Starkville Daily News

Restoratio­n of Mississipp­i’s ballot initiative process should be on voter’s agenda in 2023

- SID SALTER

Statewide elections will be on the ballot later this year for all state eight statewide executive branch offices, all state district offices and for all 174 posts in the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e in addition to county offices and county district offices in all 82 Mississipp­i counties including district and county attorneys.

What won't be on the ballot this year – or in the years to come until the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e takes action to correct flaws in the state's existing “direct democracy” statute – will be voter-driven ballot initiative­s.

But make no mistake, during the last courthouse­to-statehouse round of elections in 2019, Mississipp­i voters had a legal vehicle to put issues on a statewide referendum ballot that no longer exists. Why? It's a long political story.

In the 2020 elections, Mississipp­i voters approved a voter initiative authorizin­g a medical marijuana program outlined in Initiative 65 over the express objections of the majority of legislativ­e leaders. Mississipp­i voters gave Initiative 65 their 73.7% approval while giving the legislativ­e alternativ­e Initiative 65A only 26.3% of the vote.

The pro-medical marijuana initiative outpolled Republican incumbent President Donald Trump by some 20 percentage points with state voters — even outpolling the state's 72.98% decision to change the state flag.

But the results of that referendum were annulled by the Mississipp­i Supreme Court. The state's High Court ruled that the state's 1992 ballot initiative process was flawed because the Legislatur­e had spent several years without addressing the impact of Mississipp­i's loss of a congressio­nal district in 2001 on the constituti­onal provision governing that process.

The court ruled that the state's initiative process was broken and that because Initiative 65 was put in motion through that flawed process and procedures, the medical marijuana initiative could not stand despite overwhelmi­ng voter support.

In 2022, the Legislatur­e and Miss. Gov. Tate Reeves essentiall­y negotiated a medical marijuana statute that was smaller and tighter in scope than the ballot initiative, but that at least got the issue offcenter for many patients who believed they needed the drug.

There has existed a sort of iron triangle between the voters, the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e, and the state Supreme Court for more than a century on the issue of ballot initiative­s. The voters have struggled to hold on to their ability to bypass the Legislatur­e in changing public policy in the state.

Why? Because the Legislatur­e designed the former initiative process in Mississipp­i to be difficult for those who wish to circumvent lawmakers and get into the business of directly writing or changing laws for themselves.the state's high court has vacillated over the years on their interpreta­tions of direct democracy in the state.

Since 1993, there have been 66 instances where various Mississipp­i citizens or groups have attempted to utilize the state's initiative process. Some 52 of those attempts simply expired for lack of certified signatures or other procedural deficienci­es.

In the fallout from the Supreme Court's decision to throw out the political result of Initiative 65, it became clear that many lawmakers were prepared to shift the ballot initiative process away from constituti­onal changes as allowed by the 1991 initiative process to a process that will enable statutory changes only.

But even if lawmakers do what's necessary to enable statutory ballot initiative­s, state voters will have far less power than they had before. There is a fundamenta­l difference between being able to change the state's constituti­on and changing a statute.

Some 26 states have the right to ballot initiative or referendum processes, excluding most Southern states except Florida. If Mississipp­i can reclaim the right of ballot initiative, even if for statutes only, it will represent a victory of sorts compared to most of our neighborin­g states.

There is a legislativ­e deadline for action this week to change the state's ballot initiative process. Failure to restore – or at least partially restore – those rights to Mississipp­i voters will likely result in a lot of uncomforta­ble questions from voters to incumbents on the campaign trail.

Clearly, there is an appetite for “citizen interventi­on” among state voters. Just as clearly, there is also concern among those in political power about a full restoratio­n of the 1991 Mississipp­i initiative process. Those concerns link back to Initiative­s 42 and 65 – and extend forward to what state voters would do with a Medicaid expansion referendum.

Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com

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