Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 issues keep ballot spots, justices rule

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The Arkansas Supreme Court on Thursday decided not to remove from the Nov. 3 election ballot two proposed constituti­onal amendments, one that would make it more difficult to qualify proposed measures for the ballot and the other that would eliminate lifetime term limits for state lawmakers.

The state’s high court upheld Pulaski County Circuit Judge Mary McGowan’s Sept. 9 dismissal of a lawsuit filed by Tom Steele, chairman of the Arkansas Term Limits committee, against Republican Secretary of State John Thurston. Steele’s lawsuit aimed to remove the

proposed amendments from the general election ballot.

Chief Justice Dan Kemp wrote the court’s majority opinion and Justice Rhonda Wood wrote a concurring opinion.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Shawn Womack said the circuit court lacked subject-matter jurisdicti­on and Steele’s appeal of McGowan’s ruling should be dismissed.

In another dissenting opinion, Justice Josephine Linker Hart said the proposed amendment on ballot issues should be removed from the Nov. 3 general election ballot.

The proposal that would make it tougher for Arkansans to qualify proposed constituti­onal amendments, initiated acts or referenda for the ballot is Issue 3. The proposed amendment also would increase the vote threshold for the Legislatur­e to refer proposed amendments to voters.

The proposed constituti­onal amendment that would eliminate lifetime term limits for state lawmakers is Issue 2.

Both proposals are the subject of another pending lawsuit in McGowan’s court.

In its 2019 regular session, the Arkansas General Assembly voted to refer those proposed constituti­onal amendments and a third one on highway funding to voters.

APPEAL ARGUMENTS

In his appeal of the circuit court’s dismissal of his suit, Steele argued that McGowan erred in ruling that the ballot titles of Issue 2 and 3 were sufficient because, he contended, with the passage of Act 376 of 2019, all ballot titles should be evaluated under Amendment 7 instead of Article 19, Section 22, of the Arkansas Constituti­on.

But the court’s majority opinion said the Article 19, Section 22, standard is a different and less demanding one than that employed for Amendment 7 initiative­s and the court has previously rejected the invitation to apply one uniform standard to all proposed amendments.

The court said it agreed with McGowan’s ruling that there is nothing in Act 376 that explicitly overrules prior rulings utilizing Article 19, Amendment 22.

“The plain language of Act 376 allows a ‘qualified elector’ to ‘challeng[e] the sufficienc­y of’ a proposed constituti­onal amendment in one of three ways — by challengin­g the text, ballot title, or popular name of the proposed constituti­onal amendment,” the court said.

“Nowhere in Act 376 does it expressly state that this court must review a constituti­onal amendment proposed by the General Assembly under amendment 7. Further, we have stated that the Arkansas General Assembly is presumed to be aware of our decisions…We see no reason to depart from our well-establishe­d precedent in reviewing a constituti­onal amendment proposed by the Legislatur­e under article 19, section 22 of the Arkansas Constituti­on.”

Thus, the court ruled that Article 19, Section 22 of the Arkansas Constituti­on governs the ballot titles of Issue 2 and 3.

BALLOT TITLE ISSUE

In his appeal, Steele also argued that the ballot titles of Issues 2 and 3 are misleading and insufficie­nt and fail to inform the voters of their specific proposals and, as a result, the substantia­l changes made by the two amendments constitute manifest fraud.

In its majority opinion, the court said it has stated that Article 19, Section 22, doesn’t require a ballot title, and any ballot title offered is intended to identify and distinguis­h the amendment rather than to inform the voter.

The court said the Issue 2 ballot title states that the amendment is known as the “Arkansas Term Limits Amendment” and proposes “amending the term limits applicable to members of the General Assembly.”

The Issue 3 ballot title states that its amendment will “amend the process for the submission, challenge, and approval of proposed initiated acts, constituti­onal amendments, and referenda,” the court said.

“Here, these two ballot titles sufficient­ly identify and distinguis­h the proposed amendments from others on the ballot and in the public,” the court said.

GERMANE PARTS

Steele also argued that Issue 3 is not a single-subject proposal, but one containing three separate and disparate constituti­onal amendments.

The Supreme Court said it has held under Amendment 19, Section 22, there is no violation of the separate issue requiremen­t as long as all of the proposed amendment’s parts are reasonably germane to each other and to the general subject of the proposal.

“Based on our review, Issue 3 allows for amendments through public-initiated acts, referenda or the Legislatur­e,” the high court said Thursday.

“It does not violate the same-subject provision because its parts are reasonably germane to each other and to the general subject of the amendment,” the court said. “We conclude that the circuit court properly ruled in this instance. Therefore, we hold that the circuit court properly dismissed Steele’s complaint.”

DISSENTING OPINION

In her dissenting opinion, Hart said Issue 3 should be removed from the ballot.

One part of Issue 3 is directed at a measure generated by the people and two other parts affect how the Legislatur­e proposes constituti­onal amendments, she said.

All three parts concern different processes for amending the constituti­on, Hart said.

“Yet, the majority affirms the circuit court’s finding that these different procedures are ‘reasonably germane’ because ‘[t]he general subject of Issue 3 is the various procedures in which Arkansas law can be amended: through public initiated acts and amendments.’

“That single sentence should provide all the clues necessary to decide that Issue 3 contains disparate proposals,” Hart wrote in her dissenting opinion. “The phrase ‘various procedures’ can only indicate that there is more than discrete change to the constituti­on that should be ‘submitted as to enable electors to vote on each amendment separately.’”

Attorney David Couch, who represente­d Steele, said Thursday, “It’s disappoint­ing that measures sent to the voters by the politician­s are not held to the same strict standards as those initiated by citizens.

“No voter will actually know what they are voting for when they cast their vote on Issues 2 and 3,” Couch said in a written statement. “The Supreme Court permitted this deception by the politician­s while during this same election cycle removed all three measures proposed by the people for a hyper-technical reason.”

Thurston spokesman Kevin Niehaus said in a written statement, “We do not have a comment.”

A spokeswoma­n for Republican Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said, “The Attorney General is pleased the Arkansas Supreme Court ruled that Issue 2 and Issue 3 are constituti­onally valid.

“This decision will give Arkansas voters the opportunit­y to consider both issues during this election,” said Rutledge spokeswoma­n Stephanie Sharp.

ISSUE 3 SPECIFICS

Issue 3 would require initiative or referendum petitions to have a certain percentage of valid signatures from each of 45 counties. The designated percentage would be based on the votes in each county in the most recent gubernator­ial election. The constituti­on now sets that minimum at 15 of Arkansas’ 75 counties.

The proposed amendment also would:

■ Require initiative petitions for statewide measures to be filed with the secretary of state by Jan. 15 of the year they would be voted on. They are now required to be filed by four months before the election.

■ Eliminate the 30-day cure period, which gives more time to gather signatures if the sponsor of a proposed ballot measure falls short on valid signatures but turns in at least 75% of the required number.

■ Require a challenge to the sufficienc­y of a statewide petition to be filed no later than April 15 of the year of the general election in which it shall be voted on. ■ Require a three-fifths vote — up from the current majority vote — in the 100-member House of Representa­tives and 35-member Senate to refer a proposed constituti­onal amendment to voters.

Issue 3 would become effective Jan. 1.

ISSUE 2 SPECIFICS

Issue 2 would remove lifetime term limits for state lawmakers.

Lawmakers are now limited to a maximum of 16 years in the House, the Senate or a combinatio­n of service in both chambers. (Senators’ two-year terms required by once-a-decade redistrict­ing don’t count toward that 16-year limit.)

Issue 2 would allow current lawmakers and any legislator elected Nov. 3 to serve under the current term limits, with the difference that once they hit the limit, they would be eligible to hold office again in the future after four years.

Then, the proposed amendment would prohibit future lawmakers elected after Jan. 1, from serving more than 12 years in a row. However, those lawmakers, once they have served 12 years consecutiv­ely, would be able to serve in the Legislatur­e after taking a fouryear break. The 12 years would include two-year Senate terms resulting from the once-a-decade restrictin­g process.

Issue 2 would become effective Jan. 1.

 ??  ?? Hart
Hart
 ??  ?? Kemp
Kemp

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States