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Massachusetts Public Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest Between Government Officials and Candidates Amendment (2024)

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Massachusetts Public Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest Between Government Officials and Candidates Amendment
Flag of Massachusetts.png
Election date
November 5, 2024
Topic
Government accountability
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

The Massachusetts Public Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest Between Government Officials and Candidates Amendment was not on the ballot in Massachusetts as an indirect initiated constitutional amendment on November 5, 2024.

The initiative would have established an Office of Government Officers and Candidate Information and required officers and candidates to submit their three most recent filed tax returns to be publicaly released.[1][2]

Text of measure

Full text

  • The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Massachusetts

The state process

In Massachusetts, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated constitutional amendment for the ballot equal 3 percent of votes cast for governor in the most recent gubernatorial election. No more than one-quarter of the verified signatures on any petition can come from a single county. Signatures must be submitted to the secretary of the commonwealth by the first Wednesday in December in the year that is at least two years before the year of the targeted election date. Massachusetts is unique among states with a process for initiated constitutional amendments because state law requires that any proposed initiative with enough valid signatures be approved by one-quarter of state legislators in a joint hearing—with senators and representatives voting together—in two successive sessions for the initiative to be certified for the ballot.

The requirements to get an initiated constitutional amendment certified for the 2024 ballot:

If enough signatures are submitted by the deadline, the initiative goes to the legislature, where it must garner the approval of 25 percent of all lawmakers, with senators and representatives voting jointly, in two successive sessions. If this requirement is met, the initiative goes on the ballot at the next general election. Because of this unique requirement, the earliest an initiated constitutional amendment can reach the ballot is two years following signature submission. And, depending on the year, it can be three years after signature submission before voters decide on the measure.

Details about this initiative

  • The initiative was filed by Kirstin Beatty on August 4, 2021.[2]
  • On September 1, 2021, the attorney general announced that the initiative was not legally sufficient to be cleared for signature gathering.[3]

See also

External links

Footnotes