PROPOSITION
105
AN INITIATIVE MEASURE
MAJORITY RULE--LET THE
PEOPLE DECIDE ACT
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO THE
CONSTITUTION OF ARIZONA: AMENDING ARTICLE IV, PART 1, CONSTITUTION OF ARIZONA,
BY ADDING SECTION 1.1 RELATING TO INITIATIVE MEASURES AND REQUIRING THAT
ANY MANDATORY TAX OR SPENDING INCREASE BE ENACTED BY A MAJORITY OF QUALIFIED
ELECTORS.
Be it enacted by the
People of the State of Arizona:
The Constitution of
Arizona is proposed to be amended by adding Section 1.1 to Article IV,
Part 1 as follows, if approved by a majority of the votes cast thereon
and on proclamation of the Governor:
Section 1. Article
IV, Part 1, Constitution of Arizona, is amended by adding Section 1.1,
as follows:
§1.1. FISCAL
RESPONSIBILITY THROUGH TRUE MAJORITY RULE
SECTION 1.1. TO PRESERVE
AND PROTECT THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY THROUGH TRUE
MAJORITY RULE, AN INITIATIVE MEASURE THAT ESTABLISHES, IMPOSES OR RAISES
A TAX, FEE, OR OTHER REVENUE, OR MANDATES A SPENDING OBLIGATION, WHETHER
ON A PRIVATE PERSON, LABOR ORGANIZATION, OTHER PRIVATE LEGAL ENTITY OR
THIS STATE, SHALL NOT BECOME LAW UNLESS THE MEASURE IS APPROVED BY A MAJORITY
OF QUALIFIED ELECTORS THEN REGISTERED TO VOTE IN THIS STATE.
Section 2. Short Title:
This Constitutional Amendment shall be known as the "Majority Rule--Let
the People Decide Act."
Proposition 105 would amend
the Arizona Constitution to provide that an initiative measure that establishes,
imposes or raises a tax, a fee or other revenue or mandates a spending
obligation on a private person, a labor organization, other private legal
entity or this state shall not become law unless the initiative measure
is approved at the election by a majority of qualified electors registered
to vote in the state.
State law requires the Joint
Legislative Budget Committee (JLBC) Staff to prepare a summary of the fiscal
impact of certain ballot measures. The fiscal impact cannot be determined
in advance. Ballot propositions are currently approved by a majority of
votes cast on a measure. By increasing the current vote threshold for an
initiative that increases a tax or fee or creates a mandatory spending
obligation, Proposition 105 may reduce the number of such initiatives that
are approved in the future.
ARGUMENT IN FAVOR OF THE MAJORITY
RULES INITIATIVE
On behalf of the Arizona chapter
of Americans for Prosperity (www.aztaxpayers.org), we encourage all Arizona
voters to vote YES on Prop 105, the Majority Rules Initiative.
Proportionally, our state government
has the largest budget deficit in the nation. One of the main causes of
the fiscal crisis is the fact that almost half of the state budget is on
autopilot. Every year, the Governor and Legislature are forced by voter-approved
ballot measures to spend more and more money on certain government programs.
Because of voter-approved spending
mandates, the Governor and the Legislature are not allowed to freeze or
reduce the spending for those government programs--even during a recession,
when companies are closing, people are losing their jobs, and tax revenues
are drying up.
The Majority Rules Initiative
would not affect existing voter-approved spending mandates, but it would
raise the bar, making it harder for special interests to enact new spending
mandates. That makes sense. When you're deep in a hole, the first thing
you should do is to stop digging.
The Majority Rules Initiative
would also make it harder for special interests to use ballot initiatives
to raise our taxes. Of course, if we, as a strong majority of voters, want
new spending obligations or tax increases, we can still vote for them.
We, the voters of Arizona,
have done much to create the state's budget crisis. And we, the voters,
must fix it. We urge you to join us in voting YES on Prop 105.
|
Chad Kirkpatrick,
Arizona Chairman, Americans for Prosperity, Phoenix
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Tom Jenney, Arizona
Director, Americans for Prosperity
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Paid for
by "Americans for Prosperity"
|
Vote YES on Proposition 105
because a true majority should set new taxes at the ballot box.
With some irony this initiative
is forced by previous initiatives which have created out of control state
spending and burdensome regulations by special interests of using the
ballot box. Low voter turnout elections create situations where taxes,
spending and regulations can be driven by narrow special interests, but
the costs are borne by everyone on a permanent basis.
This initiative says if the
voters of Arizona want to enact new taxes and mandates on government
and the private sector, the measure must be passed by a majority of those
qualified to vote in that election. This initiative does not affect proposals
referred to the voters by the legislature. These proposals are thoroughly
debated and are tested beyond the "slick and misleading" slogans
special interests use when they put their measures on the ballot. It
also does not effect local bonding elections for local government and
schools.
When special interests put
permanent tax, spending and regulatory measures on the ballot, a vote
of a majority of those qualified to vote should be required.
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Kevin Rogers,
President, Arizona Farm Bureau, Gilbert
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Jim Klinker,
Chief Administrative Officer, Arizona Farm Bureau, Gilbert
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Paid for by "Arizona
Farm Bureau"
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Our legislators and our governor
have failed us
They are spending too much of our tax money.
Their hands must be tied.
This ballot measure will help do that.
Please vote yes
CONCERNED
ABOUT OUR BUDGET DEFICIT? VOTE YES FOR MAJORITY RULE
Our state faces a massive,
crushing, and growing budget deficit. When a family has these problems,
it cuts its spending. So too did our Legislature try to curb the spending
frenzy of years past. But it couldn't, because much of the spending was
approved through ballot measures, and it is nearly impossible to reduce
it, even in times of fiscal emergency.
Many of those spending measures
were enacted by far fewer than a majority of Arizona voters. Yet their
actions tie the hands of our elected officials, and all of us bear the
financial burden.
Moreover, special-interest
groups not only benefit from higher taxes and spending, but they often
lavishly bankroll campaigns to convince voters to approve them through
the initiative process. Once approved, even if voter turnout is light,
those increases often are locked in forever.
It makes sense that if voter-approved
spending measures are largely off-limits even when circumstances change,
they should reflect the will of a true majority of Arizona voters. The
Majority Rule initiative would make sure that spending and tax increases
reflect the real will of the people.
Taxes and spending in Arizona
are growing far faster than population and inflation. As a result, our
economy is stagnating, property values are plummeting, and people are
losing their homes and businesses. It's a fiscal train that's out of
control. If our politicians won't fix it--indeed, can't fix it--we the
citizens need to assume greater control and responsibility. Majority
Rule gives us the power to control our fiscal destiny.
The Majority Rules Initiative,
Proposition 105, promises to make it harder for the tax and spend special
interests, whose appetites seem never satiated, to highjack our ballot
box and with a minority of the people in this state impose new taxes
or new spending on the rest of us.
Under current law, out-of-state
special interests can hire paid circulators to put tax and spend measures
on the ballot which can become law without a broad state consensus that
the taxing or spending is necessary or wise. Indeed, they can become
law with only a minority of registered voters supporting them. Special
interests have done just this with the result that the Legislature is
powerless to cut back on the mandated spending, even if it means paying
taxes we can't afford or spending more than we have in the state's treasury.
It is more important than
ever, when taxes are choking us and state spending is out of control,
that we put the brakes on runaway special interests high jacking our
ballot box for their favorite tax and spend schemes. If a measure is
worthy of support, it will attract a broad consensus -- a majority of
qualified electors -- to become law. Accepting less than a true majority
of qualified voters means that a measure does not have the broad support
that it should have before new taxes or new spending are forced onto
the entire state.
Please remember the wise
counsel of Thomas Jefferson: "We must make our election between
economy and liberty, or profusion and servitude. I place economy among
the first and most important of republican virtues, and public debt as
the greatest of the dangers to be feared."
Please support this reasonable
fiscal restraint and help Arizona get its budget under control.
In 1992 voters approved a
measure that made it tougher for state lawmakers to raise taxes. Instead
of a simple majority needed to pass a tax increase, it now takes 2/3
of the legislature to pass a tax increase on Arizona taxpayers. This
has proved to be an important safeguard. From the time that initiative
passed 16 years ago, the legislature has not been successful in raising
taxes. Unfortunately that's not the end of the story.
Interest groups have successfully
raised taxes and spending for their causes by circumventing the legislature
and getting approval from only a simple majority of election-day voters.
This means that a minority of registered voters can raise taxes on everyone.
Like the protection against
legislative tax increases passed 16 years ago, Majority Rule provides
a similar safeguard against interest groups that seek to raise taxes
or spending.
Simply stated, Majority Rule
says that any citizen initiative that seeks to raise taxes or spending
must be approved by a majority of all registered voters.
Please vote yes on Prop.
105, the Majority Rule initiative.
END UNFAIRNESS
OF MICRO-MINORITY RULE
Imagine that only 15 of your
neighbors decide that the other 85 of you should be charged for decades
or longer for a project that was destined to bankrupt the entire neighborhood.
This is precisely what happens now under the rules that allow a small
percentage of voters to raise taxes or spending through ballot initiatives.
Requiring a simple majority of qualified voters before new spending or
taxing can be instituted would be a far superior system. And infinitely
fairer.
It's all in a name. One trick
is to give a ballot measure such warm and fuzzy titles that a small number
of voters (currently the threshold for passage) is enticed into agreeing
to more spending or taxation, sometimes in perpetuity. A busy citizen
caught up in the business of supporting a family or surviving crises
is no match for a highly-paid public relations consultant who knows the
right catch phrases to splash across a 5-color brochure in order to bag
an affirmative vote for ever more juicy entitlements.
Despite the rosy scenarios
painted by politicians that all is fine in our fiscal affairs, Arizona
is on the verge of going broke. Elected officials who say otherwise are
just covering their trails.
This initiative is one of
the most important on which Arizona citizens will vote. Let's help save
our state from monetary meltdown. End the unfairness of minority rule
by voting YES.
ARGUMENT IN FAVOR OF THE MAJORITY
RULE INITIATIVE
Since the initiative process
has been taken over by lobbyists and special interest groups, I encourage
all Arizona voters to take back the initiative process by voting YES
on Prop 105, the Majority Rule Initiative.
In recent years the initiative
process has been hijacked by lobbyists and special interest groups whose
sole mission is to trample on the many for the benefit of the few, and
it has become a plague on Arizona's system of government.
In an effort to curb wasteful
government spending, Arizona taxpayers have required the Legislature
to have a supermajority to raise taxes. Since these groups cannot pass
their "projects" through the legislative process, they have
turned to the slick public relations firms to convince us to raise our
taxes for their pet projects.
Unfortunately, very citizen
of Arizona must pay for these projects, we don't require a majority of
the taxpayers to approve them. That's why it's time to reinstate majority
rule. Simply put Majority Rule requires a majority of the taxpayers to
decide how money is spent, and not special interest groups.
With all of the increased
spending, Arizona will need to raise taxes to pay for it. We need to
require a true majority of tax-paying citizens to approve of these spending
measures. By working together we can change the system and send the special
interests packing.
On Election Day, please don't
let your guard down. The special interests will do their best to scare
us, but don't be fooled. The best thing we can do for ourselves, our
families and our state is to take back the power from these special interests
and finally let all of the people decide. Please join me in voting YES
on Prop 105.
|
Matthew Clark,
Executive Director, Golden Door Foundation, Chandler
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ARGUMENT
IN FAVOR OF THE MAJORITY RULE INITIATIVE
As a small business owner
that cares about promoting freedom and opportunity for all Arizonans,
I encourage all Arizona voters to vote YES on Prop 105, the Majority
Rule Initiative.
My belief in our representative
government is why I support the Majority Rule Initiative. Unfortunately,
the initiative process has diverted the electorate's attention away from
who is in their State Legislatures, which is a detriment to our system
and to the cause of freedom. That is why I believe Majority Rule is a
critical step to begin to reform the process. By removing the ability
for special interests to use ballot initiatives to raise our taxes and
mandate increased spending, voters will shift their focus back where
it belongs: our elected state leadership.
Passage of Majority Rule
will improve the quality of our elected leadership, protect representative
democracy, improve Arizona's economy, protect an individual's property
from Government confiscation, and result in more freedom for future generations.
My Grandfather, Carl Karcher,
started Carl's Jr. with a 7th Grade education, a Hot Dog Cart, and hardly
a penny to his name. This is possible only in a free enterprise system.
The more the free enterprise system is encroached upon by taxes and spending
that are mandated by special interest through the current initiative
process, the more the free enterprise system is diminished.
The
Majority Rule Initiative amends Arizona's Constitution to ensure that
any new taxes or spending approved by the initiative process is not done
by a small minority of Arizona voters. This initiative is a step towards
freedom and protects the free enterprise system for all current and future
Arizonans. Please join me in voting YES on Prop 105.
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Jason LeVecke,
CEO, MJKL Enterprises, Guadalupe
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Margaret LeVecke,
CMO, MJKL Enterprises, Guadalupe
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Paid
for by "MJKL Enterprises"
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Argument Against Prop 105
Majority Rules - Let the People
Decide
This deceptive initiative is
intended to tie the hands of voters in Arizona. PROP 105 will make it nearly
impossible for civic and community organizations to impact public policy
through the will of the voter. PROP 105 states that an initiative must
gain more than 50% of qualified electors (all registered voters) to become
law.
Proponents of PROP 105 are
empowering registered voters who don't exercise their right and civic duty
to vote. In this Presidential Election, Arizonans will come out to vote
in masses; nearly 70% of registered voters will cast a ballot. If PROP
105 were in effect this election, a ballot initiative would have to achieve
75% of the vote to make up for the 30% of voters who opted to stay home.
PROP 105 and its proponents
are giving a voice to apathy.
A vote in opposition will protect
the rights of Arizonans to change public policy by the will of the voter.
The Arizona Education Association requests a NO vote on PROP 105.
|
John Wright,
President, Arizona Education Association, Phoenix
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Andrew Morrill,
Vice-President, Arizona Education Association, Phoenix
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Paid
for by "Arizona Education Association"
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ARGUMENT AGAINST C-19-2008 :
Vote NO. This initiative destroys
the foundation of democracy.
"We The People" decide
by not only registering to vote - but actually voting. The winning side
must obtain a 'simple majority' (i.e., 50% of those voting plus 1 vote).
Our fundamental democratic
rights in the United States and in the State of Arizona are based on
winning a 'simple majority' for making public policy and governance decisions.
It is very hard to accomplish simple majority votes in any democracy.
This proposal causes a small
MINORITY to dictate that our social contract to abide by a simple majority
vote is destroyed by their distorted, small MINORITY sense of what is
good for them, but a disaster for a democratic society. Specifically,
they want a majority of registered voters plus 1 for new governmental
revenues to be enacted.
The insanity of this position
will be easily shown by looking at past Arizona General Election Yr-1998
and Yr-2006 turnout, and the distorted vote needed to get over this "insane
threshold" proposal.
Only 45.8% voted in Yr-1998;
therefore, even if 100% voted YES - it would have been IMPOSSIBLE to
enact any revenue issues.
Even if 100% voted 'yes',
the law would still not pass.
Only 64% voted in Yr-2006;
therefore a 82% yes vote would have been needed to enact any revenue
issues.
I am not arguing for more
taxes, but if society votes for them with a simple majority, then so
be it. That is democracy at work.
This proposal 'poisons-the-heart'
of DEMOCRACY by allowing MINORITY RULE to dictate social and governmental
policy. DEMOCRACY can not survive such self-centered interests.
Defend DEMOCRACY across Arizona
by VOTING NO on this proposal!!
|
Bradley K.
Vandermark, Phoenix
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Why should we let people
that don't bother to vote decide an election? Prop. 105 would do this
by counting people registered to vote - but who don't bring themselves
to ACTUALLY cast a ballot -- as a NO vote in any initiative designed
to raise funds for issues such as education. It is plain undemocratic,
un-American and bad for Arizona.
The Arizona School
Boards Association, an organization made up of 230 school districts and
their volunteer governing boards, urges you to vote against Prop. 105.
If Prop. 105 had been in
effect in 2000 the voters would not have passed the six-tenths of a cent
sales tax that has provided a funding stream of more than $2 billion
to increase teacher salaries and classroom opportunities for public school
children. Can you imagine our classrooms even more shortchanged than
they already are - even less for teacher salaries, reducing class size
and extending educational programs? 50th place: that is Arizona's ranking
in per pupil funding on education Prop. 105 quite likely would make that
ranking permanent.
Prop. 105 is one of the worst
ideas to come along in a long time and would severely jeopardize Arizona's
future. There are already checks and balances in place for initiatives
that raise revenues; they are difficult, but not impossible. Prop. 105
doesn't make sense for this state.
The Arizona School
Boards Association urges you to defeat Prop. 105.
|
Suzanne Schweiger-Nitchals,
President, Arizona School Boards Association, Phoenix
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Panfilo H.
Contreras, Executive Director, Arizona School Boards Association,
Chandler
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Paid
for by "Arizona School Boards Association, Inc."
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The so-called "Majority
Rule Initiative", actually contradicts majority rule
and
allows a small minority of voters to overrule the will of the majority.
Passage of this measure will destroy our citizen initiative process
which has been a core constitutional right of Arizonans since we became
a state in 1912.
This act would apply to almost
every initiative placed on the ballot preventing Arizona voters from
implementing programs that have even small administrative costs (Humane
Treatment of Farm Animals), increase state revenues even without raising
taxes (Indian Gaming), or raise the standard of living for Arizona's
working poor (State Minimum Wage).
Requiring approval by a majority
of all registered voters (including those
who have died or moved out of state, but are still on the rolls), is
not only undemocratic but will effectively kill any ballot measure, even
extremely popular ideas that pass by more than a three-to-one margin
at the polls. For example, in a typical Arizona general election with
a 60 percent voter turnout, more than 83 percent of those voting would
have to vote yes for any measure to pass. This means the 17 percent of
voters who cared enough to vote "no" would have their way over
the vast majority of voters who cared enough to vote "yes".
This
is not majority rule, it's minority tyranny!
If this measure had been
in place since statehood popular ideas as diverse as our Heritage Fund
for public parks, our Independent Redistricting Commission, Smoke Free
Arizona, increased classroom funding, funding for early childhood development
and Clean Elections all would have been defeated despite receiving majority
votes due to their great appeal and broad benefits.
Maintain
the American principle that every vote is equal by rejecting this undemocratic
attack on our constitutional rights. Vote No on Prop 105.
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Bart Turner,
President, Clean Elections Institute, Glendale
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Ann Eschinger,
Vice President, Clean Elections Institute, Phoenix
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Renz Jennings,
Secretary/Treasurer, Clean Elections Institute, Phoenix
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Paid
for by "Clean Elections Institute"
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The Arizona Hospital and
Healthcare Association, representing Arizona's hospitals, strongly opposes
the so-called "Majority Rules Initiative," Proposition 105,
because in reality it is the "Ultra-Minority Rules" initiative.
It throws away the votes of responsible citizens who take the time to
vote and gives power to people who do not vote.
Currently, ballot initiatives
either pass or fail based on the majority of people voting. If Prop 105
passes, most citizen initiatives will fail unless they receive yes votes
from a majority of all persons registered to vote--not a majority of
people actually voting. Typically, only about 50 percent of registered
voters actually vote. That would mean for nearly every initiative, every
single person who takes the time to vote would have to vote for the initiative
to make it become law. In other words, people who don't vote will actually
have more power than citizens who take the time to go to the polls to
vote.
If this "Ultra-Minority
Rule" had been in effect before, we would not have Clean Elections
to diminish the influence of special-interest money in state government;
we would not have smoke-free restaurants and hotels; we would not have
the Heritage Fund that protects our parks, trails and wildlife; we would
not have the tobacco tax that helps fund healthcare for millions of Arizonans
and we would not have the Arizona Indian Gaming initiative that funds
emergency rooms and trauma centers all over Arizona. The initiatives
that created all those programs would not be law even though they were
passed by large majorities of the people voting. People who didn't vote
would have had more power than people who did vote.
On behalf of hospitals throughout
the state, Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association strongly urges
you to vote "no" on "Majority Rules" Proposition
105.
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Adda Alexander,
Executive Vice President, Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association,
Phoenix
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James F. Haynes,
Vice President, CFO, Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Assocaition,
Phoenix
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Paid
for by "Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association"
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Anyone reading this letter
obviously is a conscientious voter. Congratulations on taking your right
to vote seriously. Ironically, Prop 105 aims to marginalize YOU by diluting
your right to vote.
The proposition says that
any voter who takes the time (like you) to learn an issue can still vote "YES" or "NO" on
an initiative AND ALL THOSE WHO DO NOT CARE TO TAKE THE TIME AND DO NOT
VOTE ARE COUNTED AS A "NO". Why does that make sense? It doesn't.
Majority Rules is a dangerous
constitutional amendment that guts your rights. Even if you and I as
informed voters may not agree on an issue, yet we take the time to learn
the issue and then vote on it, our voices should be heard equally. Not
so according to Prop 105
Prop 105 wrongly puts the
will of people who don't vote at our level of importance. It requires
initiatives to receive the majority vote from ALL registered voters-
even those who don't bother voting in essence cast a ballot. This proposition
is being pushed by special interests who fear people like us because
you and I actually vote. In a patronizing sweep of illogic, these groups
(this proposition is being paid by the liquor and fast food industry)
claim that anyone not actually voting would therefore be a "NO".
Why does that make sense? It doesn't.
Join me and other people
who take voting seriously by rejecting Prop 105 with a NO vote. Arizona
deserves to have fair elections.
|
Slade Mead,
Former State Senator, Phoenix
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Vote NO on "Majority
Rules", Prop 105
We at Healthy Arizona have,
twice, offered Arizona voters initiatives that made sense, and that brought
healthcare to hundreds of thousands of hard-working, low income Arizona
families. You've voted, overwhelmingly, each time, for what we've put
on the ballot, because we are on your side, have no special interests
to placate, and share your values. We are now asking you to vote NO to
stop corporate greed and give Arizonans the right to vote for the programs
they deserve.
If this initiative had been
in place, voters would never have been able to vote to use lawsuit settlement
money, from the tobacco industry, for funding healthcare. If not for
the voters of Arizona, over 300,000 citizens would not have health insurance!
Let's face it-- the Arizona
Constitution gave voters this power because we need to have recourse
when our legislature is not fulfilling the will of the people.
But now, the special interests
want to limit our say. They'd let non-voters, who never even make it
to the polls, overrule what the majority of voters want.
And this restriction only
applies to initiatives where you decide to spend money, not ones that
cut revenues. The legislature can still vote to stop revenues, and bankrupt
the programs we support, like funding for schools and healthcare. If
we pass this initiative, there's nothing we can do to correct it.
We say, Yes, let the people
decide-- but only to those who actually vote. Decide to keep it that
way. Vote NO on Prop 105.
|
Eve Shapiro,
MD, MPH, Chair, Healthy Arizona, Tucson
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Paid
for by "Healthy Arizona"
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"Church Women United
urges a NO vote.
Did you vote, a few years
ago, to increase the tax on cigarettes, in order to fund schools? Did
you vote for the money, that Arizona got in a lawsuit to go to help hard-working,
low-income families get healthcare? Did you vote for lottery money to
go to preserve park land in Arizona? Do you think that new housing developments
should pay a fee, to pay for the sewer hookups, etc? Would you vote for
that? Would you vote for a tax on the sale of heavy gas-guzzling Hummers,
to pay for the extra wear on our highways and extra pollution in our
air?
If you said "yes," then
you are with the majority of Arizonans. Or, at least, with the majority
who vote. But then, this constitutional amendment no longer leaves such
matters in the hands of those who vote. Read the last sentence-- "approved
by a majority of qualified electors then registered to vote." If
this measure passes, none of the things you've supported in the past,
or want to support in the future, will pass. Because voters will be "outvoted" by
nonvoters, under this thing.
Church Women United has no
axe to grind in this. We are not special interest lobbyists, trying to
undermine free elections. But, then, in our denominations, when elections
are held, only those folks who show up in the pews, and at the conventions
and meetings and councils, actually decide things. We don't consider
ourselves "outvoted" by the folks who sleep in on Sundays.
We cannot understand why voters who make it to the polls would allow
the illusion that those, who don't, should cancel our votes.
Vote NO."
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Carolyn Redmore,
President, Church Women United in Tucson, Tucson
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Jane Rohwer,
Finance Chairperson, Church Women United in Tucson, Tucson
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Paid
for by "Church Women United in Tucson"
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"As Candidates of the
Arizona Green Party, we urge a NO vote.
This pretends to be about "the
people" deciding, but [surprise!] it isn't.
For example, it creates a
limitation on us voters, but only when we decide something is valuable
enough to pay for. If this were such a good idea, why doesn't it cut
both ways? If the decision is truly ours, then any limitation, in our
constitution, should be even handed. After all, right now being able
to run initiatives is the only way we voters have to bypass stalemates
in the legislature, and get past the lobbyists' wish-lists for our tax
dollars. Why tie our hands?
But, get this, it isn't about
voters deciding, either. Because a majority of actual voters can't decide
anything, ever again, if we pass this measure. Only a majority of "registered" voters.
So if, say, 49% of registered voters make it to the polls, then, even
with 100% approval, what we want fails. That's right-- the phantom voter,
who doesn't cast a ballot, can cancel your vote. This measure disenfranchises
people who actually vote, in favor of people who are registered, but
do not vote.
The Green Party is about
giving people more reasons to vote, not about presuming that folks who
don't show up are somehow voting against funding education, healthcare,
protecting the environment, the air, the land. We actually believe that
voters are smart, and want to save the planet, even if it means taxing
themselves, or taxing some special interest that is trying to pull a
fast one on them. To learn more about this measure, and to read what
about other initiatives, go to the AzGP website at www.azgp.org
Vote NO. "
|
Claudia Ellquist,
Green Party candidate for Pima County Attorney, Tucson
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Kent Solberg,
Green Party candidate for the Arizona House, Legislative District
27, Tucson
|
|
Paid
for by "Kent Solberg for the House"
|
The "Majority Rules" initiative
is anything but that - it's a backhanded attempt to basically end the
citizens' initiative process in Arizona.
This proposal, PROP 105,
would take everyone on the voter rolls who doesn't show up to vote -
those who didn't bother to get a ballot or go to the polling place, people
who have moved, even dead people - and count them as "no" votes.
By requiring that a majority of all registered voters - not just those
who show up, but all registered voters - to approve of an initiative,
the promoters of this proposal would set up a threshold for passing an
initiative that's almost impossible to meet.
In recent years, turnout
in presidential election years may approach 60 percent - which means
that about 83 percent of people who cast their ballots would have to
approve of an initiative for it to pass. This would mean that even if
a big majority of Arizonans who showed up to vote - 65, 75, 80 percent
- approved of a proposal, it still couldn't pass.
This isn't "majority
rules" - it's robbing voters of their chance to make important decisions
about the future of our state.
The supporters of this initiative
will say it's just about taxes - but really, the way it's written, PROP
105 would doom almost any voter initiative, because all of them require
some kind of administrative cost in order to implement them.
If you care about the rights
of Arizonans to vote on initiatives that are important to the future
of Arizona, then you should vote no on PROP 105.
The so-called "Majority
Rules" initiative's slogan is "Let the People Decide!" but
it really should be "Let the Non-Voters Decide!"
If it passes, any initiative
that involves a tax, fee, or other revenue source must be approved not
by a majority of those voting, but by a majority of all registered voters.
If someone didn't vote, they voted no.
Because not everybody votes,
the initiative cedes power to those who don't vote. A typical off-year
election has 50 percent turnout, so no spending or tax initiative could
pass, even with 100 percent of the votes. It wouldn't be a majority of
all registered voters.
Initiatives for taxes are
the ballgame in Arizona, because supermajority legislative requirements
mean a 33 percent minority can block everything. Making initiatives pass
with a majority of registered voters would give a minority of 25 or 15
percent the same power. Ignore the spin; if this initiative passes, then
it's the minority who will rule.
The initiative depends on
a cute legal trick, switching the way people usually talk about elections
with a deceptive phrase that means something entirely different. We're
comfortable deciding things based on a majority of voters. That's how
we elect candidates, right? But switching the common term "voter" for "qualified
elector" means that those people who actually vote no longer get
to decide, because those who don't vote suddenly count.
So vote no, then raise a
toast to the Beer & Wine Distributors of Arizona, major funders of
this truly bad idea. Hey, if they believe so deeply in majority rule,
then liquor licenses should be approved by a majority of qualified electors,
not just a namby-pamby majority of those voting.
After all, what sauce goes
with both goose and gander? Beer and wine, baby, beer and wine.
|
Hon. Sam Coppersmith,
Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Coppersmith Gordon Schemer & Brockelman PLC"
|
Protect
Our Constitutional Rights:
Please Oppose
Onerous Restrictions on Citizen Initiatives.
Vote "no" on
Proposition 105.
Proposition 105 refers to
the ballot yet another constitutional amendment that, if approved, would
significantly restrict the ability of Arizona voters to enact laws via
the initiative process, which is the only way we have been able to get
many important protections and programs. For example, the Arizona Heritage
Fund, which provides funding for parks and wildlife as well as for trails
and playground equipment, was enacted via a citizen initiative and was
approved by nearly a two-thirds vote. If Proposition 105 passes, even
measures such as the Heritage Fund that receive overwhelming support
would not pass as they would need a majority of everyone registered rather
than of everyone who voted.
This proposition gives more
power to the people who sit home and don't vote and dilutes the power
of voters who take the time to learn about the measures and vote for
or against each of them based on thoughtful consideration. We require
no such hurdles for our elected officials; why should we require it of
ballot measures?
The initiative and referendum
process in some form is older than our country itself -- it dates back
to the 1600s when via town meetings, communities voted on ordinances
and other issues. The authors of the Arizona Constitution thought that
the initiative and referendum process provided citizens with both a check
on the legislative branch and on the then widespread corruption of big
business and monopolies. They thought it was critical that the citizens
have an equal opportunity to create laws directly via the initiative
process. We agree with that.
Please vote "no" on
Proposition 105.
|
Jim Vaaler,
Chairperson, Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Chapter, Phoenix
|
Don Steuter,
Conservation Chair, Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Chapter, Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Sierra Club Grand Canyon Chapter"
|
-
DEMOCRACY IS NOT A SPECTATOR SPORT
-
TRANSPARENCY IN GOVERNMENT
-
VOTERS HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO VOTE
AND GOVERNMENT HAS A RESPONSIBILITY TO VOTERS
The League of Women Voters
holds these three tenets. They are not beliefs embodied in Prop 105.
Why is the proposition not
transparent? Because it is misleading. Voters read "majority rules" and
support that. The League strongly supports majority rule, but this is
something else. This proposition changes our election process. It takes
away the voter's voice and gives it to others. The proposition is not
about the majority of Voters; it is about the majority of possible voters.
Additionally misleading is
that voters who support fiscal responsibility may find they have done
just the reverse. In all practicality, Prop 105 eliminates citizens'
ability to establish or adjust funding for programs and services - including
safe roads, jails, prisons, public safety, schools, libraries, parks,
or effective police and fire protection. Once locked into law, it may
be difficult to ever repeal.
We think voting is both a
right and a responsibility. Not everyone acknowledges this responsibility.
That is their choice. But why should those who do not vote have as much
say in governance as voters who take their responsibility seriously?
Why should government interpret
the wishes of 'no-show people' who are not 'voters'? The assumption here
is that people who haven't voted would vote 'no'. But how can anyone
know? Government must be responsible to those who DO vote - not allow
others to cancel their vote.
Prop 105 violates our principles
of democracy. It violates 'one-person, one-vote' voting. It steals the
voice of voters.
Democracy is not a spectator
sport - one must vote to be counted. Let's protect the VOTER'S voice.
Vote No on Proposition 105.
|
Dr. Bonnie
F. Saunders, President, League of Women Voters of Arizona, Surprise
|
Dr. Barbara
Klein, 1st VP, League of Women Voters of Arizona, Scottsdale
|
|
Paid
for by "League of Women Voters of Arizona"
|
Look at the citizens' initiatives
that voters have passed in recent years by overwhelming margins - more
resources for early childhood education and health, laws for the humane
treatment of farm animals, the creation of an independent redistricting
commission.
Now think if all of these
initiatives, which won overwhelming support at the ballot box, couldn't
become law because it fell short of the threshold it needed to pass -
83% of those who came to vote.
Do you think that would be
majority rule? Well, there's a group of people who think so - and who
also think that 60%, 70%, 80% approval just isn't enough consensus for
the citizens of Arizona to be able to make their own laws.
The so-called "Majority
Rules" initiative, PROP 105, would basically count everyone who
doesn't show up to the polls - even those who remain on the voting rolls
but have moved, or are even dead - as "no" votes against citizen
initiatives. Because at the highest, voter turnout has gotten up to 60%
in recent years, it would mean that an initiative would have to pass
by more than a 6-to-1 margin to win.
Can you think of the last
time that voters approved of anything by a 6-to-1 margin? It's tough
to remember one - examples are very rare.
I don't know why the supporters
of PROP 105 don't trust Arizonans to make their own laws. But it seems
like common sense that if the citizens want to place a proposal on the
ballot, it shouldn't take some kind of super-majority to pass.
It's overwhelmingly clear
that if you support the democratic process and citizens' initiative,
you should vote against gutting the ability of Arizonans to make laws
for themselves, and vote no on PROP 105.
|
Tim Hill, President,
Professional Fire Fighters of Arizona, Glendale
|
Mike Colletto,
Legislative Director, Professional Fire Fighters of Arizona, Glendale
|
|
Paid
for by "Professional Fire Fighters of Arizona"
|
Majority Rules is a catchy
title for a measure that in reality would thwart the will of the people
and their constitutional right to make law through the initiative process.
While it sounds good, Majority Rules is in reality a title designed to
deflect its real intent.
The framers of Arizona's
Constitution had it right in 1912 when they wrote into the Constitution
the people's right to decide policy matters when they disagree with their
elected officials.
While "Majority Rules" sounds
democratic, it is cleverly designed to make any initiative of the people
virtually impossible to pass. It would require a majority of registered
voters to pass an initiative, a very daunting task. We elect representatives
by a simple majority of those who chose to vote. Why would we willingly
give up the right to pass or reject initiatives in the same manner?
After nearly 100 years, the
initiative process has become ingrained as part of the state's governance
structure. I don't believe we should support weakening it or rendering
it powerless. Apathy should not be a weapon to hinder the rights of those
who take the time to be involved in the process.
If Majority Rules were in
place, most, if not all, of the public safety, immigration, education
and infrastructure initiatives that have recently passed would have failed.
It cuts across the board for conservatives, moderates and liberals alike.
We believe this is bad public
policy that has would have a serious and detrimental negative impact
on Arizona's future. And, as the CEO and CFO of Phoenix Children's Hospital
whose sole purpose it is to make our children's lives better, I urge
all Arizonans to reject this misguided proposition.
Sincerely,
|
Robert Meyer,
CEO, Phoenix Children's Hospital, Phoenix
|
Larry Smith,
CFO, Phoenix Children's Hospital, Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Phoenix Children's Hospital"
|
Vote NO
on Majority Rules
Among the 2.7 million people
registered in Arizona, more than 500,000 are listed by the Secretary
of State as "inactive" - meaning they have died or moved away.
If Majority Rules passes, each of these non-existent voters is given
a vote in Arizona. Majority Rules brings Chicago-style politics to Arizona.
Vote NO and keep control of Arizona votes in the hands of living Arizonans
who care about their country and their state.
Majority Rules would effectively
take away the right of Arizona citizens to petition their government.
As example:
In 2006, Prop 103, English
as the Official Language, 74% of Arizonans voted Yes. Under Majority
Rules, it would have FAILED because more than 83% of the voters would
have had to agree.
In 2006, Prop 207, Private
Property Rights Protection, 65% of Arizonans voted Yes. Under Majority
Rules, it would have FAILED because more than 83% of the voters would
have had to agree.
In 2006, Prop 203, Early
Childhood Education, 53% of Arizonans voted Yes. Under Majority Rules,
it would have FAILED because more than 83% of the voters would have had
to agree.
Majority Rules virtually
removes the right to petition government in Arizona. If you believe our
citizens should have the right to voice their opinion and force politicians
to listen, then you should VOTE NO.
Remember, Majority Rules
would allow 19% of people registered (one half million) who are most
likely dead or no longer in Arizona to have their votes "counted" in
every election. VOTE NO ON MAJORITY RULES!
WESTMARC
urges a NO VOTE on Proposition 105!
WESTMARC is a regional coalition
of business, government, and education that advocates for good public
policy. As a partnership between business and government, it is paramount
that we thoroughly consider public policy issues and work collaboratively
toward public policy that is good for our West Valley region and our
state.
WESTMARC
has thoroughly reviewed Proposition 105 and does not believe that the
Majority
Rules - Let the People Decide
Initiative will
be beneficial to our region or our state.
WESTMARC believes in the
fundamental principles of majority rule that our forefathers laid before
us, and that this Initiative actually violates those principles.
WESTMARC further believes
that:
-
Arizona already has
many constitutional and voter protected mechanisms in place to limit
and control taxes at all levels of government;
-
overlaying this Initiative
on existing taxpayer protections would be devastating to the state's
ability to address future funding needs;
-
this Initiative would
exacerbate our state budget situation instead of improving it;
-
this constitutional
change is unnecessary because of existing taxpayer protections;
-
our government system
is a democratic republic, not a populist government; we elect people
to represent us in government, that citizens have the right to choose
to vote or not, and that if citizens choose not to vote that the majority
of voters should not be penalized for others not exercising their right.
WESTMARC's
opposition to this Initiative is based on majority rule - a majority
of the quorum attending our Board of Directors meeting opposed it!
We encourage
you to join WESTMARC in opposing this Initiative and urge you to vote
NO on Proposition 105!
|
Ray L. Jones,
Chairman, WESTMARC, Peoria
|
Jack W. Lunsford,
President & CEO, WESTMARC, Peoria
|
|
Paid
for by "WESTMARC"
|
The Arizona Advocacy Network
urges you to vote NO on Prop 105. Passage would effectively eliminate
the constitutional right of Arizona citizens to make law by popular vote.
The requirement that citizen initiatives receive a YES vote from a majority
of all registered voters (not of those who actually vote as in all other
American elections) creates a barrier that is impossible to overcome.
No initiative passed in the past seven elections has met that standard
and all would have failed had this measure been in place, including such
popular measures as requiring humane treatment of farm animals, increasing
the minimum wage, providing health insurance to the poor, or restricting
state benefits to citizens and legal residents
This initiative automatically
makes every registered voter who has moved, died, been turned away at
the polls due to lack of ID, or who doesn't bother to get up off the
couch on election day into a NO vote. In a typical Arizona election an
initiative would have to pass by a 6-1 majority of those voting to overcome
this built-in handicap.
This would only apply to
measures put onto the ballot by citizens. Ballot measures created by
the Legislature would still only require a simple majority of those voting.
Why this double standard? The people behind this initiative think they
can use their influence to control the Legislature; it's the people they
don't trust.
Our rights as citizens are
being slowly restricted, reduced, and removed. Don't be manipulated into
agreeing to give up your own historic rights as Arizona citizens. Vote
NO on Prop 105.
|
Michael J.
Valder, President, Arizona Advocacy Network, Phoenix
|
Eric Ehst,
Treasurer, Arizona Advocacy Network, Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Arizona Advocacy Network"
|
Argument Against Majority
Rules
Arizona voters need to defeat
Prop 105. Why give voters who do not vote a significant say in the outcome
of an election. For example, in the last statewide election held in November
of 2006, only 1,553,032 of the 2,568,401 registered voters actually voted.
Therefore, to gather enough yes votes to pass an initiative covered by
Prop. 105 it would have required over 80% of the voters who actually
voted to have voted yes for an initiative to pass.
In reality no initiative
would likely be able to gather a yes vote by over 80% of the individuals
who actually voted. Therefore, in this example the individuals who were
registered to vote but did not vote had a very significant say in the
outcome. This is not the American way to determine the outcome of an
election. Vote no on Prop. 105.
|
David Peterson,
Vice President, Arizona Association of School Business Officials,
Phoenix
|
Chuck Essigs,
Director of Government Relations, Arizona Association of School
Business Officials, Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Chuck Essigs"
|
Arizona NOW strongly urges
you to vote NO on Prop 105, the Majority Rule Initiative. This measure
is undemocratic and violates the fundamental principle of every vote
being equal. Passage of this change would allow a small minority of voters
to thwart the will of the majority and block passage of popular and necessary
programs. NOW has consistently advocated for policies that benefit women,
children, and families. Through the constitutionally guaranteed initiative
process, voters have enacted many such popular and important ideas. These
include Healthy Arizona (health insurance for the working poor, a disproportionate
number of which are single mothers and children); Prop 301 (increased
funding for classroom education); and First Things First (funding for
early childhood development). If this measure had been in place, none
of these vital programs would have been passed, despite receiving a majority
of the votes cast. If Prop 105 passes, we citizens will never again be
able to control our own fate and decide where to place our state resources.
The backers of Prop 105,
heavily funded by the liquor industry, want to eliminate the citizens'
historic ability to pass laws and give all of the power to the state
Legislature, which they can more easily influence.
Arizona has always been a
leader in providing for the rights of its citizens. We provided women
the vote in 1912, ahead of the rest of the nation, but that initiative
would also have failed if Prop 105 had been in effect. Protect your vote;
vote NO.
|
Eric Ehst,
Policy Coordinator (President), Arizona National Organization of
Women, Phoenix
|
Marge Mead,
Legislative Coordinator (Vice President), Arizona National Organization
of Women, Sun City
|
|
Paid
for by "Arizona National Organization of Women"
|
Arizona Women's Political
Caucus
Argument Opposing C-19-2008
The Arizona Women's Political
Caucus urges you to vote NO on Prop 105.
Requiring a Yes vote on a
ballot issue from a majority of all registered voters (instead of a majority
of those who actually vote, as in all other American elections) would
make it nearly impossible to pass any ballot measure.
As a result, this proposition
would disproportionately disadvantage women and families. Consider all
the family-friendly ballot measures passed by voters that would have
been impossible to pass under the rules of this proposition: the increase
in the minimum wage, the extension of health benefits under Healthy Arizona,
the added funding for early childhood education to name a few.
Just as the economy has shifted,
so have some of the social and economic realities of women's lives. More
women than ever are working in the paid labor force, and they continue
to earn less than men. Women's work in the home remains undervalued.
Due to the lower earned income, it is women who are disproportionately
living in poverty both before and after retirement.
Women more than men are responsible
for caring for children and for aging parents, navigating the health
care system often without the benefit of adequate health insurance.
The ballot initiative process
is one way that citizens can promote improvements in public policy when
our Legislature fails to act.
This proposition ignores
the voices of people who vote on election day in favor of those who merely
register and stay home. The votes cast in any election should matter
more than those not cast.
Vote NO on Prop 105.
|
Karen Ford
Manza, Board Member, Arizona Women's Political Caucus, Phoenix
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Eleanor Eisenberg,
President, Arizona Women's Political Caucus, Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Eleanor Eisenberg"
|
BALLOT ARGUMENT-ANIMAL
DEFENSE LEAGUE OF ARIZONA
Vote NO
on Proposition 105
The Animal Defense League
of Arizona urges you to vote NO on Proposition 105. This measure carries
the misleading title of "Majority Rules". However, it would
deprive the majority of voters participating in an election of the right
to decide ballot initiatives. It would virtually eliminate citizens'
initiatives in Arizona. When the founders of Arizona met at our state's
Constitutional Convention, they held initiative rights as one of the
most sacred. In fact, when Arizona's founders received pressure from
the federal government to forego initiative rights as a condition of
statehood, they said no.
Prop 105 not only desecrates
voting rights, it is contrary to the principles on which Arizona was
founded. Initiatives are an important check on other branches of government.
Initiatives have been utilized to protect Arizona animals when the Legislature
refused to act. For example, Arizona was one of the last states to outlaw
cockfighting. Beginning in the 1950's for over an almost 40-year period,
every bill aimed at banning the barbaric blood sport died in the State
Legislature. However, the first time Arizona's citizens were given a
chance to vote on cockfighting in 1998, the citizens' initiative passed
by an overwhelming margin of 68%. That would not be enough under the "Majority
Rules" initiative.
On behalf of Arizona's animals
and the animal protection community, we urge you to vote NO on Proposition
105. Please allow our grassroots, volunteer signature-gathering efforts
to continue as a tool for animal protection in Arizona.
Sincerely,
|
Stephanie Nichols-Young,
President, Animal Defense League of Arizona, Phoenix
|
Karen Michael,
Secretary, Animal Defense League of Arizona, Peoria
|
|
Paid
for by "Animal Defense League of Arizona"
|
The Humane Society of the
United States, the nation's largest animal protection organization, with
more than 213,000 members and supporters in Arizona, strongly opposes
PROP 105. This measure is another cynical and underhanded power grab
by special interest groups and industry lobbyists who want to prevent
Arizona voters from exercising their right to direct democracy and the
lawmaking process.
In 2006, voters overwhelmingly
approved Proposition 204 to provide more humane treatment of farm animals,
by a landslide vote of 62 percent to 38 percent. The initiative won majorities
in 12 of 15 counties across the state. Industrial factory farms in the
state will phase out the cruel confinement of calves and pigs in small
cages where they don't even have enough room to turn around and stretch
their limbs. The measure prevents animal cruelty and protects Arizona's
environment from factory farm waste.
But the initiative could
not have passed if the changes mandated by PROP 105 had been in place.
Although it had the overwhelming support of the majority of people who
voted, it would not have met the nearly impossible threshold of a majority
of all registered voters in the state. Indeed, no ballot initiative could
meet that standard, and PROP 105 is a de facto ban on the ballot initiative
process.
People who have died or moved
and are still on the voter rolls, or people who simply choose not to
vote or don't make it to the polls, should not be considered automatic "NO" votes.
No candidate is held to that standard, and no ballot initiative should
be either. It's undemocratic and unworkable. The Humane Society of the
United States urges all Arizonans to protect their voting rights, by
voting "NO" on PROP 105.
|
Kari Nienstedt,
Arizona State Director, The Humane Society of the United States,
Scottsdale
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Wayne Pacelle,
President & CEO, The Humane Society of the United States, Gaithersburg,
MD
|
|
Thomas Waite,
Chief Financial Officer, The Humane Society of the United States,
Gaithersburg, MD
|
|
|
Paid
for by "The Humane Society of the United States"
|
Dear Arizona Voters,
The "Majority Rules" ballot
measure will undermine citizens' rights to petition their government
through citizens' initiatives.
This right has been treasured
by Arizonans of all stripes since we were a territory, and must be protected
against this dangerous ballot measure.
The sponsors want to prevent
future citizens' initiatives from being approved by requiring the support
of the majority of all registered voters. This includes voters who do
not go to the polls on Election Day.
The result would be that
most citizens' initiatives would require more than 80% of actual votes
in order to pass.
Tucsonans and all Arizonans
have strongly supported valuable initiatives to invest in vital services
such as public education and healthcare. These important efforts would
not have succeeded if PROP 105 had been in law at the time.
If PROP 105 were to pass,
our future would be taken out of our hands and placed in the hands of
the liquor and fast food industries that back this proposal.
Vote in OUR best interests,
not theirs.
Please vote no to PROP 105.
Sincerely,
|
Steve Farley,
State Representative, Legislative District 28, Tucson
|
|
Paid
for by "Jonathan Pitel"
|
To Arizona Voters:
"Majority Rules" is
a dangerous amendment to our constitution that guts Arizona's citizens
initiative process and waters down the constitutional concept of "one
person, one vote."
This measure tampers with
our constitution by putting the will of people who don't vote above those
who do. Prop 105 requires initiatives to receive the majority vote from
ALL registered voters -- even those who don't bother to cast a ballot.
This dilutes the power of those Arizonans who invest the time and effort
to vote and puts special interests above the will of the people. This
reckless initiative will prevent Arizonans who vote from having their
voices heard when it comes to important initiatives.
Time and time again, voters
have supported and passed initiatives that improve the quality of life
in Arizona- strengthening public education, expanding access to health
care and building critical infrastructure.
Majority Rules will put a
stop to these important initiatives, moving Arizona backwards.
Vote NO on Prop 105. Let's
keep Arizona moving forward.
Sincerely,
|
Thomas Ziemba,
Phoenix
|
|
Paid
for by "Jonathan Pitel"
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PROPOSED
AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION
BY THE
INITIATIVE RELATING TO THE INITIATIVE
|
MAJORITY RULE-LET
THE PEOPLE DECIDE ACT
PROPOSING
AN AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF ARIZONA: AMENDING ARTICLE IV, PART
1, CONSTITUTION OF ARIZONA, BY ADDING SECTION 1.1 RELATING TO INITIATIVE
MEASURES AND REQUIRING THAT ANY MANDATORY TAX OR SPENDING INCREASE
BE ENACTED BY A MAJORITY OF QUALIFIED ELECTORS.
|
|
REQUIRES
AN INITIATIVE MEASURE THAT ESTABLISHES, IMPOSES OR RAISES A TAX, FEE,
OR OTHER REVENUE, OR MANDATES A SPENDING OBLIGATION, WHETHER ON A PRIVATE
PERSON, LABOR ORGANIZATION, OTHER PRIVATE LEGAL ENTITY OR STATE, SHALL
NOT BECOME LAW UNLESS THE MEASURE IS APPROVED BY A MAJORITY OF QUALIFIED
ELECTORS REGISTERED TO VOTE.
|
|
|
|
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A "yes" vote
shall have the effect of requiring that a majority of registered voters
approve any initiative measure establishing, imposing or raising a
tax, fee, or other revenue, or mandating a spending obligation, whether
on a private person, labor organization, other private legal entity,
or the state, in order to become law.
|
YES
|
|
A "no" vote
shall have the effect of retaining the current law under which an initiative
measure is enacted upon approval of a majority of registered voters
that vote on the measure.
|
NO
|
The Ballot Format displayed in
HTML reflects only the text of the Ballot Proposition and does not
reflect how it will appear on the General Election Ballot.
Spelling, grammar, and punctuation were reproduced as submitted in the "for" and "against" arguments.
JANICE
K. BREWER
Arizona Secretary of State
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© September
2008
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