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Initiative & Referendum Institute

at the University of Southern California 

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Ballotwatch®

 

 

2008 Election

 

Election Preview (BW 2008-1) [Posted August 6, 2008]

 

The big story for ballot propositions this year is the surge of social issues. The tax and spending issues that normally dominate initiatives and referendums are taking a back seat in November to a diverse collection of social issues, with intriguing potential spillovers onto the presidential election.

As of early August, voters in 30 states are set to decide 112 ballot propositions in November. The number of propositions is likely to grow as states continue to verify signatures, and legislatures place additional measures on te ballot.

Thirty-nine of the measures were placed on the ballot by citizen petition, all of them initiatives (proposals of new statutes or constitutional amendments). Eight measures were placed on the ballot by state commissions, and two were required by state constitutions (whether to call a constitutional convention, required every 20 years in Connecticut and Hawaii). The remaining 63 measures were placed on the ballot by legislatures.

Voters faced 162 propositions in November 2004, and 204 propositions in November 2006, so this is looking to be a down year for direct democracy. The 39 initiatives in November together with 9 initiatives from earlier in the year bring the annual total to 48 initiatives. There were 66 initiatives in 2004 and 76 initiatives in 2006, so citizen-driven activity is lower than the recent past. If the number of initiatives remains at 48 (unlikely), it would be the fewest initiatives in an even-numbered year since 1986, when there were 42. For the decade as a whole (2000-2008), the number of initiatives is 351, short of the record 379 for the decade 1990-1999, but still the second busiest decade since the initiative process was adopted in 1898. See IRI Report on Initiative Use, 1905-2007.

This IRI report highlights key issues and provides a state-by-state list all of ballot measures. This report will be updated periodically as new measures qualify for the ballot. For additional nonpartisan information on ballot propositions, see Ballotpedia and the National Conference of State Legislatures.

 Please direct media inquiries to Gilien Silsby, Director of Public Relations, (213) 740-9690 (office), (213) 500-8673 (cell), gsilsby@law.usc.edu.

 


Select a state on the map below to transfer to a page with other information on the state's political history and a link to the state's election division.

 

Initiative & Referendum States

 


 

Local Initiative, Referendum and Recall Elections of Interest

 

For local land and environmental ballot measure information visit the Land Trust Alliance. For local transportation related ballot measures visit the Center for Transportation Excellence.

 

 

International Initiative, Referendum and Recall Elections of Interest

 

For information on ballot measures in other countries, visit the Initiative and Referendum Institute-Europe and the Center for Direct Democracy

 

 


2007 Election

 

Election Results 2007 (BW 2007-2)

 

Election Preview 2007 (BW 2007-1)

 

Report on Historical Initiative Use, 1904-2006

 

Report on Constitutional Amendments (IRI Report 2006-3)

 

 


 

2006 Election

 

Election Results 2006 (BW 2006-5)

 

Tobacco-related ballot measures (BW 2006-4)

 

Election Preview 2006 (BW 2006-3)

 

IRI report on how ballot propositions may spill over onto candidate elections (IRI Report 2006-2)

 

IRI statement on Florida constitutional amendments

IRI report on constitutional amendments (IRI Report 2006-2)

 

 


2005 Election

 

Election Review 2005 (BW 2005-3)

Election Preview 2005 (BW 2005-2)

 

California Special Election

Democracy on the Brink: Nov. 1 Conference

Report on California Special Election (BW 2005-1)

Propositions in Detail

Report on Redistricting in California (IRI Report 2005-1)

Article: "Have Initiatives Paralyzed the California Budget Process?"

 


2004 Election

 

Overview of all measures (BW 2004-1)

 

Marijuana (BW 2004-2)

 

Seven Worth Watching (BW 2004-3)

 

The "Long" California Ballot (BW 2004-4)


Gambling (BW 2004-5)

 

Election Reform (BW 2004-6)

 

Taxes and Bonds (BW 2004-7)

 

Marriage (BW 2004-8)

 

Health Care Costs (BW 2004-9)

 

Complete state-by-state election preview (BW 2004-0)

 

Complete state-by-state election results (BW 2004-10)

 

Post-election Report: Environmental Measures (BW 2004-11)

 


2003 Election

 

As with most odd year elections, few statewide ballot measures appeared on the ballot in 2003. The most notable election was the California recall election in which Governor Gray Davis became only the second governor ever to be recalled from office. List of all November 2003 statewide ballot measures and outcomes.

 

Land Vote 2003

 

Center for Transportation Excellence - 2003 Transportation Ballot Measures

 


 

2002 Election (PDF)

 

So what did the voter’s decide – were they cautious as we had predicted or did they disregard the concerns of war, terrorism and the economy and do as they pleased?  In short, “cautious” was the word of the day. The voters once again defied party labeling and voted their conscience when it came to ballot measures.  In a time of great uncertainty, voters picked through the list of statewide ballot measures and systematically made their feelings known while at the same time not revealing whether their underlying principles lean more liberal or conservative.  The great race to categorize the voter’s political beliefs will once again have to wait for another election day.

 

Land Vote 2002

 

Center for Transportation Excellence - 2002 Transportation Ballot Measures

 

2002 Ballot Measure Donor Report

 


 

2000 Election (PDF)

 

The voters turned out on Tuesday to cast their ballots on 204 statewide ballot measures in 42 states and approved approximately 63% of them.  71 were placed on the ballot by the people and 133 were placed on the ballot by the state legislatures.  Of the measures placed on the ballot by the people, 48% were approved.  This number is a little higher than the 100-year average of 41% but a lot lower than 1998’s passage rate of 61%.  In looking at the measures placed on the ballot by the state legislatures, the voters continued the trend of passing those at a higher percentage than citizen measures by adopting almost 71% of them. 

 


 

1998 Election (PDF)

 

1998 proved to be no different than previous elections with the people utilizing the initiative process to place the issues on the ballot that elected officials typically have been unwilling or unable to deal with.  Issues from all political persuasions blanketed the ballot - from the conservative backed I-200 in Washington State that ended racial preferences to the liberal backed enactment of campaign finance reform in Arizona and Massachusetts.  There were initiatives that limited government as well as those that expanded government, those that increased taxes or lowered taxes and those that empowered government and those that empowered citizens.  1998 had a little of something for voters of every political persuasion.

 


 

IRI Historical Database

 

The database lists all statewide initiatives to appear on the ballot since the first statewide initiative in Oregon in 1904.  This list does not contain information on issues placed on the ballot by state legislatures which are commonly referred to as legislative measures. The Institute has only tracked legislative referendum since the 1998 general election and a listing of those ballot measures can be found in the above general election reports. For information on accessing the database, contact John G. Matsusaka, President, matsusak@usc.edu.

 


 

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© 2008 Initiative & Referendum Institute

USC School of Law

Los Angeles CA 90089-0071