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A measure to increase city council term limits from two to three terms by 2023 was on the ballot for voters within the limits of the consolidated city-county metro of Nashville and Davidson County, Tennessee, on August 6, 2015. It was defeated.
If approved, this measure would have extended council term limits from two to three terms. The change would have been fully implemented by 2023.[1]
Council Member Emily Evans backed a separate, citizen-initiated charter amendment designed to establish a three-term limit for council members that was also on the August 2015 ballot. This amendment was crafted to reduce the number of council members from 40 to 27 as well as providing a more lenient term limit rule. It was also defeated.
In the metro's municipal election on August 6, 2015, 22 of the 40 city council members—not counting the mayor or vice mayor—were ousted by the city's term limits. The term-limited members and some early retirements left well over half of the city council seats up for grabs with no incumbent defending the position. The Mayor Karl Dean was also term-limited, leaving the office of mayor open to one of the seven challengers that filed as candidates for the office. Vice Mayor Diane Neighbors was also term-limited. The large, forced turnover in city leaders was hailed by supporters of Amendment 1 and Amendment 2 as an argument in favor of extending term limits. For details on the outcomes of the municipal election races, see this page.
| Nashville Amendment 1 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 63,305 | 64.18% | |||
| Yes | 35,328 | 35.82% | ||
The following summary of Amendment 1 appeared on the ballot:[2]
| “ |
This amendment would increase the term limits effective as of the August 2023 Metropolitan Government general election for the office of vice mayor, district councilmember, and councilmember-at-large from two consecutive four year terms to three consecutive four year terms.[3] |
” |
The full text of the amendment is available here.
Voters approved the city's two-term limit in 1994. Between 1994 and the beginning of 2015, three separate ballot measures seeking to extend or remove the city's term limit law were defeated by voters. Amendment 1 and Amendment 2 were brought the count up to five. The last term limit measure before the 2015 amendments was defeated in 2002.[4][5]
Council Member Ronnie Steine, who introduced and sponsored this measure, said, "Always raised to me is the notion that voters have spoken on this (term-limit) issue several times. I agree, but the last time voters spoke on this was in 2002. I would argue that it's an important enough issue that we ought to reconsider it in [sic] once a decade."[6]
Council Member Ronnie Steine introduced and sponsored this amendment.[6]
Supporters of this measure argued that the huge turnover forced by the city's term limits—epitomized by the 24 members of the city council, including the mayor and vice-mayor, being term-limited this year—periodically results in a large contingent of inexperienced council members faced with the complex issues of city governance. Describing the city's term limit law as "draconian," Council Member Evans argued that it did nothing but reduce the influence and authority of council members and impede active representation of the voters.[7]
A group called Nashville Term Limits opposed both this measure and the citizen-initiated charter amendment backed by Council Member Emily Evans.[5]
Opponents of the amendment argued that the city's term limits keep the city council members accountable to the voters, prevent abuses of authority, force fresh perspectives and prevent the advantage of incumbency from ruling politics in the city.[5]
Critics also pointed out that voters had rejected three separate efforts to eliminate or extend the city council's term limits since voters first approved the law in 1994 and argued that the city council should have honored the will of the voters by refraining from proposing such amendments.[4]
| “ |
The editorial board’s position is that there should be no term limits, rather that voters should decide when to end a politician’s service through the ballot box. However, Nashville voters have made clear again and again that they want to limit the amount of time politicians can serve in office. That is why extending term limits alone without offering voters something else in return is ill-conceived. We recommend voting “No” on Amendment 1.[3] |
” |
| —Editorial board of The Tennessean[4] | ||
On May 19, 2015, Council Member Ronnie Steine, the sponsor of the measure, narrowly succeeded in attaining enough "yes" votes from his fellow council members to put the amendment on the ballot. The council voted 27-9 in favor of moving forward with the ballot measure; two council members abstained from voting. According to the city's requirements for putting a charter amendment before voters, 27 was the minimum number of votes needed.[6]
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Nashville term limit Amendment 1. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
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Categories: [Defeated local measure, 2015] [Tennessee 2015 local ballot measures] [City governance, Tennessee, 2015] [Local ballots, 2015] [Local charter amendments, Tennessee, 2015] [Local term limits, Tennessee, 2015] [Certified_past_date_local_ballot_measures]