Weekly Opinion Editorial
HJR#1027 INCREASES ODDS
BY 18.2 TIMES!
by Steve Fair
The
initiative petition is under attack in Oklahoma. House Joint Resolution #1027
(HJR#1027) passed the House on Tuesday evening at 6:05 pm. The vote was 66-30 with four members not
voting. All but five of the yea votes
were Republican. All Democrats voted
nay. One of the five Republicans voting
no was Rep. Jon Echols, (R-OKC), the House Majority Leader, who voted to send
the JR to the House floor, but then voted against it when it came to the floor.
HJR#1027 now goes to the Senate.
HJR#1027 would dramatically change the
initiative petition process in Oklahoma.
It would require the signatures to be gathered equally in each of the
five congressional districts. Proponents
of HJR#1027 say that rural Oklahoma is being ignored when initiative petitions are
run. They claim those running the
petitions concentrate on OKC, Tulsa and Lawton areas and ignore rural Oklahoma
and ‘disenfranchise’(whatever that means) rural voters. Critics of HJR#1027 say the current initiative
petition process is fair and allows citizens to bypass the legislature and take
issues direct to the people.
First, HJR#1027 would make success at
running an initiative petition nearly impossible. In statistics, ‘combinations’
are when a number of factors, without regard to the order, are used to calculate
probability. HJR#1027 proposes a combination factor to the initiative petition
process. By placing the congressional
district requirement on petitioners, the probability of success is increased by
18.2 times! That’s right. Instead of making it just a little more
difficult, getting a state question on the ballot becomes nearly impossible. Both liberal, conservative, moderate citizens
are impacted when government votes to restrict or regulate involvement.
Second, many legislators despise the
initiative petition process. It is
highly unlikely one of the 149 lawmakers have carried a clipboard seeking
signatures to get an issue on the ballot.
They believe anyone who does is radical and must be stopped. But radicals should have the right to take
their case to the people. SQ#640, which
requires any tax or fee increase pass with a ¾ majority, is despised by
legislators, but without it Oklahomans would be paying much more in taxes. SQ#640 was on the ballot because hard working
‘radical’ Oklahomans were sick of being taxed to death and took action.
Third, the legislature should govern the
state, not make it harder for citizens to get involved in their government. “If the
requirements of HJR#1027 would have been in place, we wouldn’t have had
legalized pot on the ballot,” an unnamed legislator said. They were likely right and not only pot, but
everything else wouldn’t get on the ballot.
If HJR#1027 becomes law, the only
state questions on the ballot will be those generated by the legislature
itself.
HJR#1027 now moves to the state Senate. Citizens who care about their rights and the
right to petition your fellow citizens to get an issue on the ballot should
contact their state senator and ask them to oppose HJR#1027.
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