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Nebraska Prohibit Forced or Coerced Medical Treatment Amendment (2022)

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Nebraska Prohibit Forced or Coerced Medical Treatment Amendment
Flag of Nebraska.png
Election date
November 8, 2022
Topic
Healthcare
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
Constitutional amendment
Origin
Citizens

The Nebraska Prohibit Forced or Coerced Medical Treatment Amendment was not on the ballot in Nebraska as an initiated constitutional amendment on November 8, 2022.

The initiative would have amended the Nebraska Constitution to prohibit any individual, employer, institution, school, private or public organization, or a governmental authority from coercing a minor contrary to parental approval or coercing an adult to receive medical treatment, including a vaccine. Penalties for violating the amendment would have been set by the Nebraska State Legislature. The measure would have taken effect on January 1, 2023.[1][2]

Text of measure

Object statement

The object statement for the initiative would have been as follows:[1]

An amendment to the Constitution of Nebraska is proposed which will protect the citizens of Nebraska against forced medical mandates.[3]

Constitutional changes

See also: Article I, Nebraska Constitution

The measure would have amended Article I of the state constitution by adding a new section. The following underlined text would have been added:[1]

No individual, employer, institution, school, private organization, public organization, or governmental authority shall coerce a minor contrary to parental approval, or require an adult, by coercion or force, to receive any type of medical service, medical procedure or vaccine which may infringe upon the person medical freedoms of said minor or adult. Penalties imposed against those mandating the infringement of medical freedoms shall be determined by the Nebraska State Legislature. Said penalties shall be imposed on both the official who established said requirement, and the employee who carried out the requirement. This proposed measure is to be implemented on January 1, 2023.[3]

Full text

  • The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Nebraska

The state process

In Nebraska, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated constitutional amendment for the ballot is equal to 10 percent of registered voters as of the deadline for filing signatures. Because of the unique signature requirement based on registered voters, Nebraska is also the only state where petition sponsors cannot know the exact number of signatures required until they are submitted. Nebraska law also features a distribution requirement mandating that petitions contain signatures from 5 percent of the registered voters in each of two-fifths (38) of Nebraska's 93 counties.

Signatures must be submitted at least four months prior to the next general election. Signatures do not roll over and become invalid after the next general election at least four months after the initial initiative application filing. Depending on when the initiative application is filed, petitioners can have up to just under two years to circulate petitions.

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

Signatures are submitted to the secretary of state. The secretary of state sends the appropriate signature petitions to each county, where county election officials verify the signatures. Upon receiving the signatures back from county officials, the secretary of state determines whether or not the requirements were met.

Details about this initiative

  • The initiative was filed by Michael Connely and Kelli Brady on September 2, 2021.[2]
  • The sponsors of the initiative did not file signatures on July 7, 2022.[2]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Nebraska Secretary of State, "Full text," accessed November 8, 2021
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Nebraska Secretary of State, "Petitions in circulation," accessed November 8, 2021
  3. 3.0 3.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "quotedisclaimer" defined multiple times with different content