Texas 1948 ballot measures: Difference between revisions
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{{pt1}} [[Texas 1949 ballot measures|1949]] {{pt2}} [[Texas 1947 ballot measures|1947]] {{pt3}} | {{pt1}} [[Texas 1949 ballot measures|1949]] {{pt2}} [[Texas 1947 ballot measures|1947]] {{pt3}} | ||
In [[1948 ballot measures| 1948]], voters decided on eight statewide ballot measures in [[Texas]] on November 2. | |||
* | * The eight measures were {{lrcafull}}s. | ||
* | * Voters approved all eight measures. | ||
==On the ballot== | ==On the ballot== | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{txflag}} | {{txflag}} | ||
* [[Types of ballot measures in Texas]] | |||
* [[List of Texas ballot measures]] | * [[List of Texas ballot measures]] | ||
* [[1948 ballot measures]] | * [[1948 ballot measures]] | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* [ | *[https://lrl.texas.gov/legis/constamends/electionDates.cfm Legislative Reference Library of Texas, Constitutional Amendments] | ||
{{1948 ballot measures}} | {{1948 ballot measures}} | ||
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[[Category:Texas 1948 ballot measures]] | [[Category:Texas 1948 ballot measures]] | ||
[[Category:Past-date_ballot_measure_state_year_overviews]] | [[Category:Past-date_ballot_measure_state_year_overviews]] | ||
Latest revision as of 17:23, 8 April 2024
In 1948, voters decided on eight statewide ballot measures in Texas on November 2.
- The eight measures were legislatively referred constitutional amendments.
- Voters approved all eight measures.
On the ballot
November 2, 1948
| Type | Title | Subject | Description | Result | Yes Votes | No Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposition 1 | Labor | Grant the legislature the power to pass laws to provide county employees with workman's compensation insurance coverage |
|
574,987 (79%) |
156,122 (21%) |
|
| Proposition 2 | Redistricting | Create the Legislative Redistricting Board to handle senatorial and representative district reapportionment if the legislature does not |
|
528,158 (77%) |
153,704 (23%) |
|
| Proposition 3 | Family | Allow spouses to partition existing community property into separate property of the respective spouses |
|
548,718 (79%) |
149,438 (21%) |
|
| Proposition 4 | Executive | Provide for gubernatorial succession in the event the governor-elect dies, becomes disabled or fails to qualify for office |
|
548,195 (81%) |
130,119 (19%) |
|
| Proposition 5 | Taxes | Restore the exemption of $3,000 of the assessed taxable value of all residence homesteads from all state taxes |
|
614,325 (86%) |
104,059 (14%) |
|
| Proposition 6 | Law enforcement; Salaries | Require compensation for all law enforcement officers to be on a salary basis |
|
557,698 (80%) |
140,953 (20%) |
|
| Proposition 7 | Taxes | Prohibit ad valorem taxes for general revenue purposes beginning on January 1,1951 |
|
475,255 (70%) |
201,572 (30%) |
|
| Proposition 8 | Judiciary | Provide for the retirement and compensation of judges, based on service duration, age, or disability, and allow their reassignment to active duty |
|
376,070 (55%) |
312,624 (45%) |
See also
External links
State of Texas Austin (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Elections |
What's on my ballot? | Elections in 2026 | How to vote | How to run for office | Ballot measures |
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