Texarkana Gazette

Ballot initiative­s buck legislatur­es

- By David Crary

Marijuana legalizati­on. An increase in the minimum wage. Expansion of Medicaid. Come Election Day, voters in a batch of Republican-dominated states will weigh in on these and other liberal or centrist proposals that reached the ballot after bypassing state legislatur­es.

Pushed forward via signature-gathering campaigns, these measures offer a chance for voters to do things their GOP-run legislatur­es oppose. Many are considered to have a good chance of passage.

In four of the states— Florida, Missouri, Montana and North Dakota—the ballot measures might have some effect on closely contested U.S. Senate races. Even a slight boost in turnout among liberal-leaning voters could help Bill Nelson, Claire McCaskill, Jon Tester and Heidi Heitkamp, the endangered Democratic incumbents in those states.

Missouri is notable this year for having three left-leaning proposals on its ballot—raising the minimum wage, legalizing marijuana for medical purposes and changing the congressio­nal redistrict­ing process so that it is potentiall­y less partisan.

The minimum-wage measure might have special appeal to low-income voters from Kansas City and St. Louis, where efforts to raise pay locally were thwarted by the Legislatur­e last year.

Among those dismayed by the Legislatur­e's move was the Rev. Starsky Wilson, who heads a social services foundation in St. Louis. He also co-chaired a commission that investigat­ed economic and social inequality after the racial unrest provoked by the 2014 killing of Michael Brown by a police officer in Ferguson.

"When the Legislatur­e pre-empted, it showed what lengths folks will go to thwart the will of the people," Wilson said. "These were unfortunat­e actions of some legislator­s who don't seem to care about the poor and also don't seem to care about democracy."

Most of the financing for the minimum wage campaign has come from a Washington­based liberal organizati­on, the Sixteen Thirty Fund, which has backed campaigns in other states.

The wage increase is opposed by Associated Industries of Missouri and the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, which say it will raise the cost of doing business and possibly reduce the number of entry-level jobs. However, more than 350 Missouri businesses have announced support for the increase.

The measure would gradually raise the state's $7.85 minimum wage to $12 an hour, starting with a boost to $8.60 in January.

St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson said that the current wage is not high enough and that even the bump in January might not do much for many minimum-wage workers. "But it's a move in the right direction," she said.

St. Louis had raised its minimum to $10 an hour before the legislatur­e banned local government­s from setting wages that were higher than the state's.

Dave Robertson, a political science professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said the ballot measures might have only a marginal effect on turnout.

"That said, the marginal votes could make a huge difference in the Senate race because everyone expects it to be dead even," he said, referring to McCaskill's effort to repel a strong challenge from Republican Attorney General Josh Hawley.

Aside from Missouri, other GOP-controlled states with liberal- or centrist-backed measures on the ballot include:

■ Arkansas, to raise the state minimum wage from $8.50 an hour to $11 by 2021.

■ Idaho, Nebraska and Utah, to expand Medicaid coverage to more residents.

■ Montana, to raise tobacco taxes to extend an existing Medicaid expansion.

■ North Dakota and Michigan, to legalize recreation­al use of marijuana, a step already taken by nine other states.

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