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Montana Qualifications of County Superintendents Amendment (1924)

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Montana Amendment 1

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Election date

November 4, 1924

Topic
County and municipal governance and Public education governance
Status

ApprovedApproved

Type
Legislatively referred constitutional amendment
Origin

State legislature



Montana Amendment 1 was on the ballot as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment in Montana on November 4, 1924. It was approved.

A "yes" vote supported amending the constitution to allow anyone who can vote to run for county superintendent or any other school district office.

A "no" vote opposed amending the constitution to allow anyone who can vote to run for county superintendent or any other school district office.


Election results

Montana Amendment 1

Result Votes Percentage

Approved Yes

81,814 64.56%
No 44,920 35.44%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for Amendment 1 was as follows:

For the amendment to the constitution


Against the amendment to the constitution 

Full Text

The full text of this measure is available here.


Path to the ballot

See also: Amending the Montana Constitution

A two-thirds (66.67%) vote is required of all members of the legislature during one legislative session for the Montana State Legislature to place a constitutional amendment on the ballot. Since Montana has 150 legislators (100 Representatives and 50 Senators), at least 100 members must vote in favor of a constitutional amendment for it to pass. Amendments do not require the governor's signature to be referred to the ballot.

See also


External links

Footnotes