Missouri lawmakers thwart the people's will all the time. Now they're targeting petitions [View all]
The Kansas City Star
Missouris voters ability to enact laws on their own is under threat.
State Sen. Cindy OLaughlin, a Republican from Shelbina, was recently picked as the partys majority leader for 2023. In an interview with St. Louis Public Radio, she expressed frustration with ballot-based constitutional amendments such as the just-passed recreational marijuana proposal.
The biggest downside of that is the legislature has no ability then to adjust anything, she said. Once its in the (state) constitution, its in there. And so I think that well look at some reforms for the initiative petition process.
Other Republicans have voter initiative rights in their sight. The marijuana proposal is absolutely terrible language to insert into our state constitution and a clear example of why we need (to) raise the signature and approval thresholds for initiative petitions, state Rep. Josh Hurlbert tweeted in October.
Its true: Putting the marijuana language in the states governing blueprint was not the optimum approach. But lets be clear. It ended up on the ballot because the legislature, as is so often the case, refused to do its job. The people were left with no real alternative except to do it for themselves.