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Arizona Proposition 102, also known as the Public Debt, Revenue and Taxation, was on the November 7, 2004 election ballot in Arizona as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment. It was defeated.[1]
Election results[edit]
| Public Debt, Revenue and Taxation |
|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage |
d No | 853,632 | 51.9% |
| Yes | 792,277 | 48.1% |
- Election results from Arizona Elections Department.
Text of measure[edit]
Ballot language[edit]
The language that appeared on the ballot:
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The Arizona Constitution prohibits the state government from becoming a shareholder or joint owner in a company or corporation.
Proposition 102 would amend the Constitution to add an additional exception allowing the state to license or transfer interests in technology or intellectual property created or acquired by state universities or the Board of Regents in exchange for ownership interests and securities in a company or corporation. The ownership interests must be obtained only for investment as authorized by law.[2][3]
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”
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Campaign finance[edit]
Arizona Forward, a group for the referendum, spent $654,090 in support of the measure.[4]
See also[edit]
- Arizona 2004 ballot measures
- 2004 ballot measures
- List of Arizona ballot measures
- List of ballot measures by year
- List of ballot measures by state
External links[edit]
- Proposition 102 Text
- National Conference of State Legislatures Ballot Measures Database
[edit]
- ↑ Arizona 2004 election results
- ↑ NCSL ballot measure database
- ↑ Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ Follow the Money, Arizona Proposition 102 Donations
2004 ballot measures |
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