The NPR Politics Podcast - Republicans Push For Legislation Limiting Ballot Initiatives
Episode Date: May 19, 2025Ballot initiatives are one way for voters to get issues that matter to them enshrined in law, especially if lawmakers aren't interested in taking them on in local legislatures. But, efforts in several... Republican-led states are trying to make it harder for people to get initiatives on ballots in the first place. This podcast: voting correspondent Miles Parks, political correspondent Ashley Lopez, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, this is Sarah, baby Ivan, and John from Beatrice, Nebraska.
We're taking our first tractor ride as a family this planting season.
This podcast was recorded at 1 17pm on Monday, May 19th, 2025.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but we'll still be complaining about
the weather no matter what it is.
Here's the show.
Is there like a car seat for a tractor situation or do we think that's like just in the lap or what does that look like do you think? I like that first tractor ride is a milestone in a life. By the
way one I have not cleared yet. That hasn't happened yet. Everyone should have a tractor
ride when they're a baby.
Hey there, it's the MPR Politics Podcast. I'm Miles Parks. I cover voting.
I'm Ashley Lopez. I cover politics.
And I'm Mara Liason, senior national political correspondent.
And today on the show, Direct Democracy. We've talked a lot in recent years about ballot
measures allowing voters to weigh in directly on things like reproductive freedom and rank
choice voting. But now, Ashley, you are reporting that a number of Republican
led states are making it harder to get these sort of initiatives on the ballot. So I want
to take a step back and just talk about the process of how things get in a ballot more
broadly. Can you walk us through how something becomes kind of a vague political idea to
actually getting something voters weigh in on?
Yeah. So there are about two dozen states in this country that allow citizens to petition becomes kind of a vague political idea to actually getting something voters weigh in on?
Yeah.
So there are about two dozen states in this country that allow citizens to petition their
state to change its laws, usually by amending their constitution.
And how this works for the most part is fairly straightforward.
You have to get a certain number of voters to sign a petition to get an issue on a ballot.
And depending where you live, there are rules about who collects those signatures, how and
how much time they have. And then if state officials and you
know, oftentimes the courts get involved, if they say that the language passes legal
muster, then that will appear on a ballot before voters. And typically if a measure
gets a majority approval, and then it passes.
Okay. So then how are some of these states trying to change that?
Well, there are quite a few states looking to change the rules for pretty much every
aspect of this process.
This is an effort, as you mentioned, being carried out mostly by Republicans.
For the most part, proponents say this is a way to combat fraud in the process of signature
gathering.
Arkansas is a good example.
That state recently passed several laws.
One of those laws requires that the title of a proposed ballot measure
be read in full and out loud by either the person signing the petition or the person
gathering signatures. I talked to a Republican state lawmaker in Arkansas who pushed for
this legislation. His name is Mark Johnson. And he told me that this is so that voters
know that what they're signing and they can't be misled about what a ballot measure would
do. But I should say ballot titles can get pretty long the League of Women voters who is suing Arkansas over this law
Told me that they estimated could take now up to like 10 minutes to gather one signature with this new rule
Which I'm sure you guys have watched signature gathering before the quick pitch is this only take a minute. Don't walk away
You can do this really fast that will not be as easy to sell
walk away. You can do this really fast. That will not be as easy to sell. And anyways, the state is also requiring voters to show a photo ID and confirm
that they know fraud is a crime before they sign a petition, which can be a
little intimidating. And if they sign without doing any of this, the person
collecting signatures could be charged with a crime. And all of this is going to
make it tougher, voting rights advocates say, to both gather signatures and
recruit people to gather signatures, which is already kind of tough to do. One other notable law, Florida is
prohibiting people from gathering more than 25 signatures for a petition beyond their own and
those belonging to their immediate family. And if they collect something like 26, they could face
criminal penalties. I mean, these kind of laws aren't new, but people who are, you know, keeping
an eye on these kinds of laws say they are seeing more this year than ever before.
Marc Thiessen Morrow, what do you make of this kind of new development?
How does it fit into other things that Republicans have been prioritizing in recent years?
Danielle Pletka Well, I think it fits into the Republican kind
of self-identity as a minority party.
In other words, Donald Trump once famously said during his first term that the more people
vote the bad it is for Republicans.
And Republicans really relied on minoritarian institutions like the Electoral College or
extreme partisan gerrymandering.
And statewide referenda are the opposite of that.
That is plain old majority rule.
You know, the people go to the polls and they pass a constitutional amendment or they change
a law. And Republicans in the past, especially in the state of Florida, the people go to the polls and they pass a constitutional amendment or they change a law.
And Republicans in the past, especially in the state of Florida, have been trying to
make the bar much higher, make it harder for voters to enact laws on their own with a
simple majority.
Florida, for example, made the bar 60% to pass a referenda.
So it doesn't really surprise me.
What is interesting is that Donald Trump won a majority of the popular vote.
He was the first Republican since George W. Bush in 2004 who had won the popular vote.
So, it had been a very long time, 20 years, but the Republicans have not shed their real
fear of majoritarian rule.
And this is, to me, just part and parcel of that.
Yeah. Trump did win 56% of the vote there. The abortion rights measure, you know, would
have enshrined abortion rights in the state, won by 57. So this is a place where Republicans
do not have majority support on an issue. And even some of their voters, just looking
at that, even some of their voters don't agree with the party on this.
And even though it got 57, it didn't pass because it didn't clear 60, which is the rule.
I'm shocked that more Republican states haven't tried to just outright ban referenda.
Well, that is part of the slate of changes that are being proposed.
I think they do face a little more pushback because they are harder to sell as purely
combating fraud. But there are states, North Dakota has a proposed legislation that
would increase the threshold to 60%. But I think it's just like the packaging of it to
voters is a little tougher.
Well, what's interesting too, Ashley, to your point about being able to connect this to
fraud, I will say, whereas when we talk about actual voter fraud, we know from every
possible study that has been done that it is minuscule and there's been no evidence of widespread
voter fraud. But when it comes to signature gathering, there is a little bit more there
there, right? Yeah. I mean, this is a part of elections that gets a little less attention.
I mean, to be fair, we're talking about signatures versus votes, like the results of an election. This is something that happens downstream
a little earlier in the process. But Republicans say they take that as seriously as votes.
So I mean, whether that's fair or not, I think is up to anyone's interpretation there. But
yes, this is a part of elections that does have some issues. Most of these issues experts
have told me stem from the paid gatherers.
There seems to be much fewer issues with volunteer efforts,
but states that allow people to be paid, for example,
for every signature they gather, as opposed to by the hour,
those states seem to see more problems
with people committing signature fraud.
I mean, because there's like a pretty clear incentive there,
right?
And while states are looking
at the ballot measure initiative process, I think actually there's evidence of more prevalent
petition signature gathering issues when you look at like the sort of candidate qualifying
side of that. So like an independent candidate trying to get on the ballot has to also get
petitions and there seem to be more issues there. And this is why critics are skeptical.
They're like, well, why are you looking at that sort of part of it and just focusing
on stuff that is mostly volunteer effort?
This is not about fraud. Let's be clear. This is about making it harder to have statewide
initiatives on the ballot. I mean, there are many ways to attack fraud. You can set up
systems that make it easy to vote and hard to cheat, but that is not what this is.
It does just make me feel a little bit of pity for those signature gatherers who are
going to be... If it truly does take 10 minutes to get a signature, I'm like, oh man, that
is a tough job. I don't know who's staying for 10 minutes in front of a grocery store
to get everything read to them. But let's leave it there for now. Let's take a quick
break. We'll be right back.
And we're back. So Ashley, what are
critics of these developments saying about these changes?
Well, I mean, they're really concerned that this is, you know, in particular in these
Republican-led states, that this is a way to consolidate power. I mean, petition or
direct democracy, as you mentioned, it was created to give voters the ability to circumvent
their state legislatures, to deal with issues that politicians just don't have the political
will to address.
But it goes further than that.
I mean, since we talk about elections a lot,
statewide petition is also how voters are attempting
to address the sort of structures of our elections
that aren't working for them.
Things like independent redistricting commissions,
rank choice voting, primary form,
things that election officials largely don't wanna touch
with a 10 foot pole because they don't have
the incentive to.
Advocates told me this is really concerning because it's just going to make it harder
to address the sort of like bigger structural issues that are making democracy not work
for people.
And getting rid of the few ways that people can make their legislatures focus on issues
that matter to them, to them is a real shame.
I do want to switch gears here for a second.
We should note before we go that former President Biden announced
this weekend he's been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate
cancer.
And Mara, I was curious about your reaction to that news,
specifically at a time when the Biden administration
and the former president has been really under a microscope this week due
to a new book out from CNN's Jake Tapper
and Axios's Alex Thompson,
that really looks at what was happening,
what was being communicated about Biden's health
over the last year.
How much do you feel like the former president's health
will end up being a part of his legacy?
I think it will be the biggest part, no doubt.
The Biden office announced
that he has this aggressive form of prostate cancer.
It has metastasized to his bones.
But they say the cancer appears to be hormone sensitive, which means there are some options
for managing it.
And we know that over time, prostate cancer is no longer a death sentence.
People live with it for many years.
But it has just reignited the whole debate about whether Biden was forthcoming and his staff
was forthcoming about his health issues, you know, whether his age was affecting his ability
to function.
The reaction among Republicans has been really, really interesting.
Donald Trump issued a very anodyne statement that we would expect from any previous president,
which is that
he and Melania were concerned about Biden and they were wishing him the best and their
thoughts and prayers were with him more or less. While MAGA, the MAGA world, including
Donald Trump's son, Don Jr., were attacking Biden for covering this up. Now, we don't
know if that's true or not, but this, at least in the initial reaction, Donald Trump was able to be empathetic
and caring, which is unusual for him because he has been attacking Biden for his health
for years.
That's what I was going to say.
It almost feels like the normalcy of the statement felt like it could have come from any president,
but it only felt...
Right.
It's odd because he just never issued statements like that.
Okay.
Well, we can leave that there for now.
I'm Miles Parks, I cover voting. I'm Miles Parks, I cover voting.
I'm Ashley Lopez, I cover politics.
And I'm Mara Eliason,
senior national political correspondent.
And thank you for listening to the MPR Politics Podcast.