Missouri

Missouri voters protected abortion rights. Lawmakers put repeal, gerrymandering, tax swaps, initiative limits, and Medicaid cuts on 2026 ballots.

Latest: June 24, 2026 Latest BriefKehoe's Dark Money HypocrisyJune 24, 2026

Missouri is the first state where voters will decide whether to repeal an existing constitutional right to abortion. The legislature passed the repeal 103-51 in the House and 21-11 in the Senate, eighteen months after 1.5 million Missourians voted to protect that right.

That repeal is one of up to nine ballot measures voters face in 2026. The legislature also gerrymandered congressional districts on Trump’s orders and proposed killing the citizen initiative process. Medicaid expansion, which voters approved in 2020, is running out of money.


The legislature is trying to repeal what voters just approved

Missouri voters added a “fundamental right to reproductive freedom” to the state constitution in November 2024. The margin was 52%-48%. Eighteen months later, the legislature voted to put repeal on the November 2026 ballot.

HJR 73 bans abortion and also targets gender-affirming care for minors, including surgeries, hormones, and puberty blockers. Rape and incest exceptions are limited to the first 12 weeks.

”1.5 million Missourians cast their votes in favor of Amendment 3 in November. These voters knew what they were voting for. And Missourians, not the legislators, Missourians brought it to the ballot box.”

Kennedy Moore, Abortion Action Missouri

The ballot language itself became a fight. Courts found the original summary “misleading” because it never told voters that a “yes” vote would repeal the reproductive rights amendment they had just passed. The Missouri Court of Appeals rewrote the summary in December 2025, adding explicit “yes means repeal” and “no means keep” language.

VoteBodyMarginDate
Voters approve Amendment 3Statewide election52%-48%November 5, 2024
House passes repeal (HJR 73)Missouri House103-51April 17, 2025
Senate passes repealMissouri Senate21-11May 14, 2025
Repeal goes to votersNovember ballotTBDNovember 3, 2026

Rep. Ed Lewis, the repeal sponsor, said voters got it wrong. “To say I want to terminate this other person’s life because it’s inconvenient for me, I don’t think most people in the state of Missouri line up in that position.” House Minority Leader Ashley Aune responded directly. “If you think they made a mistake for supporting Amendment 3, how can you think that they didn’t make a mistake when they voted for you?”


Trump ordered a gerrymander and Missouri delivered

President Trump pressured Republican states to redraw congressional maps mid-decade. Governor Kehoe called a special session on September 3, 2025. Three weeks later he signed a map designed to flip the 5th District from safe-blue to GOP-leaning.

The new map splits Jackson County between three congressional districts. The dividing line between the 4th and 5th Districts is Troost Avenue, a street that has served as the line of racial segregation in Kansas City for a century.

300,000+ signatures submitted by “People Not Politicians” to force a referendum on the gerrymandered map

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver has held the 5th District since 2005. His redrawn district now stretches east to Osage County, far from its Kansas City base. Cleaver testified before the Missouri Senate against the map.

”President Trump’s unprecedented directive to redraw our maps in the middle of the decade and without an updated census is not an act of democracy — it is an unconstitutional attack against it. This attempt to gerrymander Missouri will not simply change district lines, it will silence voices.”

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO-5)

The Missouri Supreme Court upheld the map on May 12, 2026, rejecting compactness challenges and ruling that signatures gathered before October 14 were contested. Whether the referendum reaches the ballot depends on final signature verification by the Secretary of State.


The income-to-sales-tax swap that would raise taxes on 80% of Missourians

Amendment 5 appears on the August 4, 2026 ballot. It phases out Missouri’s 4.7% income tax and gives lawmakers five years to replace the revenue with expanded sales taxes. For those five years, the legislature can bypass the Hancock Amendment, which normally requires voter approval for significant tax increases.

$8.5 billion/year Current income tax revenue, funding 64% of general revenue
4 out of 5 Missourians who would see total taxes increase
$535/year Net tax increase on a family earning $65,000
Not locked in Current exemptions on groceries, prescriptions, and utilities could be taxed

The amendment passed the House 95-59. It does not define which services get taxed. Rent, healthcare, and car repairs could all become taxable.

Older adults and active duty military, whose income is largely exempt from state income tax, would face especially steep increases.

A lawsuit filed May 22, 2026 in Cole County argues lawmakers bundled too many subjects into one proposal. The Missouri Budget Project called it “an ill-conceived tax proposal” that would “increase taxes for most Missourians, damage communities and economy.”


They want to kill the citizen initiative process

Amendment 4, also on the August 4 ballot, would require citizen-initiated constitutional amendments to win a majority in each of Missouri’s eight congressional districts. A statewide simple majority would no longer be enough. No state in the country has this requirement.

If Amendment 4 passes

  • Constitutional amendments need majority in all 8 districts
  • Gerrymandered districts give rural areas effective veto over statewide initiatives
  • Every Missouri ballot initiative since 2020 would have failed under this rule

If Amendment 4 fails

  • Statewide simple majority continues to decide citizen initiatives
  • Voters retain the power that approved Medicaid expansion, marijuana, and abortion rights
  • Legislature cannot dilute direct democracy through map manipulation

Ballotpedia analyzed every Missouri ballot initiative since 2020 under the proposed rule. Medicaid expansion, marijuana legalization, and abortion rights all would have failed. Every single one.

The amendment also bans foreign nationals from contributing to ballot measure campaigns and makes petition signature fraud a crime. Those provisions are popular on their own, which is why critics say they were bundled with the supermajority requirement to make the whole package harder to oppose.


Medicaid expansion is hitting a funding cliff

Missouri voters approved Medicaid expansion in 2020. The state received $968 million in temporary federal funding to cover its share. As of September 30, 2025, the reserve balance was $532.2 million. It could be exhausted by late 2026.

For the first time since voters approved expansion, Missouri’s general revenue fund is being tapped to pay for it.

$17 billion projected federal Medicaid funding loss over the next decade

Federal law will require Medicaid enrollees ages 19-64 to verify 80 hours per month of work or school by January 1, 2027. An estimated 90,000 Missourians are projected to lose coverage from this requirement alone. Over the next decade, approximately 130,000 people are projected to lose coverage total.

1.1 million Missourians currently covered by MO HealthNet
$294.6 million Cost to implement new federal Medicaid rules
90,000 Medicaid renewal backlog requiring 60 contractors to clear
Work requirements Legislature advancing plan to enshrine them in the state Constitution

The legislature is letting expansion run out of money while moving to put work requirements in the state Constitution. That would make them harder to roll back through future ballot initiatives.


Up to nine ballot measures in one year

Missouri voters could face nine constitutional amendments across two elections in 2026. The legislature controls what goes on which ballot and when.

BallotAmendmentWhat it does
August 4Amendment 1Renews sales tax for state parks and soil conservation
August 4Amendment 2Requires direct election of county assessors statewide
August 4Amendment 4Requires initiative petitions to win majority in all 8 congressional districts
August 4Amendment 5Phases out income tax, expands sales taxes
November 3Amendment 3Repeals abortion rights amendment, bans gender-affirming care for minors
November 3Amendment 6”Respect MO Voters” citizen initiative (if qualified)
November 3Amendment 8Makes county sheriff a constitutional office
November 3ReferendumChallenges the gerrymandered congressional map (pending signature verification)

The legislature placed the tax swap and initiative petition restrictions on the August primary, when turnout is lowest. The abortion repeal goes on the November general election ballot, when turnout is highest but the legislature believes the issue energizes its base.

Andrew Bailey, Missouri’s former attorney general, resigned in September 2025 to become FBI co-deputy director. As AG, Bailey refused to release prisoners after overturned convictions and fought the original Amendment 3. He now helps run federal law enforcement.


Protect yourself right now

  1. Check your voter registration. Missouri’s primary is August 4, 2026. The registration deadline is July 8. Verify your status at sos.mo.gov/elections. The November general election registration deadline is October 7.

  2. Know what is on your ballot. You face up to nine constitutional amendments across two elections. Read the full text of each measure before you vote. The Secretary of State is required to provide the complete language.

  3. Vote in the August primary. The income tax swap and initiative petition restrictions are on the August ballot specifically because primary turnout is low. Showing up is the countermove.

  4. Track the redistricting referendum. The petition to challenge the gerrymandered map is pending signature verification. Follow the campaign “People Not Politicians” for updates on whether it makes the November ballot.

  5. Call the governor’s office. 573-751-3222. Ask why the legislature is overriding voter-approved Medicaid expansion, voter-approved abortion rights, and the citizen initiative process all in the same year.

Call Your Senators
Josh Hawley Republican
202-224-6154 Senate profile →
Eric Schmitt Republican
202-224-5721 Senate profile →
Governor Mike Kehoe (R) 573-751-3222
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Patriots Against Kings in America (PAKA) Weekly Rally

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Broadway Blvd, Kansas City, MO, 64111

Join us SATURDAYS from 12:00-2:00 pm. Organized by a group of concerned citizens, bring your signs, your friends, your passion and your courage. Stand up and speak out. Missouri needs you. Kansas.

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FOX Takedown- First Tues Each Month

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Fox News spreads propaganda and lies to the American public. Fox is Trump’s mouthpiece. Let’s show our FELLOW AMERICANS THAT FOX NEWS HURTS AMERICANS AND NEEDS TO STOP SPREADING TRUMPS PROPAGANDA!

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FOX Takedown Protest 1ST Tues Every Month

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3030 Summit St, Kansas City, MO, 64108

Fox Takedown is a grassroots non-violent protest movement against Rupert Murdoch's right-wing propaganda machine. It is the nationwide version of Truth Tuesdays! FIRST TUESDAY OF EVERY MONTH!!! Fox.

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7850 Holmes Rd, Kansas City, MO 64131, Kansas City, MO, 64131

Boots on the Ground Midwest is creating Community Hubs throughout the KC area to better address critical needs. These Community Hubs will give you some very specific ways to engage with people and.

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POP UP Protest 2ND Monday Each Month 85th & Ward Parkway

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8500 Ward Pkwy, Kansas City, MO, 64114

POP UP PROTEST MONDAY 4:30 TO 6 PM 85th AND WARD PARKWAY- THIS PROTEST WILL TAKE PLACE THE 2ND MONDAY OF EACH MONTH! WE MUST STOP THE MURDERING OF AMERICAN CITIZENS. ABOLISH ICE, STOP TRUMP AND THE.

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POP UP Protest 2ND Monday Each Month 85th & Ward Parkway 4:30 TO 6PM

Rally · Indivisible Kansas City

8500 Ward Pkwy, Kansas City, MO, 64114

POP UP PROTEST MONDAY 4:30 TO 6 PM 85th AND WARD PARKWAY--2ND MONDAY OF EACH MONTH...BE THERE!!! WE MUST STOP THE MURDERING OF AMERICAN CITIZENS. ABOLISH ICE, STOP TRUMP AND THE BILLIONAIRES NOW.

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Pop Up ICE OUT Rally-Every 3RD Friday

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8350 NW Roanridge Rd., Kansas City, MO, 64151

POP UP ICE OUT RALLY-Friday April 17th and every 3rd Friday of the Month! 4:30 to 6:00 PM I-29 and Barry Road, (next to Chili's) 8350 N W Roanridge Road, KCMO 64151 Bring your ICE OUT Signs and ICE.

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Briefs

What Changed Recently

Ethics June 24, 2026

Missouri's Gov. Kehoe Used Dark Money for His Own Ballot Measure

Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe publicly campaigned against out-of-state dark money in ballot initiatives, then accepted undisclosed donor funding from a Delaware

Voting June 16, 2026

Missouri's Gerrymandered Map Reached 28 Counties. A Referendum Could Still Block It.

Missouri election officials began mailing primary ballots on June 17, 2026, using a Republican-drawn congressional map that reassigned voters in 28 counties,

Education June 16, 2026

Missouri Lost 2 Top Education Officials in May. A Nationwide Search Begins.

Missouri's education commissioner and deputy both resigned in May 2026 with little notice. The State Board named an interim and is starting a nationwide

Healthcare June 15, 2026

Missouri Medicaid Ends Chiropractic Coverage July 1. 2,000 Patients Lose Care.

Missouri's MO HealthNet will stop covering chiropractic care on July 1, 2026, cutting off roughly 2,000 low-income patients after lawmakers removed $658,660

Voting Updated June 12, 2026

Every Missouri Ballot Initiative Since 2020 Would Have Failed Under the Legislature's New Rules

Missouri lawmakers repealed voter-approved laws and now want to make citizen initiatives nearly impossible. Here's what's at stake in 2026.

Red States June 1, 2026

Missouri Voters Legalized Abortion and Sick Leave. The Legislature Is Reversing Both.

Missouri lawmakers are overturning two ballot measures voters approved in 2024. Florida made petition collecting a felony. 60+ preemption bills filed nationally.

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