Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot. Click to learn more!

Hawaii Legislative Recesses, Amendment 4 (1984)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search


Voting on
State Legislature
State legislatures measures.jpg
Ballot Measures
By state
By year
Not on ballot
Hawaii Constitution
Flag of Hawaii.png
Preamble
Articles
IIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIXXXIXIIXIIIXIVXVXVIXVIIXVIII

The Hawaii Legislative Recesses, Amendment 4, also known as Amendment 4, was on the ballot in Hawaii on November 6, 1984, as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed, per House Bill No. 1948 of the Twelfth Legislature, Regular Session of 1984, that Article III, Section 10 of the Hawaiian constitution, which required the legislature to recess each regular session for not less than five days at one time during the period between the twentieth and fortieth day of the session, be amended to remove the requirement that the recess of at least five days be taken consecutively, and allow the recess to be taken any time during the session after the deadline for introducing bills.[1]

Election results

Hawaii Amendment 4 (1984)
ResultVotesPercentage
Approveda Yes173,62362.18%
No105,59137.82%

Election results via: Referenda and Primary Elections for Hawaii, 1968-1990

See also


External links

Footnotes