State senators wear masks and social distance during floor session on the last day of the legislative session on Aug. 31, 2020. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters

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A reader has asked us a question about a lesser-known provision buried in one of the year’s most controversial ballot measures:

If you haven’t already been blitzed with a dozen ads about it since you woke up today, Prop. 22 is the massively funded measure pushed by the likes of Uber and Lyft. It would exempt them from a state labor law requiring them to treat their drivers as employees rather than independent contractors.

At the bottom of the initiative’s text, there’s a proviso wrapped in a lot of legalese:

After the effective date of this chapter, the Legislature may amend this chapter by a statute passed in each house of the Legislature by rollcall vote entered into the journal, seven-eighths of the membership concurring, provided that the statute is consistent with, and furthers the purpose of, this chapter.

Translated: If Prop. 22 passes, state lawmakers can only come back and change it if…

  • the change is “consistent” with what Prop. 22’s backers would want
  • seven-eighths of lawmakers agree

Geoff Vetter, a spokesperson for the Yes on 22 campaign, emailed that the high threshold ensures that “the legislature couldn’t completely undo the new law, but that there’s also flexibility in place to make tweaks in the future if that becomes necessary.”

It’s not at all unusual for ballot-measure writers to force state legislators to jump through hoops before they can monkey with the text of a voter-approved law. Many measures don’t allow legislative input at all.

Of the 24 states that put measures on the ballot, California is unique: By default, a law enacted by ballot measure can only be changed by another law enacted by ballot measure.

The exception to that rule: If crafters of the initiative explicitly say otherwise.

No surprise, many ballot measures do not say otherwise. Compared to that default, Prop. 22’s high bar for amendments actually gives the Legislature more influence than the norm.

Why allow legislative editing at all?

Mary-Beth Moylan, a professor at McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento: “Sophisticated proponents appreciate that they may not be thinking of everything…They don’t want to go back through the process either. It’s really expensive.”

The decade-spanning ballot battle over chicken cage sizes offers a cautionary tale:

  • In 2008, voters OK’d a measure requiring farmers to let their animals stand up and turn around freely. Lawmakers could change the law afterward, but only if four-fifths agreed.
  • Farmers argued the proposition did not require them to go cage-free. Proponents of the measure disagreed.
  • Rather than try to convince legislators to goad some of California’s most powerful agricultural interests, the Humane Society put a new measure on the ballot to clarify.

A seven-eighths requirement would be an even steeper climb.

Inside the California Capitol, those types of margins are typically reserved for legislation that renames highways or protects puppies and kittens from being euthanized.

“I’ve looked at a lot of ballot measures over the years,” said Moylan, adding that a two-thirds majority is common.

But a seven-eighths “super, super, super-duper majority,” she said, “is new as far as I’m aware.”

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