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This means Amendment D is still void. It will appear on Utah voters’ ballots, but the votes will not be counted. The decision from the court is not the full opinion.
Panelists discussed Utah's Amendment D \u2014 a proposed constitutional amendment that has caused a stir for the last few weeks.
Judge Dianna Gibson on Thursday declared constitutional Amendment D invalid, citing its deceptive and misleading presentation on the ballot and the Legislature’s failure to publish the text of ...
Now Republican legislative leaders are asking the Utah Supreme Court to overturn Gibson’s ruling, put Amendment D back before the public, and ultimately, they say, give voters the option ...
There’s a chance the controversial constitutional Amendment D on Utah’s Nov. 5 ballot — voided last week by a district court judge — may come back from the dead. Over the weekend, the Utah ...
Amendment D was run in response to a Utah Supreme Court ruling on citizen ballot initiatives that found the legislature overstepped its power when it overruled a citizen initiative on independent ...
The Utah Legislature voted late last month to put a ballot question to voters, Amendment D, asking them to affirm the right of lawmakers to tweak, change and even repeal citizen-led ballot ...
Amendment D — which would have cemented the Utah Legislature’s power over ballot initiatives — has been voided by the courts and any votes cast for it won’t count. And now, Amendment A ...
The same day the Utah Supreme Court voided Amendment D on the November ballot, opponents of Amendment A went to court and asked a judge to kick that proposed constitutional amendment off the ballot.
On Aug. 19, Adams and Schultz sent a release, invoking a special session for Aug. 21 to draft Amendment D to address the Utah Supreme Court’s new interpretation.
Amendment D would change the Utah Constitution to explicitly say the Legislature has the power to amend laws that started as citizen initiatives. It would also prohibit foreign influence (out-of ...