2 Matching Annotations
- Oct 2024
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ballotpedia.org ballotpedia.org
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Supermajority requirement: A 60 percent supermajority vote was required for the approval of Amendment 4. Contents 1 Aftermath 1.1 Implementing Amendment 4 1.2 Senate Bill 7066 2 Election results 3 Overview 4 Text of measure 4.1 Ballot title 4.2 Ballot summary 4.3 Constitutional changes 4.4 Readability score 5 Support 5.1 Supporters 5.1.1 Officials 5.1.2 Organizations 5.1.3 Individuals 5.2 Arguments 6 Opposition 6.1 Opponents 6.1.1 Officials 6.1.2 Organizations 6.2 Arguments 7 Media editorials 7.1 Support 7.1.1 Additional editorial endorsements 7.2 Opposition 8 Campaign finance 8.1 Support 8.1.1 Donors 8.2 Methodology 9 Polls 10 Background 10.1 Convicted felons voting laws 10.2 Margin-of-victory in past Florida elections 10.3 Gubernatorial elections 10.3.1 2018 10.3.2 2014 MOV: 1 percent 10.3.3 2010 MOV: 1.2 percent 10.4 Presidential elections in Florida 10.4.1 2016 MOV: 1.2 percent 10.4.2 2012 MOV: 0.9 percent 10.4.3 2008 MOV: 2.8 percent 10.5 History of felon voting laws in Florida 10.6 Johnson v. Bush (2005) 10.7 Hand v. Scott (2018) 10.8 Executive Clemency Board 10.9 Election policy on the ballot in 2018 11 Reports and analyses 11.1 Estimated number of disenfranchised felons 12 Path to the ballot 13 How to cast a vote 13.1 Poll times 13.2 Registration requirements 13.3 Automatic registration 13.4 Online registration 13.5 Same-day registration 13.6 Residency requirements 13.7 Verification of citizenship 13.8 Verifying your registration 13.9 Voter ID requirements 14 See also 15 State overview 15.1 Partisan control 15.1.1 Congressional delegation 15.1.2 State executives 15.1.3 State legislature 15.1.4 Trifecta status 15.2 2018 elections 15.3 Demographics 16 State election history 16.1 Historical elections 16.1.1 Presidential elections 16.1.2 U.S. Senate elections, 2000-2016 16.1.3 Gubernatorial elections, 2000-2016 16.1.4 Congressional delegation, 2000-2016 16.1.5 Trifectas, 1992-2017 17 External links 17.1 Support 17.2 Opposition 18 Footnotes
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link.springer.com link.springer.com
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They more frequently turn out to vote, engage in political discussions, attend campaign events, contribute money, contact public officials, and the like (Verba, Schlozman, & Brady 1995; Schlozman, Verba, & Brady, 2012)
These citations are fairly old, and it would be likely to find more recent studies if they exist. The newest citation is over a decade old, while this does not mean the information is invalid, it could be helpful to find newer sources that have since built on this principle.
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