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North Carolina Independent Redistricting Amendment (2014): Difference between revisions

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:: ''See also: [[Legislatively-referred_constitutional_amendment#60.25_supermajority_2|Amending the North Carolina Constitution]]''
:: ''See also: [[Legislatively-referred_constitutional_amendment#60.25_supermajority_2|Amending the North Carolina Constitution]]''


[[Article XIII, North Carolina Constitution#Section 4|Section 4 of Article XIII]] of the [[North Carolina Constitution]] requires that a legislatively-referred amendment go on the ballot after it is approved by a 60 percent vote in each chamber of the [[North Carolina State Legislature]].
[[Article XIII, North Carolina Constitution#Section 4|Section 4 of Article XIII]] of the [[North Carolina Constitution]] requires that a legislatively referred amendment go on the ballot after it is approved by a 60 percent vote in each chamber of the [[North Carolina State Legislature]].


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 19:06, 18 September 2015

Not on Ballot
Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
This measure was not put
on an election ballot

The North Carolina Independent Redistricting Amendment was not on the November 4, 2014 ballot in North Carolina as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. The measure would have established an independent redistricting commission to handle all future state legislative and congressional redistricting.[1]

The proposed amendment was sponsored in the North Carolina Legislature as House Bill 910.[2]

Support

Supporters

Path to the ballot

See also: Amending the North Carolina Constitution

Section 4 of Article XIII of the North Carolina Constitution requires that a legislatively referred amendment go on the ballot after it is approved by a 60 percent vote in each chamber of the North Carolina State Legislature.

See also

References