Florida Right to Intimacy (2) (2012)
Not on Ballot |
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This measure was not put on an election ballot |
A Right to Intimacy did not make the November 6, 2012 ballot in the state of Florida as an initiated constitutional amendment. If enacted this measure would have mandated that no sexually intimate act between consenting adults will be prohibited or discriminated against. Also, this measure allowed legal partnerships to take place between unmarried consenting adults. It could have appeared on the ballot as either the Right of Intimate Privacy or the Right to have Intimate Privacy. Both measures were introduced by Personal Sexual Privacy Initiative, with the first on January 16, 1998, and the second on October 17, 2005.[1]
Path to the ballot
- See also: Florida signature requirements
In order to qualify for the 2012 ballot supporters are required to collect a minimum of 676,811 valid signatures by the February 1, 2012 petition drive deadline. The petition was not submitted to the Florida Secretary of State by the deadline.[2]
See also
- 2012 ballot measures
- Laws governing the initiative process in Florida
- Florida 2012 ballot measures
- Florida Legislature
- List of Florida ballot measures
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ Florida Department of State Division of Elections, "Initiatives / Amendments / Revisions," accessed January 5, 2012
- ↑ [Contacted Florida Division of Elections, February 2, 2012]
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State of Florida Tallahassee (capital) |
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