Current:Home > MyRuling blocks big changes to Utah citizen initiatives but lawmakers vow appeal -Zenith Profit Hub
Ruling blocks big changes to Utah citizen initiatives but lawmakers vow appeal
View
Date:2025-04-11 18:22:07
Utah voters won’t decide this November on a proposal to amend the state constitution that would let state lawmakers rewrite voter-approved ballot measures but the question will remain on ballots with just weeks to go until the election, a judge ruled Thursday.
Legislative leaders vowed to appeal to the Utah Supreme Court.
Salt Lake County District Judge Dianna Gibson sided with the League of Women Voters and others who challenged the measure, agreeing that it carries misleading ballot language and has not been advertised in newspapers statewide as required.
To keep ballot-printing and other election deadlines on track, the amendment will still be on Utah ballots in November but won’t be counted.
The ballot language — which says the change would “strengthen the initiative process” — is not only misleading but says the opposite of what the amendment would actually do, a League of Women Voters attorney argued in a hearing Wednesday.
Gibson agreed in her ruling.
“The short summary the Legislature chose does not disclose the chief feature, which is also the most critical constitutional change — that the Legislature will have unlimited right to change laws passed by citizen initiative,” Gibson wrote.
An attorney for Utah lawmakers stood by the ballot language in the hearing. But lawmakers’ argument that extensive media coverage of the proposed amendment suffices for statewide publication also didn’t sway the judge.
“No evidence has been presented that either the Legislature or the lieutenant governor ‘has caused’ the proposed constitutional amendment to appear in any newspaper in Utah,” Gibson wrote, referring to the publication requirement in Utah law.
The amendment stems from a Utah Supreme Court ruling in July which upheld a ban on drawing district lines to protect incumbents or favor a political party. Lawmakers responded by seeking the ability to limit such voter-approved measures.
Meeting in a special session in late August, they approved the state constitutional amendment for voters to decide in November.
Opponents who sued Sept. 5 to block the proposed amendment have been up against tight deadlines, with less two months to go until the election.
In Wednesday’s hearing, Gibson asked Tyler Green, an attorney for the lawmakers being sued, whether some responsibility for the tight deadline fell to the Legislature.
“The legislature can’t move on a dime,” Green responded.
Legislative leaders in a statement criticized Gibson’s ruling as a “policy-making action from the bench.”
“It’s disheartening that the courts – not the 1.9 million Utah voters – will determine the future policies of our state. This underscores our concerns about governance by initiative,” said the statement by Senate President President J. Stuart Adams and House Speaker Mike Schultz.
The statement blamed organizers in Washington, D.C., with “seemingly unlimited funds” for the ruling and vowed to “exhaust all options” including a state supreme court appeal.
The amendment has been a “power hungry” attempt to silence voter voices, Salt Lake County Democratic Party Chairman Jade Velazquez said in a statement.
“We must be prepared for more attempts by the Republicans in our Legislature to expand their power at the expense of Utahns’ freedoms,” Velazquez said.
The proposed amendment springs from a 2018 ballot measure that created an independent commission to draw legislative districts every decade. The ballot measure has met ongoing resistance from the Republican-dominated Legislature.
In 2020, lawmakers stripped from it a ban on gerrymandering. Then, when the commission drew up a new congressional map, they ignored it and passed its own.
The map split Democratic-leaning Salt Lake City into four districts, each of which is now represented by a Republican.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Small twin
- Klaus Teuber, creator behind popular Catan board game, dies at age 70
- Former U.N. Adviser Says Global Spyware Is A Threat To Democracy
- Instagram Apologizes After Removing A Movie Poster Because It Shows A Nipple
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Rihanna, Ana de Armas, Austin Butler and More Score First-Ever Oscar Nominations
- Biden to travel to Northern Ireland to mark Good Friday Agreement anniversary
- Pope Francis misses Good Friday nighttime procession at Colosseum in cold Rome
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Pedro Pascal, Zoë Kravitz, Olivia Wilde and More Celebrate Together at Pre-Oscars Parties
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- CBP One app becomes main portal to U.S. asylum system under Biden border strategy
- See Gisele Bündchen Strut Her Stuff While Pole Dancing in New Fashion Campaign
- How to Watch All the 2023 Best Picture Oscar Nominees
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- NYU Researchers Were Studying Disinformation On Facebook. The Company Cut Them Off
- Toronto International Film Festival announces 2023 movie lineup amid Hollywood strikes
- The Future Of The Afghan Girls Robotics Team Is Precarious
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Pope Francis leads Easter Sunday mass to big crowds in Vatican Square
Man sentenced to prison for abuse of woman seen chained up in viral video that drew outcry in China
The Horrific Crimes That Inspired the Oscar-Nominated Film Women Talking
Trump's 'stop
Chocolate Easter bunnies made with ecstasy seized at Brussels airport: It's pure MDMA
Activision Blizzard Workers Are Walking Out After The Studio's Sexual Harassment Suit
Hobbled Hubble Telescope Springs Back To Life On Its Backup System