Spooked Republicans move to limit voters' power to overturn GOP policies
Source: Raw Story · Bias: Far Left
Summary
Republicans in state legislatures across the country are increasingly worried about citizen-led ballot initiatives enacting Democratic Party policies or overturning Republicans' own policies — and they're working to clamp down on the right to get those issues on the ballot in the first place.According to The New York Times, "In North Dakota, Utah and South Dakota, legislatures are sponsoring measures on the November ballot that would raise the threshold for approving citizen amendments to 60 percent, not a simple majority. In Missouri, the legislature placed a measure on the ballot that would set an even higher bar: Citizen-sponsored amendments to the state constitution would have to win in each of the state’s eight U.S. House districts. An initiative that wins 95 percent of the vote statewide could lose if it fails in a single district."Meanwhile, in Florida, where there is already a 60 percent threshold for citizen-led constitutional amendments, "Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill imposing a raft of new requirements, fees and criminal penalties around collecting signatures on petitions for ballot measures" — with the result that all 22 proposed citizen amendments this year failed to qualify.All told, said the report, in the 24 states that allow citizen-led ballot initiatives, legislators passed 51 bills restricting the practice in some form last year — and they're not shy about the reason. Utah Senate president Stuart Adams proclaimed, “We will not let initiatives driven by out-of-state money turn Utah into California” in a speech last year."Even after initiatives have passed, the legislatures have resisted the will of the voters," said the report. "After 58 percent of Missouri voters approved a law establishing paid sick leave, the Missouri legislature passed its own law repealing it. In Nebraska, the legislature watered down a similar measure that 75 percent of voters had approved."Meanwhile, Missouri and South Dakota Republican legislators put their own measures on the ballot asking voters to overturn prior ballot questions approving abortion rights and Medicaid expansion, respectively, and Utah Republicans tried to put a measure overturning voter-approved anti-gerrymandering rules that struck down their congressional map last year — but that attempt ended in failure as they fell short of qualifying.Chris Melody Fields Figueredo, who heads up the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center, told The Times, “They cannot win fairly so the are changing the rules of the game. They don’t cancel democracy outright, but they create a system that is so cumbersome and so expensive and hard that you’ve taken the teeth out of the will of the people and their ability to make change.”
Related Coverage
- Wannabe influencer busted for pelting sleeping homeless victims with ‘high-powered’ water gun (Right — New York Post)
- Iran's control of the Strait of Hormuz remains a powerful bargaining chip (Center — NPR Topics: News)
- Penn Dems boot GOP Rep from House floor for patriotic suit despite encouraging ‘Pride’ attire (Far Right — BizPac Review)
- Wes Moore on democratic socialist gains: Voters want ‘someone who is going to fight for them’ (Center — The Hill News)
- The Democrat Party Is Literally Communist, and the Voters Admit It! (VIDEO) (Far Right — The Gateway Pundit)
- This Republican Has a Wild Idea for Fixing Housing Prices: Let the Market Actually Work (Far Right — Townhall)
- Pay-to-play cycle behind GOP's corporate tax cuts exposed in new report (Far Left — Raw Story)
- Mamdani mocked by GOP for telling New Yorkers to set thermostats to 78 (Center — The Hill News)
Daily Analysis
Read the full Parallax Pulse for April 8, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.
More Headlines From April 8, 2026
- Republican Projected to Hold Marjorie Taylor Greene’s House Seat (Center)
- US oil prices fall over 18% after Trump agrees to two-week ceasefire with Iran (Center Right)
- New York Wants a Cut of Counter-Strike's Loot Boxes (Center Right)
- Republican Clay Fuller to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene in House (Center)
- 5 US House races shift toward Democrats: Cook Political Report (Right)







