North Carolina Governor Elected Terms Amendment (1977)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
North Carolina Governor Elected Terms Amendment

Flag of North Carolina.png

Election date

November 8, 1977

Topic
State executive official measures and Term limits
Status

ApprovedApproved

Type
Legislatively referred constitutional amendment
Origin

State legislature



North Carolina Governor Elected Terms Amendment was on the ballot as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment in North Carolina on November 8, 1977. It was approved.

A "yes" vote supported allowing the governor and lieutenant governor to be elected to a second successive term in office.

A "no" vote opposed allowing the governor and lieutenant governor to be elected to a second successive term in office.


Election results

North Carolina Governor Elected Terms Amendment

Result Votes Prozentualer Anteil

Approved Yes

307,754 52.54%
No 278,013 47.46%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot title

The ballot title for Governor Elected Terms Amendment was as follows:

"

[ ]  FOR constitutional amendment em- powering the qualified voters of the State to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor to a second successive term of the same office

[ ] AGAINST constitutional amendment empowering the qualified voters of the State to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor to a second successive term of the same office

Full Text

The full text of this measure is available here.


Path to the ballot

The North Carolina State Legislature can refer statewide ballot measures, in the form of constitutional amendments and bond issues, to the ballot for statewide elections.

North Carolina requires a 60% vote in each legislative chamber during a single legislative session to refer a constitutional amendment to the ballot. That amounts to a minimum of 72 votes in the North Carolina House of Representatives and 30 votes in the North Carolina Senate, assuming no vacancies. Amendments do not require the governor's signature to be referred to the ballot.

Statutes, including bond issues, require a simple majority vote in each legislative chamber during one legislative session and the governor's signature to appear on the ballot.

See also


External links

Footnotes