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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.
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 ...
On Thursday, the Utah Supreme Court issued its full opinion explaining why it struck Amendment D — which would have made clear that the Legislature can repeal or amend any citizen ballot ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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.
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 ...
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 ...
Panelists discussed Utah's Amendment D \u2014 a proposed constitutional amendment that has caused a stir for the last few weeks.