Does your state lean blue or lean red? Check out our new report, highlighting partisan control of state government from 1992-2013.
Colorado Religious Freedom Amendment (2012)
| Not on Ballot |
|---|
| This measure did not or will not appear on a ballot |
A Colorado Religious Freedom Amendment did not make the November 6, 2012 ballot in Colorado as an initiated constitutional amendment.
The measure would have banned the state from interfering with freedom of religion. The language of the proposed ballot question would have mandated that the state government should not burden a person or organization by withholding benefits, assessing penalties or excluding a person or group from government programs or facilities because of religion.[1]
The proposal was filed by Colorado Springs-based evangelical organization Focus on the Family. The measure was withdrawn during May 2012, with the group's leader citing a "tangled thicket of regulations" that would make their process too difficult.[2][3]
Contents |
Text of measure
An amendment to the Colorado Constitution expressing the public policy of the state of Colorado that government may not burden a person’s or religious organization’s freedom of religion.
Path to the ballot
- See also: Colorado signature requirements
Supporters of the measure were required to collect at least 85,853 valid signatures by the August 6, 2012 petition drive deadline in order to make the November 6, 2012 general election ballot.
On April 4, 2012 the Colorado Secretary of State's office approved the ballot language for the proposed measure and green-lit petition circulation.[3]
The measure was withdrawn during May 2012, with the group's leader citing a "tangled thicket of regulations" that would make their process too difficult.[2]
See also
External links
References
- ↑ Denver Post, "Groups propose religious freedom amendment", March 8, 2012
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Colorado Independent, "Focus on the Family withdrawing religious-liberty ballot initiative", May 4, 2012
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 The Colorado Independent,"Colorado ‘religious freedom’ initiative moves step closer to 2012 ballot," April 5, 2012
- ↑ Colorado Secretary of State,"Colorado Religious Freedom Amendment, text," retrieved April 6, 2012
State of Colorado Denver (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Ballot Measures |
List of Colorado ballot measures | Local measures | School bond issues | Ballot measure laws | Initiative laws | History of I&R | Campaign Finance Requirements | Recall process | |
| Government |
Colorado State Constitution | House of Representatives | Senate | Legislative Council | State Auditor | |
| State executive officers |
Governor | Lieutenant Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | Commissioner of Education | Commissioner of Insurance | Commissioner of Agriculture | Executive Director of Natural Resources | Executive Director of Labor and Employment | Chair of Public Utilities | |
| Elections |
Recalls | Vote fraud | |
| Judiciary |
Colorado Supreme Court | Court Election (2008) | Court of Appeals | District Courts | Judicial Nominating Commission | County Courts | Judicial activist organizations | |
| Transparency Topics |
Open Records Act | 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 | |