Voters Keep Winning. Legislatures Keep Fighting Back.
Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, abortion-rights ballot measures have gone 7 for 7. Kansas, Michigan, California, Vermont, Kentucky, Montana, and Ohio all voted to protect reproductive rights.
In each state, the pro-abortion-rights side outperformed the Democratic candidate on the same ballot. These measures win even when Democrats lose because the issue crosses party lines.
Florida proved the threat that record poses. In November 2024, 57% of Florida voters supported an abortion rights amendment. It failed because Florida requires 60% to pass constitutional amendments.
A clear majority of voters wanted it. The rules said that was not enough.
7 for 7. Abortion-rights measures have won every time voters decided them since Dobbs. The one loss, in Florida, got 57% support but failed a 60% supermajority threshold.
The Campaign to Kill Direct Democracy
State legislatures passed 45 bills restricting ballot initiatives in 2023 alone, more than the previous five years combined. In 2024, 14 more bills made the initiative process harder. By mid-2025, 51 bills had already passed state houses, exceeding the annual average of 34.
South Dakota has passed 11 laws restricting ballot access since 2018. The state now has a 2026 ballot measure proposing a 60% supermajority requirement for all citizen-initiated constitutional amendments. North Dakota has a similar measure.
Missouri’s Amendment 4 goes further, requiring majority approval in all eight congressional districts separately. Every citizen-initiated amendment since 2020 would have failed under that rule.
The pattern is clear. When voters use ballot measures to override the legislature, the legislature rewrites the rules for ballot measures.
What Is on the Ballot in 2026
The Ballot Initiative Strategy Center tracks 452 measures nationwide, with 97 certified for the 2026 ballot as of April.
Abortion. Nevada’s Question 6 needs a second vote to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution. Virginia has a constitutional amendment guaranteeing abortion access through the second trimester. Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, and Oregon have proposed measures at various stages of qualification. Missouri’s legislature placed a repeal of the 2024 abortion amendment on the ballot.
Direct democracy itself. Missouri (district-by-district approval), South Dakota (60% threshold), and North Dakota (60% threshold) all have measures that would make future citizen initiatives functionally impossible to pass.
Voting and elections. Multiple states have measures on redistricting rules and voter ID. Stateline reports that ballots are becoming battlegrounds for the machinery of elections themselves.
Why Ballot Measures Outperform Candidates
Ballot measures strip away partisanship. A voter who always votes Republican can still vote yes on abortion rights or Medicaid expansion without abandoning their party. That is exactly what happened in Kansas in 2022, where the abortion measure outperformed the Democratic governor candidate in deep-red counties. Ohio followed the same pattern in 2023.
This is why legislatures target the process. They cannot win the argument on the merits, so they raise the threshold and shorten signature windows. They impose geographic distribution requirements that give rural districts veto power over statewide majorities.
What you can do now
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Check what is on your ballot. Go to Ballotpedia’s 2026 ballot measures page and search your state. Know every measure you will vote on before you get to the polling place.
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Watch for threshold measures disguised as reform. Supermajority requirements are often marketed as protecting the constitution from “special interests.” Read the actual text. If a measure raises the threshold above 50%, it means a minority of voters can override the majority.
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Support signature collection for measures you believe in. Ballot measures live or die during the qualification phase, months before the election. The Ballot Initiative Strategy Center tracks which measures need signatures and where.
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Vote on every measure, not just the top of the ticket. Ballot measures appear at the bottom. Undervoting is highest on these questions. In low-turnout midterms, the voters who show up for every line on the ballot are the ones who decide policy.
Primary Sources
- KFF: Status of Abortion Ballot Initiatives Since Dobbs
- Ballot Initiative Strategy Center: 2026 Hot Sheet
- Ballotpedia: 2026 Ballot Measures
- NPR: GOP-Led States Passing New Restrictions on Ballot Measures
- Brennan Center: Politicians Take Aim at Ballot Initiatives
- ProPublica: Red State Voters Approved Progressive Measures, GOP Lawmakers Undermine Them