Why Are So Many School Funding Ballot Measures Failing?
This long and well-researched article from the newspaper in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, argues that the fault for so many failed local school referendums lies with the strange way state school funding is calculated. But another argument emerging in Wisconsin -- where 31 of 61 school referenda failed last week -- is voter fatigue. That's been an explanation heard in initiative-heavy states such as California, Oregon and Colorado. Academic studies suggest this is bogus. Yes, there is some evidence of fatigue among voters who are asked to vote many times a year on many measures. But there is no evidence that voting more often makes voters more likely to defeat measures. In fact, voters are generally inclined to defeat ballot measures no matter how often they vote. This is especially true of initiatives, which -- over more than a century of American direct democracy -- have shown a consistent record: they lose more than two-thirds of the time.
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