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Proposition 100 was a ballot measure to temporarily raise the Arizona state sales tax by 1 cent per dollar, with the proceeds going to education, public safety, and health and human services. The referendum was passed by voters in a special election on May 18, 2010.
Arizona Proposition 100 (2010), a 2010 ballot measure to temporarily raise the Arizona state sales tax by 1 cent per dollar. Arizona Proposition 100, any of several Arizona ballot propositions Topics referred to by the same term
On May 18, 2010, a special election was held for Proposition 100. It was passed by an almost two-thirds margin. [ 21 ] It will temporarily raise the Arizona state sales tax from 5.6% to 6.6%, with two-thirds of the revenue generated going to support education.
The following is a partial list of Arizona ballot propositions.. The initiative and referendum process in Arizona has been in use since Arizona attained statehood in 1912. The first initiative was passed the same year Arizona was granted statehood when on November 5, 1912, an initiative relating to women's suffrage was passed by a greater than two to one margin. [1]
This isn't a policy that corrects for injustice but one that increases it.
In 1994, Arizona voters rejected proposition 100, which would have created the office of lieutenant governor to be elected on a joint ticket with the governor, with 65.3% of voters being against the measure. In 2010, proposition 111, a similar measure, failed with 59.2% of voters being against the measure.
Proposition 130 would restore property tax exemptions for veterans with disabilities and protect existing exemptions for other groups.
(The Center Square) – With 73% of Arizona precincts reporting, Prop. 137 will not be voted into law with only 21.61% of voters having voted in favor of it Tuesday. Prop. 137 would have ended the ...