2012 Massachusetts ballot measures

Three citizen-initiated measures were voted upon in the 2012 Massachusetts general election: a Right to Repair initiative, a proposal to allow physician-assisted suicide, and a measure to legalize medical marijuana.[1] The Right to Repair initiative, which was to require open access to vehicle diagnostic and repair information, passed overwhelmingly, with 86% support.[2] The measure to allow physician-assisted suicide failed by a narrow margin, with 51% opposed.[3] The proposal to legalize medical marijuana passed with 63% of voter support.[4]

The Massachusetts Constitution can be amended through initiative and state statutes can be proposed through initiative. All three statewide ballot measures that were on the November 2012 ballot by collecting signatures are proposed statutes (not constitutional amendments).

In Massachusetts, after the state determines which initiatives have succeeded in collecting enough signatures to be placed on the ballot, official numbers/names are assigned to each of the successful initiatives. The Secretary of the Commonwealth has discretion over the order of questions on the ballot.

Binding statewide questions

Number Initiative Title Subject Description Status Yes No
Question 1Massachusetts Right to Repair InitiativeBusiness RegulationVehicle owner and business protectionsOn ballot74%12%
Question 2Massachusetts Death with Dignity InitiativeAssisted DeathEstablishes as right to death with dignityOn ballot46%48%
Question 3Massachusetts Medical Marijuana InitiativeMedical MarijuanaWould allow for the use of medical marijuana in the stateOn ballot60%35%

Source:[5]

Local questions

A number of local non-binding questions are also on the ballot.

See also

References

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