Table 1.1

State Constitutional Changes: 2022


  Legislative Proposal Initiative Proposal
FIPS State Number
proposed
Number
adopted
Percentage
adopted
Number
proposed
Number
adopted
Percentage
adopted
01Alabama302893.3 (a)
04Arizona5480.0
05Arkansas300.010
06California11100.020
08Colorado3266.7
09Connecticut11100.0
12Florida300.0
13Georgia22100.0
16Idaho11100.0
17Illinois11100.0
19Iowa11100.0
20Kansas3133.3
21Kentucky200.0
22Louisiana11654.5
24Maryland55100.0
25Massachusetts11100.0
26Michigan11100.02

2

29Missouri3266.71

1

30Montana11100.0
31Nebraska11100.01

1

32Nevada22100.0(b)

(b)

33New Hampshire100.0
35New Mexico33100.0
38North Dakota1

1

39Ohio22100.0
41Oregon22100.01

1

45South Carolina22100.0
46South Dakota100.01

1

47Tennessee44100.0
48Texas22100.0
49Utah100.0
50Vermont22100.0
54West Virginia400.0
56Wyoming2150.0
__Totals1077973.810

7


Source:

John Dinan and The Council of State Governments.

Footnotes:

(a)

Of the 30 amendments considered in Alabama in 2022, 11 were amendments of statewide applicability, including one amendment on the May 2022 ballot and 10 amendments on the November 2022 ballot. All eleven statewide amendments in 2022 were approved. Nineteen of the 30 amendments that were considered in 2022 were local amendments that apply to a single county and were voted on by residents of the county. Seventeen of these 19 local amendments were approved. In addition to these amendments on the ballot in 2022, Alabama voters also approved a new constitution. The approval of the new constitution is not included in these totals.

(b)

Nevada voters appproved a citizen-initiated amendment instituting a top-five, ranked-choice voting system for elections, but Nevada requires citizen-initiated amendments to be ratified in two consecutive general elections, and so the amendment will only be considered approved and take effect if it is approved by voters a second time, in the 2024 election. This Nevada amendment is not included in these totals.