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Washington Remove Taxes Based on Personal Income Initiative (2022)
Washington Remove Taxes Based on Personal Income Initiative | |
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Election date November 8, 2022 | |
Topic Taxes | |
Status Not on the ballot | |
Type State statute | Origin Citizens |
The Washington Remove Taxes Based on Personal Income Initiative was not on the ballot in Washington as an Initiative to the People, a type of initiated state statute, on November 8, 2022.
This initiative would have prohibited state and local governments from imposing taxes based on personal income and would have repealed a capital gains excise tax on certain sales of assets.[1]
Text of measure
The sponsor filed multiple versions of the initiative. Ballot language and full texts for the different versions may be found here.
Path to the ballot
The state process
In Washington, the number of signatures required to qualify a directly initiated state statute—called an Initiative to the People in Washington—for the ballot is equal to 8 percent of the votes cast for the office of governor at the last regular gubernatorial election. Initial filings for direct initiatives cannot be made more than 10 months before the general election at which their proposal would be presented to voters. Signatures must be submitted at least four months prior to the general election.
The requirements to get an Initiative to the People certified for the 2022 ballot:
- Signatures: 324,516 valid signatures
- Deadline: July 8, 2022
The secretary of state verifies the signatures using a random sample method. If the sample indicates that the measure has sufficient signatures, the measure is certified for the ballot. However, if the sample indicates that the measure has insufficient signatures, every signature is checked. Under Washington law, a random sample result may not invalidate a petition.
Details about this initiative
- Jim Walsh filed multiple versions of the initiative.[1]
- Signatures for the measure were not submitted by the deadline on July 8, 2022, therefore the initiative did not qualify for the 2022 ballot.[1]
See also
External links
Footnotes
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State of Washington Olympia (capital) |
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