The latest effort to let other people decide what’s best for the rest of us is at large in the Missouri Capitol.
It is bill designed to take away some more of our voting rights. I say “some more” because of two obvious incidents from our past, within the last thirty years or so, in which we as voters gave away our right to vote.
First was term limits. In 1992, voters statewide decided you and I could not vote to retain our state representative or our state senator, no matter how well they had represented us, beyond a certain number of years. We, as a people, forfeited our right to vote for a third term for a senator we trusted or our right to vote for a fifth term of a representative who had responsibly served us.
(Hypocritically, in the same election, voters elected many incumbents to terms beyond the limits they also approved).
Later, voters statewide decided to ban any city from imposing an earnings tax other than the cities of St. Louis and Kansas City—and voters there would have to approve continuation of those taxes every five years. No other cities were seriously considering such a tax at the time, but that decision precluded any city from asking voters to think about one. Again, othrers have decided you and I can never have a chance to vote on this issue in our towns.
Now a movement is afoot to make it harder to change our constitution. And this one is even more dangerous because it could declare a majority vote doesn’t count.
The Senate already has passed this bill that says the constitution would not be amended, even if the proposal carries by a majority statewide, unless it has a majority in more than half of the state’s congressional districts. That means it must be approved by voters in five of our eight congressional districts we now have and will fail even if the statewide results show majority approval.
If you vote on the prevailing side, your vote is worthless if the issue gets a statewide majority but gets a a majority in only four of our congressional districts.
So much for one-person, one-vote. My vote and your vote might not carry the same weight as the vote of someone in a more reluctant congressional district. Our votes will not be equal. We might win the majority but the majority will not rule.
If it is such a good idea, why are elections for legislators run on the same principle? Why shouldn’t someone have to carry a majority of the precincts in their district, not just get the most votes overall, to get elected?
The proposed constitutional change is a Republican idea and Republicans don’t want voters in the Democratic congressional districts in our metro areas and, probably, the more liberal district that includes Columbia, to post majorities that more than offset votes in conservative areas of Missouri.
Can anyone name any other election law that says voters in some places don’t count even if they are in the overall majority?
Doesn’t sound very “American.”
Fortunately, this idea will require a simple majority to defeat it when it does on the statewide ballot, assuming voters realize that they are once again being asked to give away a right to decide issues on the basis of all votes being equal.
Our constitution already has too many things in it that should be state laws subject to updating as needed as our society changes. Many of those things have been put in the constitution because the legislature refused to enact them as statutes. We might have a chance to make that same mistake with a sports wagering proposition because the legislature annually fails to pass a more responsible sports wagering law.
There are ways to make it harder to turn legislative failures into constitutional amendments that reduce the opportunities our elected representatives and senators have to enact public policy. This proposal is not an appropriate way to do that.
The bill is Senate Joint Resolution 74. It will soon be on the House floor for debate. We will serve ourselves well if we tell our Representatives that our vote should be equal to the votes of others on proposed constitutional changes.
Sauces for geese and ganders should be equal. So should votes for legislators and for constitutional amendments.
I agree with you. Great column.