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In South Dakota, voters rejected a measure to legalize medical marijuana
-- a step already taken by California and 13 other states. A medical marijuana measure also was on Arizona's ballot, and Oregon voters were deciding whether to expand the state's current medical marijuana law by authorizing state-licensed dispensaries. Among other notable ballot issues on Tuesday: Arizona voters approved a measure banning affirmative action programs by state and local governments based on race, ethnicity or sex. Washington state's voters repealed taxes on candy, soda and bottled water adopted by lawmakers last year
-- a move that could eliminate a projected $352 million in revenue over five years. Voters rejected a proposal to impose a state income tax on any income above $200,000, or $400,000 for couples. In the littlest state, voters chose to keep the longest formal name
-- opting to stay as Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, instead of just Rhode Island. In Illinois, where the two most recent former governors have been convicted on federal charges, voters approved an amendment that enables
citizens to recall future governors by popular vote. Oklahoma voters approved a proposed amendment aimed at nullifying the segment of the new federal health care law requiring people to have health insurance. Similar measures were on the ballots in Arizona and Colorado. In Oklahoma, voters overwhelmingly passed three measures that had dismayed some progressive and immigrants-rights groups. One makes English the state's "common and unifying language," another requires a government-issued photo ID in order to vote, and the third prohibits state courts from considering international law or Islamic law when deciding cases. In Colorado, voters rejected three measures that would have banned borrowing for public works, cut the income tax and slashed school district property taxes. Opponents said the proposals would have cost the state $2.1 billion in revenue and eliminated tens of thousands of jobs. For the first time since the 1990s, there were no measures to ban same-sex marriage. But in Iowa, voters ousted three state Supreme Court justices who joined a unanimous 2009 ruling that legalized gay marriage there.
[Associated
Press;
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