Politics & Government

Arkansas Voters Reject Constitutional Amendment To Raise Ballot Initiative Approval Threshold

The report states the proposed amendment "failed by a wide margin."

November 9, 2022

A proposed amendment to the Arkansas Constitution that would have made it harder to pass future ballot initiatives failed by a wide margin Tuesday.

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Issue 2 would have increased the threshold for passing constitutional amendments and initiated acts, referred to voters by both the Arkansas Legislature and through citizen-led petitions, from a simple majority to 60%.

The Associated Press called the race at 11:22 p.m.

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Unofficial returns with 81% of precincts reporting were:

Against 465,594

For 320,653

The measure was introduced and put on the ballot by Republican state legislators.

The Arkansas Public Policy Panel campaigned against Issue 2, saying it would create minority rule. APPP Policy Director Kymara Seals said Tuesday that the results were encouraging.

“We’re fighting for democracy, and it’s a step toward maintaining that democracy and allowing the people to rule in the state of Arkansas, which is our motto,” Seals said, referring to the state motto of “regnat populus,” Latin for “the people rule.”

State Rep. David Ray (R-Maumelle), the measure’s primary sponsor in the Legislature, said in a text message that he found the results “disappointing.”

He previously said increasing the vote threshold would be a “check” on “dumb ideas” put forth by the Legislature.

“There’s no doubt that the hundreds of thousands of out-of-state, liberal ad dollars deceived voters about what Issue 2 would actually do,” Ray said.

He added that “this setback is only temporary” and he plans to work on legislation next year “to reform our initiative system to protect it from further abuse.”


The Arkansas Advocate is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to tough, fair daily reporting and investigative journalism that holds public officials accountable and focuses on the relationship between the lives of Arkansans and public policy. This service is free to readers and other news outlets.