2010 Oregon Ballot Measures 66 and 67 explained

Measure 66
Raises tax on household income at and above $250,000 (and $125,000 for individual filers). Reduces income taxes on unemployment benefits in 2009. Provides funds currently budgeted for education, health care, public safety, other services.
Country:Oregon
Yes:692,687
No:583,707
Total:1,276,394
Electorate:2,044,042
Map:Oregon 2010 Measures 66 and 67.svg
Notes:Source: Oregon Secretary of State[1]

Measures 66 and 67 are two ballot referendums that were on the special election ballot in the US state of Oregon, which proposed tax increases on corporations and on households making US$250,000 and individuals making $125,000 to help balance the state's budget. The measures referred two bills passed by the Oregon state legislature on, and signed by Governor Ted Kulongoski on, to the voters for approval. They were approved and became effective .[2]

Background

The recession that greatly affected the American economy starting in late 2008 caused a budget shortfall in Oregon that the state legislature had to make up for. A critical factor in this process was that the 2008 general election gave Democrats a three-fifths majority in both chambers of the legislature, which is the supermajority needed to pass any bills calling for revenue increases. Among other actions, the legislature passed House Bills 2649 and 3405, raising taxes on corporations and on wealthy individuals and households, respectively. Some Oregon citizens[3] [4] started a drive to force a referendum on these bills, believing they would hurt the state's economy.

While 55,179 valid signatures from registered voters on each referendum petition were needed to qualify the referendum for the ballot,[5] [6] about 99,000 valid signatures were filed. Don Hamilton, spokesman for the Oregon Secretary of State's office, remarked that "it's unusually high for a statewide ballot measure."[7] On, the Secretary of State's office announced that both measures qualified for the ballot.

Campaign

Businesses largely opposed the two measures, with groups such as the Associated Oregon Industries campaigning against both.[8] The top individual donor was Phil Knight of Nike, who gave $150,000. The yes vote was supported by educators and public employee unions.[8] Politically, the Oregon Democratic Party supported the measures while the Oregon Republican Party opposed the measures. The campaigns for and against these measures spent the second most money ever waged on a ballot measure campaign in the state.[9] Only Ballot Measure 50 in 2007 was more expensive than the $12.5 million spent on the yes and no campaigns of Measures 66 and 67.[9]

Results

Measure 67
Raises $10 corporate minimum tax, business minimum tax, corporate profits tax. Provides funds currently budgeted for education, health care, public safety, other services.
Yes:682,720
No:591,188
Total:1,273,908
Electorate:2,044,042
Map:Oregon 2010 Measures 66 and 67.svg
Notes:Source: Oregon Secretary of State

Notes

  1. Web site: Brown . Kate . Kate Brown . January 26, 2010, Special Election Abstracts of Votes . Elections Division . . February 25, 2010 . PDF . April 3, 2010.
  2. Web site: Oregon voters firmly approve raising taxes . David Steves . January 27, 2010 . The Register-Guard . registerguard.com . January 27, 2010.
  3. Web site: Follow the Money for "No" on Measures 66 and 67 - Common Cause . December 28, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100316095450/http://www.commoncause.org/site/pp.asp?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=5694189 . March 16, 2010 . dead .
  4. Current funding sources of the campaign against the ballot measures can be found at this link.
  5. Web site: State of Oregon: Blue Book - Elections Process and History. sos.oregon.gov.
  6. More precisely, supporters of a referendum must file a number of valid signatures from registered voters equal to four percent of votes cast in the last gubernatorial election – in this case, the 2006 gubernatorial election.
  7. Web site: UPDATE: On tax measures, 'yes' means 'no' • Daily Journal of Commerce. October 8, 2009.
  8. News: The closing tally on the Measures 66 and 67 campaigns: $12.5 million. Walth. Brent. March 3, 2010. The Oregonian. April 4, 2010.
  9. News: Only a few ballot initiatives look to qualify for Oregon ballot this November. Mapes. Jeff . April 3, 2010. The Oregonian. April 4, 2010.

See also

External links