Would Arizona voters agree to limit their power? Maybe, if they got this

Manuel Galdamez, a member of Rural Arizonans for Accountability, walks through a neighborhood in northern Pima County to gather signatures for a petition  || PHOTO BY NATHAN BROWN/ARIZONA CAPITOL TIMES

Opinion: Arizona already has tough requirements to place citizen-led initiatives on the ballot. Lawmakers need better reasons to make them even tougher.

Abe Kwok

Arizona Republic

Not every effort to restrict citizens-led initiatives is meritless. Or even unpopular. 

The 2022 election offered ample proof. 

Arizonans approved two of the three initiatives to tighten standards — one requiring 60% approval or more on ballot measures to raise taxes, the other limiting them to a single subject. 

While I had reservations of varying degrees about all three proposals, I believe Arizonans got it right. 

Will they do so again with the latest Legislature-referred measure to curb voters’ powers of redress? 

All 30 districts would need signatures

The 2024 ballot proposal makes gathering signatures to qualify a citizens-led initiative that much more difficult. 

Voters have greater reasons to be skeptical this time. 

To qualify a measure for the ballot now, citizens need the signatures of 10% of the turnout in the most recent gubernatorial election. For constitutional amendments, the percentage goes up to 15%. 

There are no restrictions on where the signatures are gathered. 

In practice, backers concentrate on Maricopa, Pima and a handful of other populous counties because they get the best bang for their buck spent on petition-circulators.

The initiative referred by the Legislature would mandate that the 10% and 15% threshold on signatures are met in all 30 legislative districts. 

More:

Share this!

Additional Articles

News Categories

Get Our Twice Weekly Newsletter!

* indicates required

Rose Law Group pc values “outrageous client service.” We pride ourselves on hyper-responsiveness to our clients’ needs and an extraordinary record of success in achieving our clients’ goals. We know we get results and our list of outstanding clients speaks to the quality of our work.

PRTA suspends operations

(Disclosure: Rose Law Group represents a coalition of property and business owners throughout Pinal County who have worked to bring new transportation infrastructure to the

Read More »
July 2023
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31