2020 Oregon Ballot Measure 107

In 2020, voters in the U.S. state of Oregon passed Ballot Measure 107,[2] allowing limits on political campaign contributions.[3] This ballot measure overturned the 1997 Oregon Supreme Court ruling in Vannatta v. Kiesling that the Oregon Constitution’s freedom of speech protections bar the legislature from limiting campaign finance activity. [4] However, the text of the amendment states that only campaign contribution limit laws and ordinances adopted on or after January 1, 2016 will be considered constitutional, so limits enacted prior to that date (Measure 47 for instance, which was enacted in 2012), remain unenforceable unless re-enacted. [5]

Ballot Measure 107
Amend Campaign Finance: Allows laws limiting political campaign contributions and expenditures, requiring disclosure of political campaign contributions and expenditures, and requiring political campaign advertisements to identify who paid for them
Results
Response Votes  %
Yes 1,763,276 78.31%
No 488,413 21.69%
Total votes 2,251,689 100.00%
Source: Associated Press[1]

See also

References


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