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Missouri Designated State Legislative Proxies Initiative (2022)

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Missouri Designated State Legislative Proxies Initiative
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Election date
November 8, 2022
Topic
State legislatures measures
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

The Missouri Designated State Legislative Proxies Initiative was not on the ballot in Missouri as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 8, 2022.

The amendment would have allowed voters to submit a form to choose a proxy for state representative and state senator no more than once per calendar year and would have weighed votes of state representatives and senators based on the number of voters that designate the legislator as a proxy on all matters except a governor veto override.[1]

Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title was as follows:[1]

Do you want to amend the Missouri Constitution to provide that:

  • all eligible voters may submit a proxy form to one member of the house of representatives and one senator naming them as their designated representative;
  • allow each senator and representative to have weighted votes on all matters that come before the general assembly based on the number of proxies, with the exception to override a governor’s veto; and
  • voters may submit a new proxy form designating a different representative and/or senator as their representative(s) at any time but no more than once in any calendar year for each office?

State governmental entities estimate no savings, one-time costs of an unknown amount, and ongoing costs of an unknown totaling at least $38,000 per year. Local governmental entities estimate no costs or savings.[2]

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Missouri

Process in Missouri

In Missouri, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated constitutional amendment for the ballot is equal to 8 percent of the votes cast for governor in the previous gubernatorial election in six of the eight state congressional districts. Signatures must be filed with the secretary of state six months prior to the election.

The requirements to get an initiated constitutional amendment certified for the 2022 ballot:

  • Signatures: The smallest possible requirement was 171,592 valid signatures. The actual requirement depends on the congressional districts in which signatures were collected.
  • Deadline: The deadline to submit signatures was May 8, 2022.

Once the signatures have been filed with the secretary of state, the secretary copies the petition sheets and transmits them to county election authorities for verification. The secretary of state may choose whether the signatures are to be verified by a 5 percent random sample or full verification. If the random sampling projects between 90 percent and 110 percent of required signatures, a full check of all signatures is required. If more than 110 percent, the initiative is certified, and, if less than 90 percent, the initiative fails.

Stages of this initiative

Winston Apple filed the ballot initiative on March 4, 2020. On April 13, 2021, Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft (R) cleared the initiative for signature gathering.[1]

This initiative did not meet the signature requirements by the May 8, 2022 deadline.[3]

See also

Footnotes