Alaska 1994 ballot measures
In 1994, voters decided on five statewide ballot measures in Alaska on November 8.
- Two measures were legislatively referred constitutional amendments.
- Three measures were indirect initiated state statutes.
- Four measures (80%) were approved and one (20%) was defeated.
On the ballot
November 8, 1994
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measure 1 | Constitutional rights; Firearms | Ensure the individual right to keep and bear arms, without denial or infringement by the state or political subdivisions. |
|
153,300 (73%) |
57,636 (27%) |
|
| Measure 2 | Crime victims | Add the goals of community condemnation of offenders, the rights of crime victims, and restitution by offenders to the constitution. |
|
178,858 (87%) |
27,641 (13%) |
|
| Measure 3 | Capitals | Move the state capital from Juneau to Wasilla. |
|
96,398 (45%) |
116,277 (55%) |
|
| Measure 4 | Term limits | Enact term limits on U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives, contingent on congressional term limits being adopted in 24 other states |
|
126,960 (63%) |
74,658 (37%) |
|
| Measure 5 | Bonds; Ballot measures; Capitals | Require voter approval of a bond covering all bondable costs before spending state funds to move the capital or legislature |
|
159,781 (77%) |
46,665 (23%) |
See also
State of Alaska Juneau (capital) | |
|---|---|
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