Politics

Supermajority voting is a basic part of Washington state's democracy

Lawmakers have only to look at the constitution to see that the idea of requiring larger majorities is fundamental to state government. Maybe a vote by the people on applying a supermajority requirement to tax hikes is in order.

Supermajority voting is a basic part of Washington state's democracy
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Ashli Blow

Lawmakers have only to look at the constitution to see that the idea of requiring larger majorities is fundamental to state government. Maybe a vote by the people on applying a supermajority requirement to tax hikes is in order.

Is  Washington’s state constitution undemocratic? Some opponents of  supermajority vote requirements seem to think so.

The 2011 budget debate  has been framed by voters’ approval of the two-thirds vote requirement  for the legislature to raise taxes. The voters approved that taxpayer  safeguard in November when they passed Initiative 1053 by a 64 percent  margin.

Voters  have enacted or reaffirmed the two-thirds vote requirement for tax  increases four times: 1993, 1998, 2007, and again in 2010. Opponents,  however, argue supermajority requirements are undemocratic and that  lawmakers should be able to make tax decisions based on a simple  majority vote.

The  Initiative 1053 law is a statute, but if supermajority restrictions are  undemocratic in principle wouldn’t the same criticism apply to the  state constitution?

Although  the opponents may still make that claim, based on the number of  supermajority requirements present in Washington’s constitution, it is  clear they have been placed there to require a high vote threshold for  certain government actions. These restrictions are policy choices. One  could argue that requiring a supermajority vote to increase the  financial burden the state places on its citizens is no more  undemocratic than the many similar restrictions that are already part of  the state constitution.

Here  is a list of the supermajority vote requirements in the Washington  constitution. This accounting shows 21 supermajority vote provisions.  Some provisions appear twice in the same section, so the number may vary  depending on how they are counted.

Several  of these provisions have been part of Washington’s constitution since  its ratification in 1889. It is clear supermajority vote requirements  are not undemocratic or even controversial in most cases.

One  way to resolve the ongoing debate over whether voters truly want  lawmakers to be restricted by the two-thirds vote requirement for tax  increases is for the legislature to refer the question to voters in the  form of a constitutional amendment. Several constitutional amendments to  do this were introduced this year, but they did not receive a public  hearing or legislative consideration.

If  such an amendment were ratified by voters, we would know their four-time  approval of the two-thirds requirement was not a fluke and that the  people really want a broad legislative consensus before lawmakers raise  their taxes. If the amendment were rejected, lawmakers could feel free  to disregard the restriction, as they have repeatedly done in the past,  without concern about overriding the will of the people.

Based  on the numerous supermajority vote requirements currently in  Washington’s constitution, providing the voters the opportunity to  consider a constitutional supermajority requirement to raise taxes would  not be embracing undemocratic principles. It would simply be following  the existing constitutional precedents for requiring higher vote  thresholds before the government takes certain actions

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal