Hawaii Technical and Style Changes, Amendment 34 (1978)
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The Hawaii Technical and Style Changes, Amendment 34, also known as Amendment 34, was on the ballot in Hawaii on November 7, 1978, as a convention referred constitutional amendment. It was approved. The amendment proposed to revise some conventions and language within the state constitution. It would allow changes to the constitution where the subject may now be unconstitutional or unnecessary under the U.S. Constitution; it would change the style and language of the state constitution; it would allow the replacement of words which sound like they apply to men or women only with words which apply to everyone; and it would make small changes which were related to main purposes of the other amendments.[1]
Election results
| Hawaii Amendment 34 (1978) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 175,032 | 69.39% | |||
| No | 77,194 | 30.61% | ||
Election results via: Referenda and Primary Elections for Hawaii, 1968-1990
See also
External links
Footnotes
State of Hawaii Honolulu (capital) | |
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