | Arizona Limited Jurisdiction Courts | Judicial selection in Arizona | Judicial News | |
| Transparency topics |
Public Records Law | Transparency Checklist | Government corruption reports | Transparency Legislation | Open Records procedures | Transparency Advocates | State budget | Taxpayer-funded lobbying associations | |
| Divisions |
State |
List of counties |
List of Cities |
List of school districts | |