Initiatives
A Great Tool For Tracking Endorsements in California Ballot Races
Fox & Hounds Daily, a California news and opinion web site to which your blogger contributes stories, has a handy new tool for tracking endorsements of the statewide measures on next month's California ballot. It's a grid. Check it out here.
Nevada Man Behind Big Oregon Initiative Donations
The Oregonian profiles Loren Parks, the Nevada millionaire who has given big to Oregon initiative campaigns.
Uruguay, And A Common Language of Direct Democracy
Among the most interesting people at this global meeting of journalists and academics here in Aarau has been David Altman, a political science professor at Catholic University in Chile. Altman has done the most comprehensive survey work, looking at every use of direct democracy in the world in the period from 1985 to 2005.
Two of his findings stick out. !. Uruguay, not the United States, is the most direct democratic country in the western Hemisphere. For all the activitiy in U.S. states, we don't have a national initiative or referendum. (Though former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel has spent years pushing for just that). Bur Uruguay, despite repeated and dramatic changes in its constitution, has had a durable direct democracy. Altman's paper on this is here.
2. Altman makes a strong case that we need a common, global language for direct democracy. (We don't even have a common language in the American press. (The Washington Post, for reasons only its editors know, insists on using the term referendum -- inaccurately -- to describe ballot initiatives in California and other Western states.) Altman has broken the types of ballot measures into two main categories: plebiscites (ballot measures that come from "above", from rulers) and referendums (ballot measures that come from below, through collections of signatures or other popular methods).
Turnout Apologies
BERN, Switzerland -- As a group of journalists and I (all of us cover direct democracy) make our way around this country by train and by bus on our way to a conference Wednesday, we keep meeting Swiss who boast -- politely -- about their direct democracy. They describe it as frustrating, problematic, but also as essential part of their political culture. There's one topic, however that they seem sheepish about: voter turnout.
It's low, very low. In Sunday's referendum and initiative elections in the canton of Zurich, the nation's largest, voter turnout came in at just 35 percent. And Denise Meyer, an election official there, described that as typical. In Uri, where direct democracy is a passion, a top canton minister described a turnout of 45 percent as pretty good.
Tip Generously: Casino Workers Take On Initiative Process
A group representing tip-earning casino workers in Nevada earlier this year filed a statewide initiative to bar casinos from forcing them to pool their tips and share them with supervisors. Then they got a lesson in direct democracy. Their initiative, and 11 others, were challenged by opponents and successfully knocked off the ballot.
Now the union-backed group, PEST (Committee to Prevent Employees From Seizing Tips") has gone to court, filing a lawsuit that claims the state's rules on ballot initiatives are unconstitutional. If this suit gets any traction, it will be worth watching because casino workers are challenging everything -- the single subject rule, the requirements for title and summary, and the ability of opposition groups to challenge a measure before signatures are filed.
Donations For, Against Prop 8 Already Top $30 Million
Supporters of the California initiative to ban same-sex marriage have outpaced opponents thus far. More details in this Los Angeles Times story. Bob Stern of the Center for Governmental Studies, which recently completed an excellent report on initiatives, says that Prop 8 could prove to be the most expensive campaign ever waged over a social issue.
Every Ballot Measure Has a Back Story
At least the 12 on the statewide ballot in California. And Robert Greene of the LA Times tells these stories.
Colorado Compromise?
In Colorado, there's a multi-initiative war between business and labor interests. Each side is sponsoring multiple measures. But there are talks underway, with some participation by Gov. Bill Ritter, aimed at avoiding a full war in November. The Denver Business Journal has details. Labor has agreed to drop its initiatives -- which are aimed at business prerogatives -- if business leaders will help the unions defeat Measure 47, an initiative to make Colorado a "right-to-work," or open shop, state.
ADDED, 9/21: More details on the talks from the Rocky Mountain News, which even has some documents on the deal-making.
Billionaires and Ballot Initiatives

Fundraising for ballot initiatives is a rich man's game. In 2006 in California, some two-thirds of all donations to ballot measures came in the amount of $1 million or more, according to a recent report from the Center for Governmental Studies. Yes, two-thirds of all donations.
So the latest big cash dumps in California are business as usual. Peter Sperling just gave $2.5 million to Prop 7, an alternative fuels measure. And George Soros found some spare change with the lint in his pants -- about $400,000 -- and threw it to Prop 5, which would expand drug rehabilitation and loosen some penalties for drug offenders. Soros' total donations to the measure? $1.4 million. So far. The Sacramento Bee has details.
The Palin Pick, and Alaska's Direct Democracy
Get ready, America, for a lesson in one of our country's strangest states. What makes Alaska so different? It's not just the cold and the empty landscape. (CORRECTED 9/4): Alaska is one of a few states to have had direct democracy since its founding. Arizona has had the initiative and referendum since statehood, and Oklahoma since shortly after it joined the union.
So it's fair to say that Alaska has been shaped more profoundly by direct democracy than almost any other state in the union. As every bit of Gov. Sarah Palin's life is scrutinized, you'll hear lots of odd things for which direct democracy is part of the answer. (Here's my strongest prediction about this choice: once Americans learn how Alaska works, Leno and Letterman will start making jokes -- and it'll be years before they stop). For example, she'll have to admit -- as she has done in the past -- that she smoked marijuna. But she'll have an explanation that may surprise people. Marijuana was LEGAL in Alaska until 1990, and not just for medicinal purposes. Thank the voters for the right. The voters also took the right away.


