Federal Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Idaho Initiative Process

Amy Pratt personally collected more than 1,000 signatures to help get Proposition 2 on the ballot. It's the first time she's been politically active and she has no plans of stopping. CREDIT: JAMES DAWSON / BSPR
Amy Pratt with the advocacy group Reclaim Idaho personally collected more than 1,000 signatures to help get Proposition 2 on the state’s November 2018 ballot. The initiative expanding Medicaid in the state passed with over 60 percent of the vote. CREDIT: JAMES DAWSON / BSPR

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BY KEITH RIDLER / AP

A federal lawsuit challenging Idaho’s ballot initiative process as unconstitutional because it requires signatures from multiple legislative districts has been dismissed.

Chief U.S. District Court Judge David C. Nye didn’t rule Tuesday on the merits of the case but said plaintiff Ryan Isbelle lacked standing to bring the lawsuit because he hadn’t tried to get an initiative on the ballot.

Isbelle had claimed Idaho’s initiative rules violate the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause.

Nye in his ruling said Isbelle could file an amended complaint within 30 days if he wanted to keep the case alive.

“I’ll be looking into my options,” Isbelle said Wednesday. “If it means starting my own initiative, I’m willing to do that.”

Isbelle, a beer delivery man in the Lewiston area who describes himself as a political junkie, said he’s been frustrated that groups with ballot initiatives in progress haven’t signed on to his lawsuit.

The Idaho attorney general’s office, which argued for the lawsuit’s dismissal, had no comment on the ruling, spokesman Scott Graf said.

Isbelle argued that an Idaho law passed in 2013 requiring signatures from 6% of registered voters in 18 legislative districts was unconstitutional. Before 2013, ballot initiatives required signatures from 6% of statewide registered voters.

Isbelle said the change unconstitutionally gave more weight to signatures in some districts, while the 6% statewide requirement kept all voters on an equal footing.

The ballot initiative process in Idaho has been among the most contentious issues in the state in recent years.

The change signed into law by then-Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter, a Republican, came a few months after voters casting ballots on three initiatives rejected sweeping changes to the state’s education system lawmakers approved in 2011.

It was the first time in nearly 80 years that Idaho voters used the initiative process to overturn laws passed by elected leaders.

Making the ballot initiative process tougher in 2013, lawmakers said, would prevent initiative backers from getting all or most of the signatures they needed from population centers, noting in particular Ada County in southwestern Idaho.

Idaho is a conservative state with a Republican-dominated Legislature, but urban areas of Idaho tend to be less conservative than rural areas.

Idaho voters again used the initiative process in 2018, this time passing Medicaid expansion with 61% of the vote after years of inaction by state lawmakers.

Lawmakers in the House and Senate responded earlier this year by passing legislation, despite hours of heated testimony opposing it, making the initiative process significantly more difficult by upping the number of signatures and legislative districts required. Opponents complained it gave a handful of rural legislative districts veto power over the ballot initiative process.

Republican Gov. Brad Little vetoed the two bills, citing his concern that a federal judge might declare the laws unconstitutional and dictate the state’s ballot initiative process.

Copyright 2019 Associated Press

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