Should all states be able to use ballot measures?

Friends,

Whether it’s defending our reproductive rights or fighting for better wages for workers, ballot measures are a proven pathway to achieving the progressive policies voters want all across the country. But currently, only 23 states and the District of Columbia allow citizens to use ballot measures to enact change in their communities – and extremist officials in many states that do allow them are working to restrict the power of ballot measures.

Here at the Fairness Project, we believe EVERY state should have a ballot measure process – and we want to know if you agree:

Do you think that all states should allow their citizens to pass laws through ballot measures?

YES →
 
NO →

Ballot measures have been under attack like never before, team. Anti-democracy lawmakers in Missouri, Florida, Idaho, and many more states have rolled out proposals that would severely restrict their ballot measure processes – and in Mississippi, the state legislature just refused to reinstate the use of voter-driven ballot measures for the second year in a row.

Our team at the Fairness Project has been working day and night to fight back against this assault against ballot measures, but we want to know what you think:

Should all states allow their citizens to pass laws through ballot measures?

YES →
 

Thank you, team!

— Fairness Project


 
      

Thanks to grassroots supporters like you, our team at the Fairness Project has won 31 people-powered ballot measure campaigns since 2016, changing over 18 million lives by expanding health care, raising wages, guaranteeing paid leave, and ending predatory lending directly at the ballot box when politicians refuse to act. Your support allows us to make this progress possible.

 
 
Contributions or gifts to the Fairness Project are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes. Contributions to the Fairness Project support its many efforts nationwide and any focus is at the Fairness Project’s sole discretion. Contributions will not necessarily be used to support activity in any one state.


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The Fairness Project
P.O. Box 21337
Washington, DC 20009
United States