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2020 Florida Amendment 2 was an amendment to the Constitution of Florida that passed on November 3, 2020, via a statewide referendum concurrent with other elections. The amendment sets to increase the state's hourly minimum wage to $15 by 2026. According to Florida law, amendments to the state constitution requires 60% of the popular vote to ...
A poll conducted by the University of North Florida prior to election accurately predicted 89% support for the amendment, with 8% of voters opposed and 4% of voters undecided. It found highest support for the amendment among Black voters at 96%, and above 80% support for all age groups and partisan affiliations.
Amendment 2 A constitutional amendment to make the Chief Justice position on the Florida Supreme Court an elected position by other members of the Court [62] Passed [63] 20,068 (63.33%) 11,621 (36.67%) Amendment 3 A constitutional amendment to grant some non-citizens the right to own property in Florida [62] Passed [63] 18,574 (57.61%) 13,668 ...
Florida Amendment 4: abortion rights Amendment 4 failed, with only 57.1% of the votes in favor. It would have restored allowing abortion in Florida up to "fetal viability," usually around 24 weeks.
Florida’s minimum wage rose by one dollar Saturday to $12/hour. The increase is the result of a constitutional amendment approved by voters in 2020 to gradually raise the Sunshine state’s ...
The two amendments that passed, Amendments 2 and 5, enshrine in the state's constitution the right to hunt and fish and prevent homeowner taxes from rising with inflation and property values.
The results were unprecedented: 25,000 additional anglers and hunters were registered to vote for the first time. 150,000 anglers and hunters signed the pledge to vote — setting the stage to ...
2020 Florida Amendment 4, commonly known as the Think Twice Initiative [2] was a proposed amendment to the Constitution of Florida that failed by 52.47% to 47.53% in the 2020 election on November 3, 2020. The amendment would have required new constitutional amendments to be approved by voters twice in order to go into effect.