Hawaii Constitutional Revisions, Amendment 23 (1968)
|
|
|
The Hawaii Constitutional Revisions, Amendment 23, also known as Amendment 23, was on the ballot in Hawaii on November 5, 1968, as a convention referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed that deletions and the rewording of various sections of the constitution be made, where the subject matter has been found to be no longer necessary or unconstitutional under provisions of the constitution of the U.S.; that style changes be made; and all changes not specifically mentioned, which are incidental to and reasonably connected to the main purposes of the amendments proposed by the constitutional convention of the state of Hawaii of 1968, be made.[1]
Election results
| Hawaii Amendment 23 (1968) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 153,967 | 78.75% | |||
| No | 41,550 | 21.25% | ||
Election results via: Referenda and Primary Elections for Hawaii, 1968-1990
See also
External links
Footnotes
State of Hawaii Honolulu (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Elections |
What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2025 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures |
| Government |
Who represents me? | U.S. President | U.S. Congress | Federal courts | State executives | State legislature | State and local courts | Counties | Cities | School districts | Public policy |