Oregon Ballot Measure 56 (2008)

Measure 56
Amends Constitution: Provides That May And November Property Tax Elections Are Decided By Majority Of Voters Voting.
Results
Votes %
Yes 959,118 56.60%
No 735,500 43.40%
Total votes 1,694,618 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 85.7%
Results by county
  Yes —   No
Source: Oregon Secretary of State [1]

Oregon Ballot Measure 56 or House Joint Resolution 15 (HJR 15) is a legislatively referred constitutional amendment that enacted law which provides that property tax elections decided at May and November elections will be decided by a majority of voters who are voting in the relevant election.[2] It repealed the double majority requirement passed by the voters in the 1990s via Measures 47 and 50, which requires that, for non-general elections, all bond measures can pass only when a majority of registered voters turn out.

The measure appeared on the November 4, 2008 general election ballot in Oregon and was passed with 56.6% of the vote.

Supporters

Measure 56 was supported by the Voting Matters Coalition, which included the League of Women Voters of Oregon, Human Services Coalition of Oregon, Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon, Basic Rights Oregon, Coalition for a Livable Future, Elders in Action, and Oregon PTA.

Official Voters' Pamphlet arguments in favor can be found at the Oregon Secretary of State's Online Voter Guide page.

Newspaper endorsements

Here is how Oregon's major newspapers have endorsed on the measure:

Newspapers Yes No
The Oregonian Yes
Medford Mail-Tribune Yes
Statesman Journal Yes
Bend Bulletin Yes
Portland Tribune Yes
Eugene Register-Guard Yes
Daily Astorian Yes
East Oregonian Yes
Corvallis Gazette Times Yes
Coos Bay The World Yes
Willamette Week Yes
Yamhill Valley News Register Yes
Gresham Outlook Yes

Arguments in favor

Notable arguments made in support of the measure included:

Opponents

Steve Buckstein of the non-partisan, non-profit Cascade Policy Institute wrote a commentary that says, "Critics of Oregon’s so-called 'double majority' rule say it isn’t democratic because a simple majority of those voting may not be able to pass a tax measure. But in reality, just 25% of registered voters can raise taxes under 'double-majority.' 'Double majority' is a sensible taxpayer safeguard that should be kept, and even strengthened."

Opposing arguments

Notable arguments made in opposition to the measure included:

Notes

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