Constitutional amendment would protect ballot initiatives
A group aiming to protect ballot initiatives in Montana has filed a Constitutional amendment to ensure Montanans can petition to enact laws in the state without interference.
“This initiative protects the right of Montana voters to propose and vote on laws that matter to them,” said SK Rossi, spokesperson for Montanans Decide, in a statement. “Too often, politicians forget who they work for and they push agendas that serve their own interests rather than listening to what voters want.
“Montanans know what is best for Montana, and this measure protects our right to propose and vote on laws that put our interests first.”
The Montana Constitution protects the right of the people to enact laws by ballot initiative.
However, Montanans Decide said the process to place measures on the ballot is under fire, and it must be protected in the state Constitution.
The proposed language states the process to submit ballot initiatives must be impartial, predictable, transparent and expeditious, and the government should not support or oppose a ballot measure.
The proposed ballot language is this:
In an email Monday, Rossi said the citizen initiative process in Montana used to be “much more straightforward.”
“Over the years, the legislature has made it much more difficult and complicated for Montana voters to exercise our right to propose and vote on laws that affect our lives,” Rossi said.
In the last couple of sessions, for example, Rossi said the legislature added “exorbitant fees” and administrative hurdles for signature gatherers.
“Montanans have a right to propose and vote on laws that affect our lives, but the process is under attack,” Rossi said in the news release. “This measure protects that right and keeps government accountable to us.”
In 2024, a district court judge found a $3,700 filing fee to propose an initiative to be unconstitutional in a lawsuit over ballot measure restrictions including ones in Senate Bill 93 from 2023.
Lewis and Clark District Court Judge Mike Menahan also struck down a requirement for review by a legislative committee as unconstitutional, although he upheld some other changes the plaintiffs had challenged from the 2021 and 2023 sessions.
For example, Menahan said the agency reviews the plaintiffs challenged might not be necessary to the process, but that didn’t make them automatically unconstitutional.
The judge said he was sympathetic to the short timelines the plaintiffs faced, but the legislature is allowed to set terms for how the power of initiative is exercised, and agency reviews should be considered individually.
In a news release, Montanans Decide said attempts to infringe on the citizens’ initiative process continued in the 2025 Legislature, “making this constitutional initiative critical to protect the voice of Montana voters.”
If approved for the ballot, the proposed Constitutional amendment will come before voters in November 2026.
To appear on the ballot, the measure requires the Montana Attorney General to approve its language as legal, as outlined by the Montana Secretary of State’s Office.
It then requires signatures from at least 10% of electors in Montana, including at least 10% in each of 40 legislative House districts.
The Secretary of State’s Office lists seven other measures that could appear on the November 2026 ballot, including Constitutional initiatives to require nonpartisan judicial elections and ones to limit property taxes.
Montanans Decide’s committee registration to the Commissioner of Political Practices is dated Friday. Its first campaign finance report is due on Jan. 5, 2026.
In the meantime, Rossi said the effort is supported by “passionate people here in Montana.”
“This is a home-grown effort, and our coalition is made up of groups, volunteers, and grassroots donors across Montana who are working to get this amendment onto the ballot and passed next November,” Rossi said in an email. “ … And only Montana voters will have the power to pass this ballot measure.”
Complete text of proposed Constitutional Initiative
BE IT ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MONTANA:
NEW SECTION. Section 1. Article II of The Constitution of the State of Montana is amended by adding a new section 37 that reads:
Section 37. Right to Initiative and Referendum. (1) The people have a fundamental right to exercise their powers of initiative and referendum under Article III and Article XIV. The government may not deny or burden this right unless justified by a compelling government interest achieved by the least restrictive means.
(2) This right guarantees impartial, predictable, transparent, and expeditious processes for proposing, qualifying for the ballot, and submitting ballot issues to the qualified electors without interference from the government or the use of government resources to support or oppose the ballot issue. This right includes, but is not limited to:
(a) Proposing a ballot issue by submitting the full text of the ballot issue and proposed ballot statements, with the government modifying the proposed ballot statements only if they are not a true and impartial explanation expressed in plain, easily understood language;
(b) Obtaining a determination regarding whether the ballot issue and ballot statements are legally sufficient for submission to the qualified electors prior to the petition being approved for circulation;
(c) The resolution of legal challenges to the determination made in subsection (2)(b) and the issuance of an approved petition for circulation within 90 days of the initial submission of the ballot issue to the government;
(d) Reasonably ample time to gather signatures without unjustified burdens on signature gathering, signature gatherers, or the preparation or submission of signed petitions;
(e) Verification of signatures and petitions without the invalidation of any signature or petition due to a technical or minor deficiency;
(f) The ability to withdraw one’s signature from a petition, with the deadline for such withdrawal being the same as the deadline for submitting signed petitions to the government;
(g) The resolution of legal challenges to the qualification of a ballot issue for the ballot prior to the deadline for finalizing ballots for the election; and
(h) Submission of a ballot issue to the qualified electors in an impartial manner for their approval or rejection by a majority of those voting thereon at a single election.
NEW SECTION. Section 2. Self-Executing. [This act] is self-executing.
NEW SECTION. Section 3. Effective date. [This act] is effective on approval by the electorate.
Provided by Montanans Decide