Why Republican Voters Support Ballot Initiatives Their Red States Do Not
When Kansas voters earlier this month rejected a ballot initiative that would have made it easier for the state legislature to restrict or ban abortion, it was only the latest example of otherwise red-state voters backing a measure seemingly out of step with their usual politics.
Over the past decade, voters in 12 states have passed minimum wage increases, including states as reliably Republican as South Dakota and Missouri. Six red states have also expanded Medicaid eligibility via ballot initiative after their Republican legislatures failed to do so under the new rules created by the Affordable Care Act. And since a nationwide movement to legalize marijuana began in the late 1990s, a whopping 36 states have either legalized or decriminalized medical marijuana, including by ballot initiative in conservative states like Utah and Oklahoma.
Part of the reason these measures have passed is because theyre popular. Still, in many of these cases, they were unlikely to have passed Republican-controlled state legislatures. Its why in some states, the state legislatures are now pushing back,
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-republican-voters-support-ballot-initiatives-their-red-states-do-not/