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Hawaii Miscellaneous Revisions, Amendment 33 (1978)

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Hawaii Constitution
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IIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIXXXIXIIXIIIXIVXVXVIXVIIXVIII

The Hawaii Miscellaneous Revisions, Amendment 33, also known as Amendment 33, was on the ballot in Hawaii on November 7, 1978, as a convention referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed three new additions to the constitution: Article XVI, Sections 3 and 13 and Article XVII, Section 2. The amendment would keep persons convicted, not just accused, of subversive activities from holding public office; it would mandate that governmental writing must be in plain language; it would clarify the time when voters must be asked if they want to have another constitutional convention; and it would allow the constitutional convention to be held five months before the general election instead of four months.[1]

Election results

Hawaii Amendment 33 (1978)
ResultVotesPercentage
Approveda Yes178,63270.82%
No73,59429.18%

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

See also


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Footnotes