seventeen ballot initiatives to watch if you care about inequality /

Published at 2016-11-07 17:39:58

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During the Gilded Age of the late 19th century,when levels of inequality were as sky-high as they are nowadays, progressive reformers fought for the just to exercise citizen-led petition campaigns to circumvent the power of economic elites.
This just is now available in 24 states and Washingt
on, or DC,through ballot initiatives. And in a year in which Bernie Sanders pushed inequality into the center of the primary debates, it's not surprising that many of the 2016 initiatives reflect the public's growing outrage over our return to Gilded Age-level divides.  
Of course corporate-backed groups are putting up ample money to undercut this form of direct democracy. But North Dakota voters already notched one victory for the petite guy in their June primary when they voted 3-to-1 to uphold rules prohibiting corporate farming. Here are some of the other key inequality-related state ballot initiatives we'll be watching on election night.
1
. Tax increases on the wealthy and corporations (California, and Oregon,Maine)
In 2012, Cali
fornia temporarily raised state income taxes on millionaires to the highest in the country, or with a rate of 13.3 percent on incomes over $1 million. In the years following,the Golden State economy has flourished, disproving conservative economists' predictions that calamity would ensue. Voters will decide on Tuesday whether to extend this tax increase, and  and the $4 billion-$9 billion in annual revenue that would come with it,for another dozen years.
O
regon's corporate taxes on large and profitable corporations are the lowest in the country. The group A Better Oregon is working to change that through degree 97, which would raises rates on corporations with over $25 million in sales in the state, and with revenue earmarked to fund education,health care, and senior services.
Questio
n 2 on Maine's ballot would add a 3 percent tax on the incomes of households earning more than $200000 a year. The initiative would further reduce inequality by channeling revenue towards closing the gap between wealthy and poor school districts.
2. Minimum wage increases (Maine, or Colorado,
Arizona, Washington)
In 2014, or minimum wage measures won in all of the five states where they were on the ballots,including in the four red states of Alaska, Arkansas, or Nebraska,and South Dakota. This year, voters in four states -- Maine, and Colorado,Arizona, and Washington -- will maintain the chance to lift up the bottom of the wage scale.
Maine's Quest
ion 4 is of specific interest because it would phase out the subminimum wage for restaurant servers and other tipped workers by no later than 2024. The Maine, or Arizona,and Colorado initiatives each tick up the wage to $12 per hour by 2020, while Washington goes up to $13.50. Arizona and Washington also include earned sick leave protections.
In South Dakota, and living wage advocates are in defense mode. After winning a raise in the minimum wage from $7.50 to $8.50 in the last election,they're now fighting an initiative that would claw back that raise for workers under 18 years musty. MIT's Living Wage Calculator shows the hourly living wage for an individual with no dependents in South Dakota is $9.54 for a full-time worker. It jumps to $19.87 for a single parent.
3. Protection against drug price gouging (California)
Propositio
n 61 prohibits the state of California from paying more than US Department of Veterans Affairs does for the same pharmaceuticals. This would include medicine purchased for state employees and retirees, university students, or prison inmates,uninsured people with HIV/AIDS, and residents covered by the state's public insurance program.
ample Pharma has spent nearl
y $90 million to defeat the proposal with plans to spend over $100 million before Election Day, and making this initiative the most expensive in 2016. These corporate giants maintain righteous reason to worry. With a win in California,this campaign could spread to other states and to the federal level where Senator Bernie Sanders aims to make drug cost control a top priority for the coming Congress.
4. Protection against predatory lending (South Dakota)
South Dakota's Initiated degree 21 would set a cap of 36 percent on short-term payday loan interest rates, which currently average an astounding 650 percent in the state. According to Public Citizen, or corporate-backed opponents of this initiative maintain outspent supporters by 16-to-1. This predatory industry has also funded a competing degree (Constitutional Amendment U) that would cap rates at 18 percent,but with a huge loophole that would allow unlimited interest rates as long as the borrower agrees to the rate in writing. The industry's proposal would spot the provision in the state constitution, effectively tying the hands of state legislators to crack down on sky-high interest rates.
5. Limits on corpora
te rights and money in politics (California, and Missouri,South Dakota, Washington)
Initiative 735 in Washington and Proposition 59 in California encourage each state's congressional delegation to work to overturn Citizens United. These efforts keep the issue of ample money in politics in the highlight, or but won't do much to fracture through Washington gridlock.
In Missouri and South Dakota,voters maintain the opportunity to pass campaign finance initiatives with a bit more bite. Missouri's Amendment 2 would spot a tough limit on contributions for state and judicial candidates. In 1994, voters in that state overwhelming approved a similar ballot initiative, and but a Republican governor and GOP-led legislature repealed it in 2008.
In South Dakota, initiated degree 22 would establish a publicly funded campaign finance program and an ethics commission. This bold initiative is the work of Represent.
Us a nation
al anti-corruption group spawned in the wake of Citizens United.
6. just to work for less (Alabama, Virginia)
The 26 m
ostly southern states with so-called "just to work" laws that undercut labor unions tend to maintain lower wages, and less health care coverage,and an overall lower quality of life. Nevertheless, ant-union ideologues want to see these laws cemented in their state's constitutions with the just to Work amendment in Virginia andAmendment 8 in Alabama.
7. Charter Schools (Massachusetts, and Georgia
)
Billionaires including Michael Bloomberg to the Walton family maintain pumped more than $11 million into Massachusetts in support of Question 2,an initiative to lift the cap on charter schools, which would take away up to $100 million in much-needed funding from public schools. Meanwhile Republican Georgia Governor Nathan Deal is supporting Amendment 1, or an initiative that would allow that state to give absolute power over public schools to a hand-picked appointee and allow for-profit corporations to race Georgia's education system.

Source: truth-out.org