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Constitutional Amendment 2 August 4, 2020 Medicaid Expansion Initiative Results Choice Votes % Yes 676,687 53.27% No 593,491 46.73% Total votes 1,270,178 100.00% Yes 80–90% 70–80% 60–70% 50–60% No 80–90% 70–80% 60–70% 50–60% Source: Missouri Secretary of State, The New York Times Elections in Missouri Federal government Presidential elections 1820 1824 1828 1832 1836 1840 1844 ...
Amendment 2 would legalize sports betting in Missouri for people 21 or older and impose a 10% tax on wagers that would fund regulation of sports wagering, resources for gambling addiction and ...
Yes votes No votes Amendment 1 Sales Tax for Parks and Conservation Measure. Would renew for 10 years a 1984 state amendment which prescribes a 0.1% sales and use tax in order to fund state parks and conservation projects. Passed [10] 2,187,773 (79.88%) 551,117 (20.12%) Amendment 2 State and Judicial Campaign Contribution Limits Initiative.
A yes vote on Amendment 2 would change the state constitution to legalize sports betting in Missouri. Heavily supported by coalition of Missouri sports teams and online gambling operators, it has ...
The first to go on the air last week was Winning for Missouri Education, the committee funded by online sports gambling companies for Amendment 2, which would legalize betting on college and ...
Missouri Amendment 2 or Missouri Constitutional Amendment 2 can refer to multiple amendments to the state constitution in Missouri: 2004 Missouri Amendment 2, a successful amendment to prevent same-sex marriage; 2006 Missouri Amendment 2, a successful amendment to allow stem-cell research; 2020 Missouri Amendment 2, a successful amendment to ...
Missouri voters will decide on Proposition A in 2024, which would raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour, require many employers to provide paid sick leave, and exempt government entities from the ...
On November 7, 2006, Amendment 2 passed by a margin of 2.4% (or 50,800 votes). The final tally of votes ended in 51.2% for yes and 48.8% for no. [10] The measure failed in 97 of the 114 counties in the state, but picked up enough votes in St. Louis, Kansas City, and Columbia (and their surrounding counties) to pass statewide.