Current:Home > reviewsUtah citizen initiatives at stake as judge weighs keeping major changes off ballots -WealthSpot
Utah citizen initiatives at stake as judge weighs keeping major changes off ballots
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:04:37
A Utah judge promises to rule Thursday on striking from the November ballot a state constitutional amendment that would empower the state Legislature to override citizen initiatives.
The League of Women Voters of Utah and others have sued over the ballot measure endorsed by lawmakers in August, arguing in part that the ballot language describing the proposal is confusing.
The groups now seek to get the measure off ballots before they are printed. With the election less than eight weeks away, they are up against a tight deadline without putting Utah’s county clerks in the costly position of reprinting ballots.
Salt Lake County District Judge Dianna Gibson told attorneys in a hearing Wednesday she would give them an informal ruling by email that night, then issue a formal ruling for the public Thursday morning.
Any voter could misread the ballot measure to mean it would strengthen the citizen initiative process, League of Women Voters attorney Mark Gaber argued in the hearing.
“That is just indisputably not what the text of this amendment does,” Gaber said.
The amendment would do the exact opposite by empowering the Legislature to repeal voter initiatives, Gaber said.
Asked by the judge if the amendment would increase lawmakers’ authority over citizen initiatives, an attorney for the Legislature, Tyler Green, said it would do exactly what the ballot language says — strengthen the initiative process.
The judge asked Green if some responsibility for the tight deadline fell to the Legislature, which approved the proposed amendment less than three weeks ago.
“The legislature can’t move on a dime,” Green responded.
The proposed amendment springs from a 2018 ballot measure that created an independent commission to draw legislative districts every decade. The changes have met resistance from the Republican-dominated Legislature.
The measure barred drawing district lines to protect incumbents or favor a political party, a practice known as gerrymandering. Lawmakers removed that provision in 2020.
And while the ballot measure allowed lawmakers to approve the commission’s maps or redraw them, the Legislature ignored the commission’s congressional map altogether and passed its own.
The map split relatively liberal Salt Lake City into four districts, each of which is now represented by a Republican.
In July, the Utah Supreme Court ruled that the GOP overstepped its bounds by undoing the ban on political gerrymandering.
Lawmakers responded by holding a special session in August to add a measure to November’s ballot to ask voters to grant them a power that the state’s top court held they did not have.
veryGood! (83)
Related
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- 'Back to one meal a day': SNAP benefits drop as food prices climb
- 'Are you a model?': Crickets are so hot right now
- How poverty and racism 'weather' the body, accelerating aging and disease
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Commonsense initiative aims to reduce maternal mortality among Black women
- Michael Jordan plans to sell NBA team Charlotte Hornets
- Meet the 'glass-half-full girl' whose brain rewired after losing a hemisphere
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Got muscle pain from statins? A cholesterol-lowering alternative might be for you
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Uh-oh. A new tropical mosquito has come to Florida. The buzz it's creating isn't good
- Fearing More Pipeline Spills, 114 Groups Demand Halt to Ohio Gas Project
- Biden to name former North Carolina health official Mandy Cohen as new CDC director
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- First Water Tests Show Worrying Signs From Cook Inlet Gas Leak
- UPS workers vote to strike, setting stage for biggest walkout since 1959
- Global Warming Pushes Microbes into Damaging Climate Feedback Loops
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
A new Arkansas law allows an anti-abortion monument at the state Capitol
What is Juneteenth? Learn the history behind the federal holiday's origin and name
Dakota Pipeline Builder Rebuffed by Feds in Bid to Restart Work on Troubled Ohio Gas Project
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Pay up, kid? An ER's error sends a 4-year-old to collections
Several injured after Baltimore bus strikes 2 cars, crashes into building, police say
You'll Be Crazy in Love With Beyoncé and Jay-Z's London Photo Diary