翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Washington quarter mintage figures
・ Washington Railroad Station
・ Washington Railway and Electric Company
・ Washington Ramirez Cruz Santos
・ Washington Rampage
・ Washington Raptors
・ Washington Red Birds
・ Washington Redistricting Commission
・ Washington Redskins
・ Washington Redskins Cheerleaders
・ Washington Redskins draft history
・ Washington Redskins name controversy
・ Washington Redskins Original Americans Foundation
・ Washington Redskins trademark dispute
・ Washington Referendum 67
Washington Referendum 71
・ Washington Referendum 74
・ Washington Renegades RFC
・ Washington Report (DuMont TV series)
・ Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
・ Washington Research Library Consortium
・ Washington Resolution 4223
・ Washington Ridge
・ Washington Road
・ Washington Road Elm Allée
・ Washington Roberto Mariano da Silva
・ Washington Rock State Park
・ Washington Rodriguez (soccer)
・ Washington Rodríguez
・ Washington Roebling


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Washington Referendum 71 : ウィキペディア英語版
Washington Referendum 71

Referendum 71 (R-71) was a vote held in 2009 in which the people of Washington state confirmed Senate Bill 5688, a law extending the rights and obligations of domestic partnership in Washington state. The Bill was approved 53% to 47%; this marked the first time in the United States that voters had approved a statewide ballot measure that extended LGBT relationship rights, although Arizona voters had previously rejected a ban on same-sex marriages and civil unions in 2006 (only to pass civil-unions-neutral Proposition 102 two years later). The law went into effect the day the election was certified, December 3, 2009.
==History==
Senate Bill 5688 was signed by Governor Christine Gregoire on May 18, 2009.〔(The new law equates same sex civil unions with traditional marriage in every way except the title of marriage )〕 On July 25, 2009, the organization Protect Marriage Washington turned in 137,881 signatures to the Washington Secretary of State's office. 120,577 valid signatures were required to qualify the referendum for the November 2009 ballot. After a complete count of all submitted signatures, 122,007 were officially verified 〔()〕 on September 1, 2009.
Under the Constitution of the State of Washington, laws passed by the legislature do not take effect until ninety days after the close of the legislative session, unless the state legislature declares an "emergency" requiring the law to take effect immediately. During this ninety day period citizens can attempt to force a referendum by gathering the required number of signatures. Under the constitution, that number is equal to four percent of the number of voters in the previous gubernatorial election. If enough signatures are gathered and presented to the Secretary of State before the ninety days have elapsed, then the law is placed on hold, and does not take effect unless it is approved by referendum held at the same time as the next election.〔Washington Constitution, Article II, Section 1〕
Enactment of the Olympia-approved law was initially halted pending signature-verification; having received sufficient valid signatures to require voter re-confirmation, the state extended the hold until the results of the 2009 general election were made official.
Washington state law mandates that when a measure already signed into law is put up for a referendum, voters vote either "approved" to confirm the law or "rejected" to oppose it. Thus, although the petition to put this law to a vote was circulated by its opponents, the ballot wording is such that voters vote in the affirmative to approve the law or in the negative to reject it.
Several lawsuits were filed to block R-71 from appearing on the ballot, but none was successful in court.〔On September 2, 2009 King County Superior Court Judge Julie Spector (http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/archives/178051.asp ) a challenge to block a vote on the referendum. Noting that she had concerns about the validity of some of the signatures, the basis of her rejection was that it should have been filed in Thurston County. (Olympia, in Thurston County, is the state capital; the state's largest city, Seattle, is in King County).〕
A second challenge to the Ballot certification brought in Thurston County by Arthur West was dismissed upon the Secretary of State's misrepresentation of the scope of the federal injunction. A third challenge brought by WFST was dismissed by agreement without review of the signature sheets There was an active lawsuit to be heard by the Supreme Court to decide if and when signatories to ballot measures are to be revealed publicly. Following the dissolution of the injunction on 11-17-11 the Secretary of State first released some copies of the R-71 signatures, but then halted such releases pending a motion for a further injunction to be heard on 11-24-11 in the 9th Circuit.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Washington Referendum 71」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.