Skip to content

An excerpt from “Justice Denied”

The complete report is available here.

Part 19: The Adoption of State Constitutional Amendments Protecting Marriage

Alaska              November 3, 1998
yes: 152,965 (68%)
no: 71,631 (32%)

Hawaii             November 3, 1998
yes: 285,384 (71%)
no: 117,827 (29%)

Nebraska           November 7, 2000
yes: 477,571 (70%)
no: 203,667 (30%)

Nevada             November 7, 2000
yes: 412,688 (70%)
no: 180,077 (30%)

Nevada             November 5, 2002
yes: 337,197 (67%)
no: 164,573 (33%)

To become a part of Nevada’s constitution, citizen initiated ballot initiatives must pass in two separate ballot votes.

Missouri           August 3, 2004
yes: 1,055,771 (71%)
no: 439,529 (29%)

Louisiana          September 18, 2004
yes: 618,928 (78%)
no: 177,103 (22%)

Arkansas           November 2, 2004
yes: 753,770 (75%)
no: 251,914 (25%)

Georgia            November 2, 2004
yes: 2,454,930 (76%)
no: 768,716 (24%)

Kentucky          November 2, 2004
yes: 1,222,125 (75%)
no: 417,097 (25%)

Michigan          November 2, 2004
yes: 2,698,077 (59%)
no: 1,904,319 (41%)

Mississippi       November 2, 2004
yes: 957,104 (86%)
no: 155,648 (14%)

Montana           November 2, 2004
yes: 295,070 (67%)
no: 148,263 (33%)

North Dakota     November 2, 2004
yes: 223,572 (73%)
no: 81,716 (27%)

Oregon             November 2, 2004
yes: 1,028,546 (57%)
no: 787,556 (43%)

Oklahoma         November 2, 2004
yes: 1,075,216 (76%)
no: 347,303 (24%)

Ohio                November 2, 2004
yes: 3,329,335 (62%)
no: 2,065,462 (38%)

Utah                November 2, 2004
yes: 593,297 (66%)
no: 307,488 (34%)

Kansas             April 5, 2005
yes: 417,675 (70%)
no: 179,432 (30%)

Texas               November 8, 2005
yes: 1,723,782 (76%)
no: 536,913 (24%)

Alabama           June 6, 2006
yes: 697,591 (81%)
no: 161,694 (19%)

Arizona            November 7, 2006
yes: 721,489 (48%)
no: 775,498 (52%)

While this proposed constitutional amendment was defeated, another, less restrictive amendment was subsequently proposed in Arizona and put before the voters. The latter proposal did not explicitly prohibit recognition of civil unions. Voters approved it on November 4, 2008 (see below).

Colorado           November 7, 2006
yes: 855,126 (55%)
no: 699,030 (45%)

Idaho                November 7, 2006
yes: 282,386 (63%)
no: 163,384 (37%)

South Carolina  November 7, 2006
yes: 829,360 (78%)
no: 234,316 (22%)

South Dakota    November 7, 2006
yes: 172,305 (52%)
no: 160,152 (48%)

Tennessee         November 7, 2006
yes: 1,419,434 (81%)
no: 327,536 (19%)

Virginia            November 7, 2006
yes: 1,328,537 (57%)
no: 999,687 (43%)

Wisconsin         November 7, 2006
yes: 1,264,310 (59%)
no: 862,924 (41%)

Arizona            November 4, 2008
yes: 1,258,355 (56%)
no: 980,753 (44%)

California         November 4, 2008
yes: 7,001,084 (52%)
no: 6,401,482 (48%)

Florida             November 4, 2008
yes: 4,890,883 (62%)
no: 3,008,026 (38%)

North Carolina   May 8, 2012
yes: 1,317,178 (61%)
no: 840,802 (39%)

Minnesota         November 6, 2012
yes: 1,399,916 (47%)
no: 1,550,434 (53%)

This list represents the 32 states where state constitutional amendments have been voted on by the people. With Arizona in 2006 and Minnesota the only states where voters rejected amendments, this table underscores overwhelming support for natural marriage nationwide. Moreover, we should keep in mind that when same-sex marriage has been deemed unconstitutional by the courts in any of these states (except Minnesota, where the voters failed to adopt an amendment), voters’ successful efforts to amend their state constitutions have been overruled by judges.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._state_constitutional_amendments_banning_same-sex_unions

http://ballotpedia.org/Marriage_and_family_on_the_ballot

http://dailysignal.com/2015/05/08/26-states-have-been-forced-by-courts-to-allow-gay-marriages/

Don’t Silence the 50 Million Who Voted for One Man-One Woman Marriage
http://goo.gl/JJN1vy

 

This page is part of a larger article.

Copyright 2015 by B. Nathaniel Sullivan. All rights reserved.