The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Failed Ohio amendment reflects GOP efforts nationally to restrict direct democracy

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>> After Ohio voters repealed a law pushed by Republican­s that would have limited unions’ collective bargaining rights in 2011, then-GOP Gov. John Kasich was contrite.

“I’ve heard their voices, I understand their decision and, frankly, I respect what people have to say in an effort like this,” he told reporters after the defeat.

The tone from Ohio Republican­s was much different this past week after voters resounding­ly rejected their attempt to impose hurdles on passing amendments to the state constituti­on — a proposal that would have made it much more difficult to pass an abortion rights measure in November.

During an election night news conference, Republican Senate President Matt Huffman vowed to use the powers of his legislativ­e supermajor­ity to bring the issue back soon, variously blaming out-of-state dark money, unsupporti­ve fellow Republican­s, a lack of time and the issue’s complexity for its failure.

He never mentioned respecting the will of the 57% of Ohio voters across both Democratic and Republican counties who voted “no” on the Republican proposal.

The striking contrast illustrate­s an increasing antagonism among elected Republican­s across the country toward the nation’s purest form of direct democracy — the citizen-initiated ballot measure — as it threatens their lock on power in states where they control the legislatur­e.

Historical­ly, attempts to undercut the citizen ballot initiative process have come from both parties, said Daniel A. Smith, a political science professor at the University of Florida.

“It has to do with which party is in monopolist­ic control of state legislatur­es and the governorsh­ip,” he said. “When you have that monopoly of power, you want to restrict the voice of a statewide electorate that might go against your efforts to control the process.”

According to a recent report by the nonpartisa­n Fairness Project, Ohio and five other states where Republican­s control the legislatur­e — Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Missouri and North Dakota — have either passed, attempted to pass or are currently working to pass expanded supermajor­ity requiremen­ts for voters to approve statewide ballot measures.

At least six states, including Ohio, have sought to increase the number of counties where signatures must be gathered.

The group found that at least six of the 24 states that allow ballot initiative­s have prohibited out-of-state petition circulator­s and nine have prohibited paid circulator­s altogether, the group reports.

Eighteen states have required circulator­s to swear oaths that they’ve seen every signature put to paper. Arkansas has imposed background checks on circulator­s. South Dakota has dictated such a large font size on petitions that it makes circulatin­g them cumbersome.

Sarah Walker, policy and legal advocacy director for the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, said Republican­s in Ohio and elsewhere are restrictin­g the ballot initiative process in an era of renewed populism that’s not going their way. She said conservati­ves had no interest in amending the ballot initiative process when they were winning campaigns in the 1990s and early 2000s.

“Since then, you’ve seen left-leaning organizati­ons really developing their organizati­onal skills and starting to win,” she said. “The reason given for restrictin­g the ballot initiative is often to insulate the state from outside special interests. But if lawmakers are interested in limiting that, there are things they can do legislativ­ely to restrict those groups, and I don’t see them having any interest in doing that.”

Aggressive stances by Republican supermajor­ities at the Ohio Statehouse — including supporting one of the nation’s most stringent abortion bans, refusing to pass many of a GOP governor’s proposed gun control measures in the face of a deadly mass shooting, and repeatedly producing unconstitu­tional political maps — have motivated would-be reformers.

That prompted an influentia­l mix of Republican politician­s, anti-abortion and gun rights organizati­ons and business interests in the state to push forward with Tuesday’s failed amendment, which would have raised the threshold for passing future constituti­onal changes from a simple majority to a 60% supermajor­ity.

Another example is Missouri, where Republican­s plan to try again to raise the threshold to amend that state’s constituti­on during the legislativ­e session that begins in 2024 — after earlier efforts have failed.

Those plans come in a state where state lawmakers refused to fund a Medicaid expansion approved by voters until forced to by a court order, and where voters enshrined marijuana in the constituti­on last fall after lawmakers failed to. An abortion rights question is headed to Missouri’s 2024 ballot.

Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose is among Republican­s in the state who cast Issue 1 as a fight against out-of-state special interests, although both sides of the campaign were heavily funded by such groups.

He called the $20 million special election “only one battle in a long war.”

“Unfortunat­ely,” he said, “we were dramatical­ly outspent by dark money billionair­es from California to New York, and the giant ‘for sale’ sign still hangs on Ohio’s constituti­on,” said LaRose, who is running for U.S. Senate in 2024.

Fairness Project Executive Director Kelly Hall said Ohio Republican­s’ promise to come back with another attempt to restrict the initiative process “says more about representa­tional democracy than it does about direct democracy.”

She rejected the narrative that out-of-state special interests are using the avenue of direct democracy to force unpopular policies into state constituti­ons, arguing corporate influence is far greater on state lawmakers.

“The least out-of-state venue is direct democracy, because then millions of Ohioans are participat­ing, not just the several dozen who are receiving campaign contributi­ons from corporate PACs, who are receiving perks and meetings and around-the-clock influence from corporate PACs,” she said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PAUL VERNON ?? Republican Ohio Senate president Matt Huffman, left, gestures toward Republican Ohio state Rep. Jim Hoops as Huffman talks to reporters in Columbus, Ohio, following the failure of Issue 1in a special election Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023.
AP PHOTO/PAUL VERNON Republican Ohio Senate president Matt Huffman, left, gestures toward Republican Ohio state Rep. Jim Hoops as Huffman talks to reporters in Columbus, Ohio, following the failure of Issue 1in a special election Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023.

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