With popular petition, you can go collect signatures and then put a law on the ballot. If it passes by 51%, it becomes law, no matter how much the 49% hate that law. Granted, the 49% could spend lots of money advertizing against the law, though in some states they can't do that with candidates.
Imagine a left to right spectrum of voters: LLLLLMMMMMRRRRR
51% is needed to pass a law. Would it be best if the 51% were LLLLLMMM, LLMMMMMR, or MMMRRRRR? The one that is LLMMMMMR is moderate and less likely to have groups on either side that would be extremely against the law.
In most states, you could pass LLLLLMMM or MMMRRRRR with 51% and get the law passed. That happened when the Arizona legislature put Propecia 102 on the ballot, and 53% of the populus voted to define marriage as between one man and one woman.
Many activists wish that individuals could propose amendments to the United States Constitution. The founding fathers require 2/3 of both houses of congress to propose amendments to the constitution for this very reason: 2/3 is guaranteed to include the middle 1/3, and also protects minorities from simple majority rule. Yes, the opposite extreme could come back with a moderate amendment to counter it, but it might not pass in time to prevent the country from splitting up.
In europe, if some extremists propose an amendment to the EU constitution, the legislatures can propose their own version of that amendment, which will run head to head with the popularly proposed one. I want my state to have something similar to that. Problem is the other extreme might instead propose their own extreme and run that against the other extreme, choosing to gamble instead of using a moderate they know would win head to head. But the populus will never give up their ability to propose amendments now that it is out.
My solution:
1. Let the legislature propose laws to run head to head with any law that is popularly passed. That is the only way the legislature can overturn popular laws.
2. Let the opposition collect opposing signatures on their own ballot. You need 10% to propose a law, but for every opposing signature collected, you need an extra signature to pass that law, until you get to 20% the number that voted for governor the last year, in which case it will be put to a vote regardless. But here is the kicker:
Opposing signatures collected: Percent of vote need to pass:
0% 50.1%
1% 52%
2% 54%
3% 56%
4% 58%
5% 60%
6% 62%
7% 64%
8% 65%
9% 66%
10%+ 67%
Imagine a left to right spectrum of voters: LLLLLMMMMMRRRRR
51% is needed to pass a law. Would it be best if the 51% were LLLLLMMM, LLMMMMMR, or MMMRRRRR? The one that is LLMMMMMR is moderate and less likely to have groups on either side that would be extremely against the law.
In most states, you could pass LLLLLMMM or MMMRRRRR with 51% and get the law passed. That happened when the Arizona legislature put Propecia 102 on the ballot, and 53% of the populus voted to define marriage as between one man and one woman.
Many activists wish that individuals could propose amendments to the United States Constitution. The founding fathers require 2/3 of both houses of congress to propose amendments to the constitution for this very reason: 2/3 is guaranteed to include the middle 1/3, and also protects minorities from simple majority rule. Yes, the opposite extreme could come back with a moderate amendment to counter it, but it might not pass in time to prevent the country from splitting up.
In europe, if some extremists propose an amendment to the EU constitution, the legislatures can propose their own version of that amendment, which will run head to head with the popularly proposed one. I want my state to have something similar to that. Problem is the other extreme might instead propose their own extreme and run that against the other extreme, choosing to gamble instead of using a moderate they know would win head to head. But the populus will never give up their ability to propose amendments now that it is out.
My solution:
1. Let the legislature propose laws to run head to head with any law that is popularly passed. That is the only way the legislature can overturn popular laws.
2. Let the opposition collect opposing signatures on their own ballot. You need 10% to propose a law, but for every opposing signature collected, you need an extra signature to pass that law, until you get to 20% the number that voted for governor the last year, in which case it will be put to a vote regardless. But here is the kicker:
Opposing signatures collected: Percent of vote need to pass:
0% 50.1%
1% 52%
2% 54%
3% 56%
4% 58%
5% 60%
6% 62%
7% 64%
8% 65%
9% 66%
10%+ 67%