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Legislature ends session without reviving ballot initiative

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Legislature ends session without reviving ballot initiative

The Mississippi ended the 2022 not restoring the initiative that citizens to place issues on the ballot for voters to decide.

The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled the process invalid in May because of a technical error in the language detailing how the process works. When the Supreme Court ruled, most everyone agreed the Legislature would fix the language and restore the initiative. But during the 2022 session, House and Senate could not agree on how to fix the language.

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Both chambers passed legislation earlier in the session restoring the process where an issue could be placed on the ballot if an initiative sponsor garnered the signatures equaling 12% of the vote in the last governor's election, which would equal about 90,000 signatures. But in the conference process where only three House and three Senate members are allowed to negotiate differences in the legislation, Senate negotiators led by John Polk, R-Hattiesburg, insisted on a much higher number of signatures be gathered to place an issue on the ballot. Polk called for the number of signatures needed to place an issue on the ballot be equal to 12% of the registered voters as of the last presidential election or about 240,000 signatures.

House Constitution Chair Fred Shanks, R-Brandon, said House negotiators believe that the mandated number of signatures should remain at 12% of those in the last gubernatorial election as it was before the Court ruled the process invalid.

“We are going to remain firm,” Shanks said, adding he would try again in the 2023 session to restore the initiative process. “It is hard enough to get the signatures without increasing them.”

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But Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, who presides over the Senate, said the signature mandate needs to be increased.

“There was concern that … it is so easy to get people to sign,” Hosemann said. “… I think that was a concern of both the House and the Senate.”

He said there are companies that specialize in gathering signatures for initiative efforts and that it is much easier now to gather signatures than when the mandate equaling 12% of the number of people voting in the last gubernatorial election was put in place.

“We're trying to get a number that makes sense,” Hosemann said.

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But House Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton, maintained the Senate was asking for “an enormously high threshold that we felt the citizens never be able to achieve.”

Both sides agree that the new proposal should allow voters to place issues on the ballot to change or amend general . The initiative adopted in the early 1990s that was struck down by the Supreme Court last year allowed voters to amend the state Constitution.

Legislative leaders said they would prefer the process be used to amend general law because it is more difficult to change the Constitution. Changing the Constitution requires the approval of voters.

It is likely that any agreement also would prohibit legislators from changing any initiative approved by voters for two years except by a two-thirds vote of both chambers of the Legislature.

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The Supreme Court struck down the proposal because the process required the mandated number of signatures to be gathered equally from the five congressional districts as they existed in 1990. The state lost a congressional seat in 2000.

The new language pending before the Legislature would require the signatures to be gathered equally from ever how many congressional districts the state has.

The initiative process was struck down at the same time the initiative that was approved by voters in November 2020 was ruled invalid by the Supreme Court.

It marked the first time in the modern era that the judiciary in any state had struck down an entire initiative process, according to Caroline Avakian, director of strategic communications for the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, a national, pro-initiative non-profit.

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While the only time in the modern era, the state Supreme Court landmark decision is not the only time a ballot initiative process has been ruled invalid by the judiciary. In the 1920s the Mississippi Supreme Court struck down a previous initiative process approved by state voters. After that 1920s ruling, it was not restored until the early 1990s.

Gov. Tate Reeves said recently he supported restoring the initiative. He said he does not intend to call a special session for the Legislature to consider the initiative, but might include it in the agenda if he called a special session for other topics.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Mississippi News

Tree falls through home of South Jackson family

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www.wjtv.com – Marie Mennefield – 2024-05-13 12:49:34

SUMMARY: A in South had their home damaged after a large tree collapsed through their roof on Cedar Pine . Fortunately, the daughter survived the incident, with the tree and debris landing just inches away from where they were sleeping. The incident woke them up, prompting them to before the tree fell through the roof, narrowly missing them. The tree had fallen from a neighbor's backyard, and the family is now to figure out their next steps.

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Mississippi governor signs bill to regulate transgender bathroom use in schools

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www.wjtv.com – Kaitlin Howell – 2024-05-13 12:47:27

SUMMARY: Governor Tate Reeves of Mississippi signed a bill regulating transgender people's use of bathrooms, locker rooms, and dormitories in public education buildings. The SAFER Act requires single-sex facilities in public education institutions based on sex assigned at birth, regardless of gender identity. Violations could result in lawsuits, with schools being protected from liability. This follows previous legislation banning transgender athletes from competing on girls' teams and prohibiting gender-affirming hormones or surgery for minors. Democrats raised concerns about the bill putting transgender individuals at risk. Reeves emphasized the importance of protecting women's spaces in Mississippi.

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Fallen tree damages Petal mobile home

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www.wjtv.com – Brandon Raines – 2024-05-13 11:39:30

SUMMARY: Severe storms on May 13 caused in parts of the Pine Belt, with a tree crashing through a mobile home in Petal, Mississippi. Homeowner Dixie Bergeron and her daughter narrowly escaped as the tree fell through the roof and on top of where another man was sleeping. The man suffered only minor cuts and scratches. The storms caused 31,000 power outages in Mississippi. Although roadways are now clear, advise drivers to avoid flooded .

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