This Election, Protect Our State Constitution. Vote Against Every Amendment.

When North Carolinians go to the polls this year, they will be asked to vote on six proposed amendments to our state constitution that range from flawed to harmful.

These six amendments represent an effort by the North Carolina General Assembly to make sweeping, permanent, and unnecessary changes to our state’s most important legal document. Lawmakers have placed these six proposed amendments on the ballot through a rushed and contentious process, often with little or no debate or explanation of the amendments’ potential impact.

If approved, the amendments would threaten many of the civil rights and civil liberties that we work to defend and that North Carolina’s Constitution is supposed to protect. The impact of many are still unknown, and all could bring unintended consequences.

The ACLU of North Carolina urges you to vote AGAINST all six constitutional amendments that will appear on your ballot this election.

For [ ] Against [X]

Here’s how each amendment will be listed and worded on the ballot, what it does, and why you should vote against it.

Voter ID restriction

What it says: Constitutional amendment to require voters to provide photo identification before voting in person.

Why you should vote against:

Marsy’s Law

What is says: Constitutional amendment to strengthen protections for victims of crime; to establish certain absolute basic rights for victims and to ensure the enforcement of these rights.

Why you should vote against:

Appointment Powers

What it says: Constitutional amendment to establish an eight-member Bipartisan Board of Ethics and Elections Enforcement in the Constitution to administer ethics and elections law.

Why you should vote against:

Judicial Appointments

What it says: Constitutional amendment to change the process for filling judicial vacancies that occur between judicial elections from a process in which the Governor has sole appointment power to a process in which the people of the State nominate individuals to fill vacancies by way of a commission comprised of appointees made by the judicial, executive, and legislative branches charged with making recommendations to the legislature as to which nominees are deemed qualified; then the legislature will recommend at least two nominees to the Governor via legislative action not subject to gubernatorial veto and the Governor will appoint judges from among these nominees.

Why you should vote against:

Income tax cap

What it says: Constitutional amendment to reduce the income tax rate in North Carolina to a maximum allowable rate of seven percent (7%).

Why you should vote against:

Hunting and Fishing Rights

What it says: Constitutional amendment protecting the right of the people to hunt, fish and harvest wildlife.

Why you should vote against:

Hunting and fishing rights are not under attack in North Carolina, but our state constitution is. We should not be littering such an important document – the foundation of our state government – with potentially meaningless and redundant provisions passed with little public explanation or debate.

Make sure to vote!

Election Day is Tuesday, November 6.
Early voting is available from October 17 to November 3.
Not registered to vote? Learn how to register here.
Find your sample ballot and voting location here.