Colonel William A. Phillips

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Two ballot measures were certified for the November 3, 2020, general election in the state of Massachusetts. Multiple other ballot measures that were initiated by supporters did not meet requirements, thus will not appear on the ballot.

The Constitution of Massachusetts can be amended through initiative, and state statutes can be proposed through initiative. In Massachusetts, after the Attorney General determines which measure(s) will appear on the ballot, an official name is assigned to each question. The Secretary of the Commonwealth has discretion over the ordering of questions on the ballot.

Measures on the ballot

As of April 2020, four measures (19-06, 19–10, 19–11, and 19-14) had achieved the required number of initial signatures and were pending in the Massachusetts General Court. The measures could be passed by the legislature before May 5, 2020, or if that failed to happen, petitioners were required collect an additional 13,347 signatures in support of each measure to be placed on the ballot. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the effects of social distancing on in-person signature collection, a lawsuit to allow for electronic signatures in support of ballot initiatives was raised with the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.[1] In late April, a court judgement to allow for electronic signatures was agreed to by Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin and supporters of the four measures.[2] In early July, supporters of two of the four measures (19-06 and 19-10) announced that they had submitted a sufficient number of signatures to qualify for the ballot. Galvin certified both measures to appear on the 2020 ballot.[3][4]

No. Question Status
1 Initiative Law to Enhance, Update and Protect the 2013 Motor Vehicle Right to Repair Law
Approved
2 Initiative Petition for a Law to Implement Ranked-Choice Voting in Elections
Rejected
Cit.[5]

Measures not on the ballot

Several measures were not certified to circulate because they went against Massachusetts law on ballot measures. Others were cleared for circulation but did not collect enough initial signatures for the December 4, 2019 deadline[6]

Despite reaching a sufficient number of signatures in the first round, supporters of two measures (19-11 and 19-14) failed to collect the necessary number of signatures in the second round. By early July both initiatives had "effectively dropped their 2020 efforts".[7]

No. Status Title Summary Text Website
19-01 Did not collect signatures Petition for a Constitutional Amendment Regarding the Public Funding of Abortion This proposed constitutional amendment would permit the state to exclude abortion services from state-funded health care. Text
19-02 Did not collect signatures Mass Gun Safe Law This proposed law would hold gun owners in Massachusetts liable for harm caused by anyone using an unsecured weapon obtained, with or without consent of the weapon's owner, from any residence, business, or vehicle. It would require all gun owners in Massachusetts to keep all weapons in their residence, business, or vehicle secured in a gun safe. Text
19-03 Did not collect signatures Initiative Petition for a Constitutional Amendment to Restore the Right to Vote This proposed constitutional amendment would remove the existing prohibition against voting by persons incarcerated because of a felony conviction. Such persons would become able to vote in elections for governor, lieutenant governor, state senator, state representative, governor's council, secretary of state, state treasurer, state auditor, state attorney general, and United States senator and representative in Congress. Text
19-04 Did not collect signatures Initiative Petition for a Law Relative to the Humane Treatment of the Disabled This proposed law would prohibit state-funded, state-operated, or state-licensed facilities from administering painful punishment or behavioral modification procedures to persons with disabilities. Text
19-05 Did not collect signatures Initiative Petition for Law Relative to the Treatment of Persons with Disabilities This proposed law would prohibit the use of electric shocks on any person with a physical, intellectual, or developmental disability for punishment, behavior modification, or for any reason other than medical resuscitation or for electroconvulsive treatment to which the person has consented. This prohibition would not apply to authorized law enforcement officers engaged in law enforcement duties. Text
19-07 Not certified for circulation Initiative Petition Relative to Corporate Rights and Political Spending The first section of the proposed amendment declares that corporations are not people and may be regulated. The second section provides that the Legislature may regulate and set reasonable limits on political contributions and expenditures Text Link
19-08 Did not collect signatures Initiative Petition Relative to Political Spending by Non-Residents of Massachusetts This proposed law would limit monetary contributions that state, county, or local political candidates or ballot question committees could accept from political action committees organized outside Massachusetts or from individuals who reside outside Massachusetts. Text Link
19-09 Did not collect signatures Whale Safe Fishing Act This proposed law would ban the use of commercial fishing gear likely to entangle whales and sea turtles. Text
19-12 Not Certified for circulation Initiative Petition for a Law Relative to Primary Elections Replacing the current system of party primaries with an open "voter nomination" primary, under which all candidates from all parties would appear on a single primary ballot and voters could choose any candidate. The top two vote-getters, regardless of party affiliation, would advance to the general election. Text
19-11 Did not collect signatures An Act Establishing Adequate Funding for Residents of Massachusetts Nursing Homes Update the Medicaid reimbursement for nursing homes, including updating the base year for average costs. Text Link
19-13 Not certified for circulation Initiative Petition for a Law Relative to Reducing the Risks of Technology Proposes a law that would create the Reducing Risks of Technology Commission (RRTC). The RRTC would be charged with drafting legislation to address a broad array of topics pertaining to technology. Text
19-14 Did not collect signatures[8] Initiative Petition for a Law Relative to the Sale of Beer and Wine by Food Stores Increase the number of food stores able to sell alcoholic beverages and lift the cap of number of licenses to sell alcohol a person may have. Text
19-15 Did not collect signatures Petition for a Law to Prevent Massachusetts From Becoming a Sanctuary State This proposed law would provide new authority to state and local law enforcement officers to detain someone who would otherwise be released in order to transfer custody to federal immigration officials, if such federal officials assert that the person is subject to deportation and if specific facts indicate that the person poses a threat to public safety. Text
19-16 Did not collect signatures Petition for a Law to Limit Taxpayer-Funded Payouts to Employees Leaving State Service This proposed law would limit to 1,000 hours the credits for unused sick leave that employees of state agencies, state authorities, and public institutions of higher education could accrue. Text

Polling

Massachusetts Question 1
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Yes (for the amendment) No (against the amendment) Other Undecided
YouGov/UMass Amherst October 14–21, 2020 713 (LV) 75% 15% 11%
Ipsos/Spectrum News October 7–15, 2020 1,001 (A) ± 3.5% 58% 22% 20%
MassInc./WBUR August 6–9, 2020 501 (LV) ± 4.4% 57% 31% 0%[b] 12%
Massachusetts Question 2
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Cohort Margin
of error
Yes (for the initiative) No (against the initiative) Other Undecided
YouGov/UMass Amherst October 14–21, 2020 713 (LV) All ± 4.5% 48% 43% 9%
Ipsos/Spectrum News October 7–15, 2020 1,001 (A) All ± 3.5% 45% 34% 21%
MassInc./WBUR August 6–9, 2020 501 (LV) All ± 4.4% 36% 36% 1%[c] 27%
323 (LV) Respondents who say they understand RCV
very well or somewhat well
± 5.6% 48% 35% 2%[d] 15%
161 (LV) Respondents who say they do not understand RCV
very well or do not understand it at all
± 7.9% 14% 38% 0% 48%

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ "Refused" with 0%
  3. ^ "Refused" with 1%
  4. ^ "Refused" with 2%

References

  1. ^ "Mass. High Court Rules For Plaintiff Signature Collectors In Ballot Access Case". www.wbur.org. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
  2. ^ Lisinski, Chris (April 30, 2020). "Accord clears way for e-signatures on ballot questions". WWLP. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  3. ^ "Auto Repair, Ranked-Choice Voting Questions Cleared for November Ballot". www.wbur.org. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  4. ^ "Two ballot questions approved for fall elections in Massachusetts". WWLP. July 14, 2020. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  5. ^ * Borchers, Callum (September 14, 2020), "A 'Right To Repair' Sequel: Mass. Ballot Question 1, Explained", Wbur.org (includes video)
  6. ^ "Current petitions filed". Mass.gov. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
  7. ^ DeCosta-Klipa, Nik (July 2, 2020). "Two proposed Massachusetts ballot questions bite the dust amid pandemic". Boston.com. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  8. ^ Young, Colin A. (June 27, 2020). "Cumberland Farms Drops Beer and Wine Ballot Question". WBUR-FM. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
Preceded by
2018
Massachusetts Ballot Measures
2020
Succeeded by
2022