Hands off, Missouri legislature. The citizen petition process is democracy in action.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/hands-off-missouri-legislature-citizen-100250375.html
Missouris entrenched legislators are apparently galled by the fact that voters keep passing bills that they oppose. In an article published in the Springfield News-Leader on Feb. 12, Missouri state Sen. Sandy Crawford indignantly declared that "We have Republican supermajorities ... and voters pass all these crazy left-wing initiative petition things
We need to get a better handle on that."
As staff writer Galen Bacharier remarked, this is a line of argument that Republican lawmakers have previously shied away from. It certainly did seem more prudent to conceal their objective to obstruct the will of Missouri voters. But at least now theyre being honest about the real motivation behind their fevered push to change the citizen-driven initiative petition (IP) process.
For more than a century, initiative petitions have been used by both progressive and conservative groups in Missouri to get proposals for new legislation to the ballot, some of which have been approved by voters and some not. To be clear, its impossible to pass policies or constitutional amendments in Missouri without support from both Democratic and Republican voters. In recent years, the IP process has been used to get Medicaid expansion, new rules for fairer redistricting maps and voter protections, a minimum wage increase and legalization of marijuana to the ballot. Each of these crazy left-wing initiative petition things were approved by a majority of Missouris voters and each were opposed by a majority of Missouris legislators.
Remarkably, their fix is not to reconsider their policy priorities, but to cut direct voter participation out of the equation so they can legislate without challenge. Proposed bill SJR 31 would nearly double the signature requirement for initiative petitions, which would amount to tens of thousands of additional signatures. As someone who has worked on initiative petition campaigns along with hundreds of other unpaid volunteers, I know that managing to collect 10 signatures from eligible voters at a crowded event is a good day.