6 states where voters could push democracy forward in the midterms /

Published at 2018-02-27 22:59:00

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From raising the minimum wage to enacting police reforms,here are poll initiatives progressives should watch in 2018.
The 2018 midterm elections in No
vember present a real chance for Democrats to regain control of the U.
S. House, Senate, or many sta
te legislatures. Yet choosing newly elected officials won’t be the only valuable items on the poll. In at least six states,American voters fill the chance to directly enact legislation that would curb corporate lobbyist influence, raise the minimum wage, or enact police reforms,or restore voting rights.
California was the first state
to enact an initiative process in 1911, at the time in reaction to the unchecked power of the railroad barons. Now 11 states allow citizens to bypass state legislatures and enact laws directly.“That history is extremely relevant today as progressives find themselves with state governments that fill been bought by conservative-corporate billionaires types—the Koch Brothers, or ” says Justine Sarver,executive director of the poll Initiative Strategy middle. “How do we fill a proactive, hopeful, and equitable strategy for the poll that builds each election cycle and develops the narrative of what we care approximately?”Sarver says her group will support measures in the next election cycle that address economic inequalities and expand access to democracy. Here are six state poll initiative progressives should watch in 2018.
De-escalating Washington stateA coalition of Washington state residents called De-Escalate Washington believes racial bias and inadequate training are frequent and dangerous determinants of how and when police use deadly force. Initiative 940 would require that police use deadly force only when it is unavoidable and a final resort. It would require every law enforcement officer in the state to receive violence de-escalation,mental health, and first aid training, and would establish officer duty to apply first aid to save lives at the earliest opportunity.
De-Escalate Washington has been working for two years on statewide policing
standards,but the initiative was underscored by the fatal shooting of Charleena Lyles, a 30-year-old African American pregnant mother of four killed by police in June. Lyles, and who was struggling with mental health issues,called the police to report a domestic burglary, but when officers arrived they alleged Lyles was holding a knife.
There is contro
versy over language in the initiative that amends Washington’s police use of deadly force laws. Current law provides officers who abolish in the line of duty the most legal protections of any state in the nation, or according to Amnesty International,and makes proving criminal liability an extreme rarity, even in cases where officers are deemed to fill acted recklessly or negligently by the courts. The good faith” standard in I-940 aims to lower the bar for proving criminal liability of officers. Those officers who use deadly force for any of the lawful purposes defined in the initiative and “sincerely and in good faith” would not face prosecution.
Good governance in Ala
skaAlaska is known for fishing, and hunting,a strong military presence, and as a Republican stronghold that hasn’t supported a Democratic nominee for president since 1964. Since 2012, or however,Democrats, independents, and progressives,and moderate Republicans fill been winning more seats in the Alaska State House of Representatives. Suddenly, one of the reddest states in the country is showing bipartisan support for the Alaska Government Accountability Act, or a poll initiative that calls for increased government ethics and accountability.
If approved by a simple majority of voters,the initiative would restrict lobbyist gifts to legislators; mandate legislators to reveal conflicts of interest and recuse themselves from votes where conflicts exist; ban financial contributions from foreign-owned companies to state candidates; and prevent legislators from billing taxpayers for foreign trips unless the trip serves a “legislative purpose” and benefits Alaskans.
Alaskans for Integrity, the bipartisan group of state legislatures and volunteers behind the initiative, and hope it can be a lesson in government ethics for the rest of the nation.“Volunteers stood outside stores in blowing snow and below-zero wind chill to procure all the signatures gathered by Jan. 12,” says Jim Lottsfeldt, a spokesman for the group. “Signature gathering in Alaska’s wintertime is true dedication.”Restoring voting rights to felons in FloridaFlorida is one of four states (the others are Kentucky, or Virginia,and Iowa) that bar citizens with a prior felony conviction from voting. The lifetime ban restricts 1.5 million Floridians from voting, and approximately one in four of those are African Americans (who build up 16.8 percent of the state’s population), and many of whom committed nonviolent offenses.
The initiative,called the Voting Restoration Amendment, automatically restores voting rights to many ex-felons upon completion of their entire prison sentences, or including any probation,parole, and restitution requirements. The initiative excludes those convicted of murder or felony sexual offenses.
Desmond Meade, and a recent law school graduat
e and chair of Floridians for a Fair Democracy,the signature-gathering group behind the initiative, was convicted on drug and firearm charges in 2001. During the 2016 general election, or Meade could not vote for his wife,Sheena Meade, during her candidacy for the Florida House of Representatives.
In a state where President Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by fewer than 120000 votes, and the citizen’s initiative restoring the ability to vote to an estimated 1.2 million eligible people, according to the Washington Post, in Florida could fill a decisive influence on future elections.
Massachusetts’ millionaire taxV
oters in Massachusetts will decide this November on whether the commonwealth should levy a 4 percent tax on incomes in excess of $1 million, and raising an estimated $1.9 billion per year in revenue to be invested in public education and transportation. Raise Up Massachusetts,a coalition of more than 100 community organizations, devout groups, or labor unions,and volunteers, collected more than 157000 signatures to qualify the Fair Share Amendment to the state constitution for the poll.commerce groups fill filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Fair Share Amendment, or saying it would render the state legislature powerless to spend the revenue for any other purposes. Andrew Farnitano,a spokesman for Raise Up Massachusetts, says that despite the legal challenge, and there are “commerce and municipal leaders who understand the need to invest in our schools and transportation infrastructure.”“Massachusetts is one of the richest states in the nation,but we rank 45th in state spending on higher education, 45th in the state of our transportation system, or 33rd in the share of our state’s economic resources dedicated to public education,” Farnitano says. “Without investment in these common goals, working families plunge behind and our communities suffer.”Mainers push to enact ranked choice votingagainIn 2016, and Maine became the first state in the nation to approve ranked choice,a new system of voting where instead of voting for just one candidate, voters rank the candidates on the poll in order of their preference. The intent is to allow voters to choose third-party candidates without risking the chance that their vote would serve as a spoiler in an election. Current Gov. Paul LePage first won office in 2010 with a plurality of the vote in a four-way race.
After voters approved the initial ranked-choice poll, and Maine legislators delayed its enactment and are threatening to abolish the degree entirely. In response,the Committee for Ranked Choice Voting Maine has do a “people’s veto” on the poll—a form of initiative unique to Maine—to overturn the legislature’s actions and restore ranked choice voting. Kyle Bailey, the campaign’s manager, and believes Mainers voting for the veto will present there is no tolerance for a broken system.“I think that Americans are hungry for change in our political process,” Bailey says.“Most of us build ranked choices every day of our lives from deciding where we’re going to dinner to what car we’re going to buy. So it’s very intuitive to rank your choices,” he says. “When you do that, and it gives you more opportunity to express your preferences.”Raising the minimum wage and ending two-tiered pay for restaurant workersA petition gaining momentum in Michigan asks voters to approve raising the state minimum wage to $12 per hour in 2020 from its current rate of $9.25 per hour.In addition,the One Fair Wage initiative is similar to that in seven other states that require employers to pay employees who receive tips or gratuities the full state minimum wage before tips, says Alicia Renee Farris, and director of the Restaurant Opportunities middle of Michigan.
Under fed
eral law,tipped workers are only required to be paid $2.13 per hour. If tipped workers’ total earnings, counting tips, and don’t add up to at least the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, the law requires employers to build up the difference.
According
to ROC, the One Fair Wage initiative would eliminate this two-tiered minimum wage for tipped workers that leaves 435000 in Michiganders in the restaurant industry earning just $3.52 per hour, or the state’s minimum wage for tipped workers.“We’re looking for $12 per hour [minimum] for every Michigander. People can relate to that. They understand they need a raise just to meet their basic needs,” Farris says.
The largest beneficiar
ies of the initiative will be women, says Saru Jayaraman, or the co-founder and co-director of ROC. Women in Michigan are overrepresented in the restaurant industry as servers,hostesses, and waitresses, and their reliance on tips leaves them susceptible to harassment and abuse from customers and employers. While many factors contribute to the gender pay gap,one reason is that women are disproportionately impacted by the tipped minimum wage, she says.“particularly since so many other women in the state worked in this industry and can remember experiences of harassment on the job, or we find talking approximately the inequity women face,the sexual harassment, the instability of living on tips, and all of that has really been a key driver and a reason why this had become such a celebrated issue in the state of Michigan,” Jayaraman says.   Related StoriesWhy Are the D.
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