How to stop Missouri legislators from overturning the public’s will

Missouri voters have used our power, but all too often have watched in dismay as politicians claimed, “The voters just don’t understand,” and overturned measures that we approved.

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Columnists

October 27, 2025 - 3:32 PM

People gather at the Missouri statehouse in Jefferson City on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025, to protest the legislature's efforts to change the state's congressional district maps. The proposed change would divide Kansas City into districts that would include vast rural areas of the state. On the Nov. 4 ballot is the Respect Missouri Voters Amendment, which would ban legislators from overturning measures that voters have approved. (Tammy Ljungblad/The Kansas City Star/TNS)

Missouri politicians are attacking our freedom. They keep overturning measures that voters have passed, and attacking our power to use citizen-led initiative petitions. As Kansas City residents who have voted Republican most of our lives, my husband and I are disgusted by the General Assembly’s power grabs.

But you can do something to stop this once and for all.

More than 1,000 volunteers across the state are collecting signatures to place a measure on the ballot called the Respect Missouri Voters Amendment. 

It would ban the legislature from overturning measures that voters have approved, requiring an 80% supermajority to send any changes to a vote of the people. 

It would also prevent politicians from weakening the initiative petition process and require ballot language be clear, easy to understand and not misleading. It’s a citizen initiative to save citizen initiatives.

The Respect Missouri Voters Amendment is endorsed by groups and leaders across the political spectrum, such as: Republican former U.S. Sen. John Danforth, Democratic former Missouri House leader Crystal Quade, the Missouri National Organization for Women, the Missouri NAACP, Show Me Integrity and Veterans for All Voters.

This is not a Republican or Democratic issue — it’s a people of Missouri issue. 

For decades, politicians have been trying to take away our freedom of the initiative petition and put all the power in their hands. It usually happens after voters pass initiatives opposed by the ruling party. 

This happened under Democratic majorities in the 1980s and 1990s, and now it’s happening under Republican control. 

After the Hancock Amendment passed in 1980 to limit taxes, the Democratic-led General Assembly tried to restrict initiative petitions.

We agreed with GOP former Gov. John Ashcroft’s statement when he vetoed Democrats’ attack on initiative petitions: “It is through the initiative process that those who have no influence with elective representatives may take their cause directly to the people.” 

As Republican former House Speaker Carl Bearden said just a few years ago, neither party is right to attack the people’s power to have a check on government.

Missouri voters have used our power, but all too often have watched in dismay as politicians claimed, “The voters just don’t understand,” and overturned measures that we approved:

• In 2018, voters approved the Clean Missouri ethics reforms to ban partisan gerrymandering. The General Assembly responded with deceptive ballot language to overturn it.

• Legislators wouldn’t expand Medicaid, so voters passed an initiative petition for affordable health care. The Missouri General Assembly refused to fund it until ordered to do so by the courts.

• Last November, Missouri voters passed sick leave for workers with a strong majority of 58%. The legislature simply repealed it.

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