Posted: Tuesday, October 3, 2009
Washington voters today are deciding two controversial ballot
measures. Referendum 71 deals with gay domestic partnerships.
Initiative 1033 would cap government revenues and cut property
taxes. But is the money spent on these measures a good predictor of
their outcomes at the ballot box? Olympia Correspondent Austin
Jenkins reports.
If you were to go on campaign finance reports alone, it looks like
domestic partnerships in Washington will be expanded and voters
will reject initiative king Tim Eyman’s cap on government. That’s
because that’s where the money is. Gay rights supporters have
raised more than $2 million more than four times their opponents.
While the labor-backed No on 1033 campaign has amassed a nearly
$3.5 million war chest. But political scientist Todd Donovan at
Western Washington University cautions against this logic.
Donovan: “That assumes a pretty direct relationship between
spending on ballot initiatives and the outcomes and us academic
geeks go back and forth about how concrete that relationship really
is, but it might not be as powerful as we expect.”
Donovan notes Eyman is routinely outspent by opponents – and yet
he’s passed numerous initiatives over the last 12 years. This year
though spending trends have matched recent polls.
Copyright 2009 KUOW