Press Release Header

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 2, 2025

Secretary Hoskins Pushes Urgent Initiative Petition Reform to Protect Missouri’s Constitution

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri Secretary of State Denny Hoskins today urged the legislature to take decisive action to reform the state’s initiative petition (IP) process. Secretary Hoskins emphasized that decades of abuse by out-of-state special interests have turned this citizen tool into a vehicle for exploitation, straining state resources, and cluttering Missouri’s Constitution with amendments that too often originate from outside the state rather than the elected legislature.

“Our initiative petition system is being abused—not serving the people of Missouri, but special interests from out of state,” said Secretary Hoskins. “National groups flood Missouri with dozens of nearly identical petitions, waste taxpayer money, and risk confusing Missourians with conflicting amendments. Missouri’s constitution is not for sale.”

Secretary Hoskins strongly supports Governor Mike Kehoe’s proclamation convening a special session of the General Assembly starting Wednesday, September 3, 2025, to address both mid-decade redistricting and overdue reforms to the state’s initiative petition (IP) process.

“Missouri’s citizens deserve direct democracy—not a system hijacked by well-funded out-of-state actors.”

Secretary Hoskins emphasized:
“Courts have already made clear that mid-cycle changes to the initiative process in 2026 are unconstitutional. That means the time to fix this is now. Waiting will only allow special interests to continue exploiting the system—and we can’t let that happen again.”

Missouri’s Initiative Petitions by the Numbers

“These are not fringe victories—they are major policy shifts enacted through the initiative process, not through our elected legislature, and they are stuck on the Missouri Constitution,” noted Secretary Hoskins. “Missouri’s constitution is sacrosanct, not a playground for special interest group experimental policies.”

  • Over 130 initiative petitions have been filed with the Missouri Secretary of State’s Office for the 2026 ballot, many of which are nearly identical copies of each other.
  • In recent cycles, the Secretary’s Office has seen a dramatic uptick in state-approved circulations: one such sponsor has submitted more than 75 nearly identical petitions, overwhelming staff with repetitive review demands.
  • Recent initiative successes include:
    • 2020 Medicaid Expansion (Amendment 2) – Passed by 53.3% of voters in August 2020. 
    • 2022 Recreational Marijuana Legalization (Amendment 3) – Approved by 53.1% in November 2022. Previously failed in 2016; 2018 medical marijuana amendment passed. 
    • 2024 Reproductive Freedom (Amendment 3) – Narrowly passed, guaranteeing reproductive rights to fetal viability as of December 23, 2024.

 

Year

Total IP Submitted

IPs

Rejected

IPs

Withdrawn

IPs Approved for Circulation

IPs Submitted with Signatures

Initiative Petitions

on Ballot

Referendum Petitions

on Ballot

JR/Leg. Referendums on Ballot

Total Ballot Measures

IP Ballot Appearance Rate

IPs Received by January 31 (Odd Year)

2004*

At least 16

Unknown

Unknown

At least 11

At least 2

2

0

1

3

Unknown

1

2006

44

1

24

19

6

3

0

3

6

6.82%

0

2008

55

12

18

25

5

3

0

2

5

5.45%

0

2010

105

39

43

23

4

3

0

3

6

2.86%

21

2012

143

18

78

47

4

2

0

3

5

1.40%

41

2014

129

16

48

65

2

1

0

8

9

0.78%

20

2016

238

40

108

90

5

4

0

2

6

1.68%

20

2018

371

184

39

148

6

5

1

2

8

1.35%

156

2020

148

44

25

79

1

1

0

2

3

0.68%

40

2022

89

39

1

49

2

1

0

3

4

1.12%

13

2024

174

9

24

139

4

4

0

4

8

2.30%

68

2026

25

Totals (2006-2024)

1496

402

408

684

39

27

1

32

60

1.80%

379

*2004 information based on available data from website - records are largely missing

 

Court Precedent: No Mid-Cycle Fix in 2026

Missouri courts have already made clear that efforts to amend initiative rules mid-cycle—while petitions are circulating—will be blocked as unconstitutional retrospective legislation. That means any reforms must be legally effective before petition circulation begins if they are to shape the 2026 process.

Proposed Reforms to Restore Integrity

Secretary Hoskins urged the General Assembly to act quickly—ideally in 2025 with an emergency clause—to implement reforms that would:

  1. Limit abuse of process, by instituting modest filing fees and banning duplicate or near-duplicate submissions.
  2. Ensure broad geographic support, strengthening the constitutional “district distribution” requirement so that petitions reflect statewide, not concentrated, backing.
  3. Ban foreign or out-of-state fundraising, and stiffen penalties for fraudulent signatures or circulator misrepresentations.
  4. Increase transparency, with public comment periods and clear, plain-language explanations available before signature gathering begins.

Missouri Values over Outsider Agendas

“This is about preserving our constitution for Missourians—not letting it become a bargaining chip in national agendas,” said Secretary Hoskins. “By acting now, the legislature can send a clear message: Missouri protects citizen initiative, but we also protect our process from being manipulated.”

###

About the Missouri Secretary of State’s Office

The Missouri Secretary of State’s Office serves as a central hub for key state functions that promote transparency, security, and opportunity for all Missourians. The Office oversees the administration of fair and secure elections, registers and supports businesses, maintains and preserves state records through the State Archives, and ensures public access to government rulemaking via the Administrative Rules Division.

Additionally, the Office protects investors through the Securities Division, supports libraries and literacy programs across the state, and administers the Safe at Home address confidentiality program for survivors of abuse and assault. With a commitment to service, accountability, and civic engagement, the Secretary of State’s Office works every day to strengthen Missouri’s government and communities.

About Secretary of State Denny Hoskins

Denny Hoskins, CPA, was elected Missouri’s 41st Secretary of State in November 2024. With a strong background in business and public service, he is committed to improving government efficiency, transparency, and supporting Missouri families. Hoskins previously served as a legislator in both the state Senate and House. He and his wife, Michelle, reside in Warrensburg and have five adult children.

For more information, please contact Rachael Dunn, Director of Communications, via email at [email protected].