List of District of Columbia ballot measures explained

The District of Columbia (a political division coterminous with Washington, D.C.)The district has had a system of direct voting since 1979, shortly after it gained home rule in 1973. Residents have the ability to place new legislation, or legislation recently passed by the city council, on the ballot for a popular vote. The district has three types of ballot measures that can be voted on in a general election: District Charter amendments, initiatives and referendums. In order to be placed on the ballot, supporters of a measure must gather signatures from registered voters.[1]

Since adopting this process, ballot measures have become a common part of the city's electoral system. more than 150 different initiatives had been filed with the district, along with a significantly smaller number of referendums; of those, only 29 have met the required qualifications to be placed on the ballot.[2] [3] Ballot measures have been used to legalize politically contentious policies such as local term limits, abolition of the tipped minimum wage, cannabis use, and advancements in the District of Columbia statehood movement.

Background

Since the late 1800s, the residents of the District of Columbia, have campaigned for control over their own affairs. In a substantial leap forward, the United States Congress passed the District of Columbia Home Rule Act in 1973, which devolved some of its powers to the city.[4] Just a few years later in 1979, the newly formed city council passed the Initiative, Referendum, and Recall Procedures Act.[5] This act created a process of direct democracy in which residents could enact their own laws or repeal existing laws.

The prominence of ballot measures has allowed Washington, D.C., to lead the nation in social issues. In 2014, residents approved Initiative 71, which legalized cannabis for recreational use, making the district the third U.S. jurisdiction behind Colorado and Washington state.[6] The Entheogenic Plant and Fungus Policy Act of 2020 made the city the fourth U.S. jurisdiction to decriminalize entheogens.[7] In 2022, voters approved Initiative 82, which eliminates the tipped minimum wage over five years, after an earlier initiative ultimately failed. It joined eight states in abolishing the practice.[8]

Residents have also used ballot measures to expand their voting rights and (by extension) campaign for admitting the District of Columbia into the Union as the 51st state. An initiative in 1980 directed the D.C. government to begin the process of moving towards statehood due to the stalled and limited-in-scope voting rights amendment. Voters made the Attorney General for the District of Columbia an elected office beginning in 2014. An advisory referendum in 2016 showed that nearly 90 percent of residents support statehood, and it directed the D.C. Council to make formal statehood petitions to Congress.[9]

Types of ballot measures

District Charter amendments

District Charter amendments are changes to the District of Columbia Home Rule Charter, the law that established the D.C. government and its authority.[10] They require a majority vote to pass the D.C. Council, a majority of voters to approve the amendment, and then are submitted to Congress for a 35-business day congressional review period. If Congress does not pass a resolution of disapproval, the amendment is adopted.[11]

Initiatives

Referendums

There are two types of referendums in the District of Columbia:

Barriers to enactment

The D.C. government has concluded that approved ballot measures become self-enactingmeaning the government does not need to take action, such as an approving signature or proclamation, for the measure to take effect.[14] However, many approved ballot measures have been invalidated by either the D.C. Council or Congress, much to the frustration of residents.

D.C. Council

The Initiative, Referendum, and Recall Procedures Act gives the D.C. Council the power to reverse voter-approved initiatives, as it did in 2001 regarding term limits and in 2019 regarding the tipped minimum wage.[15] [16]

Congressional intervention

Congress has ultimate authority over the district, including its budget. As a result, members of Congress, who do not represent the district and are not accountable to them, often add little-noticed clauses and amendments to the budget in order to manipulate or block the implementation of the city's laws.[17] Two ballot measures were interfered with using this method:

Initiative 77 was threatened by an amendment written by Congressmen Mark Meadows and Gary Palmer to block it from taking effect.[20] The amendment did not appear in the final enacted budget bill;[21] it was instead repealed by the D.C. Council.

List of ballot measures since 1979

YearMeasure nameDescriptionStatusYes votesNo votes
1980Initiative 2An initiative to legalize some forms of gambling, including a lottery, bingo, raffles, and some sports betting[22] 14,871 (39.23%)23,032 (60.77%)[23]
Initiative 3An initiative to begin the process of moving the District of Columbia to statehood[24] 90,533 (59.7%)60,972 (40.2%)[25] [26]
Initiative 6An initiative to legalize some forms of gambling for charitable purposes104,899 (63.6%)59,833 (36.3%)
1981Initiative 7An initiative to provide tuition tax credits for public education[27] 8,904 (10.76%)73,829 (89.24%)[28]
1982Initiative 9An initiative to require a mandatory minimum prison sentence, without the opportunity for parole, for people convicted for some crimes[29] 82,238 (72.25%)31,579 (27.75%)[30]
Initiative 10An initiative supporting a nuclear freeze between the United States and the USSR[31] 77,521 (69.91%)33,369 (30.09%)[32]
1983Initiative 11An initiative to require the preservation of the historic Rhodes' Tavern and protect it from development[33] 22,114 (59.68%)14,938 (40.32%)[34]
1984Initiative 17An initiative to guarantee a right to adequate overnight shelter for homeless people[35] 109,080 (72.12%)42,159 (27.88%)[36]
1985Referendum 1A referendum to maintain rent control provisions for some kinds of housing22,920 (50.82%)22,183 (49.18%)[37]
1987Initiative 25An initiative stating that the funding of public education is a high priority and requiring the government adhere to a schedule of public hearings for public education funding[38] 54,729 (77.14%)16,223 (22.86%)
Initiative 28An initiative to require beverage retailers provide a five-cent refund for all cans and bottles returned42,574 (55.00%)34,834 (45.00%)[39]
1990Referendum 5A referendum to guarantee a right to adequate overnight shelter for homeless people[40] 60,734 (48.72%)63,913 (51.28%)[41]
1991Initiative 31An initiative to ban horse-drawn carriages from operating on public streets[42] 19,429 (38.00%)31,403 (62.00%)[43]
Referendum 6A referendum to hold gun manufacturers liable when use of their weapons results in pain, death, or medical expenses40,196 (77.00%)11,692 (23.00%)
1992Initiative 41An initiative to limit individual contributions for local elections[44] 122,502 (64.70%)66,843 (35.30%)
Initiative 43An initiative to authorize the death penalty for local inmates convicted of first-degree murder66,303 (32.86%)135,465 (67.14%)[45]
1993Initiative 37An initiative calling for the United States and former members of the USSR to denuclearize and direct funding towards human services[46] [47] 41,702 (56.26%)32,422 (43.74%)[48]
1994Initiative 49An initiative limiting the mayor, councilmembers, and school board members to two consecutive terms[49] 83,865 (62.00%)52,116 (38.00%)[50]
1996Initiative 51An initiative to allow residents to challenge commercial property assessments[51] 110,523 (80.00%)27,982 (20.00%)[52]
1998Initiative 59An initiative to legalize the possession, cultivation, and distribution of cannabis for medical reasons[53] 75,536 (69.00%)34,621 (31.00%)[54]
2000Charter Amendment 3A charter amendment reducing the size of the State Board of Education from eleven members to nine members20,511 (51.00%)19,668 (49.00%)[55]
2002Initiative 62An initiative to allow some nonviolent drug offenders to go through a treatment program rather than drug courts[56] 86,162 (78.17%)24,063 (21.83%)[57]
2010Proposed Charter Amendment IVA referendum to make the D.C. attorney general position an elected office[58] 90,316 (75.78%)28,868 (24.22%)[59]
2013Proposed Charter Amendment VIIIA referendum to grant Washington, D.C., budget autonomy from the United States federal budget[60] 46,788 (86.33%)7,411 (13.67%)[61]
2014Initiative 71An initiative to legalize the possession and cultivation of cannabis for personal use in small amounts[62] 115,050 (70.06%)49,168 (29.94%)[63]
2016Advisory Referendum BA referendum approving a state constitution and encouraging the D.C. Council to petition Congress to admit the District of Columbia as the 51st state[64] 244,134 (78.48%)40,779 (13.11%)[65]
2018Initiative 77An initiative to increase the minimum wage for tipped employees to the same level as non-tipped employees[66] [67] 47,230 (55.74%)37,504 (44.26%)[68]
2020Initiative 81An initiative to require police to treat entheogenic plants and fungi as a lowest-priority offense, a form of effective decriminalization[69] 214,685 (76.18%)67,140 (23.82%)[70]
2022Initiative 82An initiative to increase the minimum wage for tipped employees to the same level as non-tipped employees[71] 132,925 (73.94%)46,861 (26.06%)[72]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Initiative Measures and Referenda . . 2022-12-24.
  2. Master Initiative and Initiative Measure List . . 2022-12-24.
  3. Master Referendum List . . 2022-12-24.
  4. Web site: D.C. Home Rule . . 2022-12-23.
  5. Web site: Recall Process . 2022-10-27 . District of Columbia Board of Elections.
  6. News: Davis . Aaron C. . D.C. Voters Overwhelmingly Support Legalizing Marijuana, Joining Colo., Wash. . . 2014-11-04 . 2022-12-24 . limited.
  7. News: Initiative 81 Passes in the District of Columbia . 2020-12-01 . Bruckheim & Patel . 2022-12-24 . D.C. will join Denver, Colorado, as well as Oakland and Santa Cruz, California, where laws are in place to decriminalize psychoactive plants and fungi..
  8. News: Gomez . Amanda Michelle . D.C. Voters Approve Measure Phasing Out the Tipped Minimum Wage . . 2022-11-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221109030855/https://dcist.com/story/22/11/08/initiative-82-approved/ . live . November 9, 2022 . 2022-12-24.
  9. News: Hersher . Rebecca . D.C. Votes Overwhelmingly To Become 51st State . . 2016-11-09 . 2022-12-24.
  10. Web site: D.C. Home Rule . . 2023-01-19.
  11. [Code of the District of Columbia]
  12. Web site: Initiative Measures & Referenda . 2022-10-27 . District of Columbia Board of Elections.
  13. [Code of the District of Columbia]
  14. Web site: Lopez . German . Despite Congressional Threats, DC Council Is Definitely Moving Forward on Legal Marijuana . . 2015-01-14 . 2022-12-24.
  15. Web site: Chan . Sewell . 2008-10-01 . When a City Council Repealed Term Limits . 2022-10-27 . The New York Times.
  16. News: Nirappil . Fenit . 2018-10-02 . D.C. Council overturns wage hike for bartenders, servers — four months after voters approved it . 2022-10-27 . The Washington Post.
  17. Web site: Democracy Held Hostage . . 2022-12-24.
  18. . Congress Lifts Ban on Medical Marijuana for Nation's Capitol . . 2009-12-13 . 2022-12-24.
  19. News: Flynn . Meagan . Congress Keeps D.C. Marijuana, Abortion Riders in Budget . 2022-03-09 . . 2023-01-19 . limited.
  20. News: Campbell . Alexia Fernández . House Republicans Try to Block DC from Raising Wages for Restaurant Workers . 2018-07-12 . . 2022-12-05.
  21. Public Law . 116-37 . . . H.R.3877 - Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 . 2022-12-05.
  22. News: 1980-05-05 . District Divided on Gambling . 4 . Daily Press . Newport News, Virginia . 2022-10-23 . Newspapers.com.
  23. News: 1980-05-07 . Kennedy's Winner In D.C. Primary . 6 . Daily Press . Newport News, Virginia . 2022-10-23 . Newspapers.com.
  24. News: D.C. Statehood on Ballot . 3 . . 1980-10-14 . 2022-12-24 . Newspapers.com.
  25. Web site: Master Initiative and Initiative Measure List . 2022-10-23 . District of Columbia Board of Elections.
  26. Web site: Washington DC Ballot Tallies for 1980 . 2023-02-02 . Internet Archive.
  27. News: Harris . Leslie A. . Herbert . Jule R. . 1981-10-30 . Election Issues: Tuition Tax . A30 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  28. News: Pianin . Eric . Feinberg . Lawrence . 1981-11-04 . D.C. Voters Reject Tax Credit . A1 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . . ProQuest.
  29. News: 2002-01-31 . Referendums and Other Measures Decided by Voters . T04 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25. .
  30. Web site: 1982-09-26 . September's Primary Election Sept 14, 1982 Summary Report . 2023-02-06 . Internet Archive.
  31. News: Hodge . Paul . 1982-11-03 . 28 Antinuclear Demonstrators Arrested . B8 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  32. News: Sherwood . Tom . Milloy . Courtland . 1982-11-03 . D.C. Voters Approve Statehood Constitution and Nuclear Freeze . A34 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . . ProQuest.
  33. News: Grano Jr . Joseph N. . 1983-11-03 . Rhodes Tavern Should Be Saved . VG2 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25. .
  34. News: Pichirallo . Joe . 1983-11-09 . D.C. Voters Overwhelmingly Favor Saving Historic Rhodes Tavern . A15 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . . ProQuest.
  35. Wells . Katie J. . 2020 . Policy-failing: a repealed right to shelter . Urban Geography . 41 . 9 . 1139–1157 . 10.1080/02723638.2019.1598733 . 151203891 . Taylor & Francis Online.
  36. News: Boodman . Sandra G. . 1984-11-07 . Voters Approve Homeless' Right to Shelter . A41 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . . ProQuest.
  37. News: 1985-11-16 . D.C. Absentee Ballots Tallied . B5 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . ProQuest.
  38. News: Boogs . Roderic V. O. . Toyer . Iris . 1987-09-20 . D.C.'s Schoolchildren Are Important . C8 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  39. News: Bruske . Ed . 1987-11-04 . Bottle Bill Is Rejected In District: 5 of 6 Incumbents Win Reelection To School Board . A1 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-26 . . ProQuest.
  40. News: Gellman . Barton . 1990-10-13 . D.C. Ordered To Provide Better Shelter; Families Must Be Moved Out of Hotels . B01 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  41. News: Wheeler . Linda . 1990-11-15 . 005 Felled By Voters In Ward 3; Homeless Issue Won In Most of District . J08 . The Washington post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  42. News: Sanchez . Rene . 1991-11-06 . Voters Pass Law Making Assault-Gun Merchants Liable . A27 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  43. News: 1991-11-07 . THE 1991 ELECTIONS; THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA . D06 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  44. News: Nathanson . Jim . 1992-10-18 . Initiative 41: Bonanza for Incumbents . C6 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  45. Web site: 1992-11-13 . District of Columbia General Election - November 3, 1992 - Final and Complete Election Results . . 2022-10-24.
  46. News: 1993-09-14 . Vote NO on Initiative 37 . A20 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  47. News: 1993-10-06 . More on Initiative 37 . A18 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  48. Web site: 1993-09-24 . District of Columbia Special Election - September 14, 1993 - Final and Complete Election Results . . 2022-10-24.
  49. News: Brown . DeNeen L. . 1994-11-09 . THE DISTRICT; Voters Back Term Limits By Big Margin; Approval of Initiative 49 Crosses Racial Lines . A29 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25. .
  50. Web site: 1994-11-18 . November 8 General Election . . 2022-10-24.
  51. News: 1996-11-04 . Initiative 51 -- No . A18 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  52. Web site: 1996-11-15 . November 15 General Election . . 2022-10-24.
  53. News: 1998-10-24 . Initiative 59: Snuffed Out . A24 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  54. Web site: 1999-09-20 . November 3, 1998 General Election Results . . 2022-10-24.
  55. Web site: 2000-07-07 . June 27 Special Election on Charter Amendment III . . 2022-10-25.
  56. News: Santana . Arthur . Tucker . Neely . 2002-10-31 . Drug Treatment, Prosecutor Measures Go Before Voters . DE3-4 . The Washington Post . 2022-10-25 . . ProQuest.
  57. Web site: 2002-11-21 . Certification Results General Election - November 5, 2002 . . 2022-10-24.
  58. News: Marchese . Darci . 2010-06-01 . Referendum Would Allow D.C. to Vote for AG . . 2022-10-24 . dead . 2013-05-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130522035028/https://wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1970459.
  59. Web site: 2010-11-19 . General Election 2010 - Certified Results . . 2022-11-29.
  60. Web site: Howell Jr. . Tom . 2013-01-08 . D.C. elections board approves budget autonomy referendum . 2022-10-24 . The Washington Times.
  61. Web site: 2013-05-10 . Special Election 2013 - Certified Results . . 2022-11-29.
  62. News: Davis . Aaron C. . Craighill . Peyton M. . 2014-09-18 . Poll: D.C. voters poised to legalize pot, elevating national debate over marijuana . 2022-10-24 . The Washington Post.
  63. Web site: 2014-12-03 . General Election 2014 - Certified Results . . 2022-10-24.
  64. Web site: 2016-11-09 . DC Voters Elect Gray to Council, Approve Statehood Measure . 2022-10-25 . NBC4 Washington.
  65. Web site: 2016-11-18 . General Election 2016 - Certified Results . . 2022-10-25 . live . 2018-02-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180209232929/https://www.dcboe.org/election_info/election_results/v3/2016/November-8-General-Election.
  66. News: Nirappil . Fenit . 2018-03-07 . D.C. voters to decide in June if tipped workers should get same minimum wage . 2022-10-24 . The Washington Post.
  67. Web site: King . Kristi . 2018-10-16 . DC Council officially overturns Initiative 77, killing minimum-wage increase . 2022-10-24 . WTOP News.
  68. Web site: 2018-07-09 . Primary Election 2018 - Certified Results . . 2022-10-24.
  69. News: Hall . Madison . Price . Rob . Live Results: Washington, DC Votes to Decriminalize Psychedelic Plants and Mushrooms . . 2020-11-03 . 2022-12-24.
  70. Web site: 2020-12-02 . General Election 2020 - Certified Results . . 2022-11-29.
  71. Web site: Hopkins . Paige . 2022-10-25 . Here's what Initiative 82 could mean for tipping in D.C. . 2022-10-27 . Axios.
  72. Web site: 2022-11-30 . General Election 2022 - Certified Results . . 2022-12-03.