Ballot initiatives in Colorado include:
- Repeals a constitutional exception that allows slavery and involuntary servitude as punishment for a crime
- Establishes independent commissions for federal and state redistricting
- Establishes income brackets (currently a 4.63% flat tax) to fund education (remember the teachers' strike). Brackets would begin at incomes over $150,000 ranging from 5-8%.
- Changes campaign financing law to limit to one million dollars the amount one candidate can contribute to his/her campaign (the Democratic candidate for Governor, Jared Polis, has been funding his campaign with personal donations. He is worth almost $400 million)
- Funds transportation projects - one initiative without raising taxes, another one with taxes to repay debt
and the Big One:
- Mandates that new oil and gas development projects, including fracking, be a minimum distance of 2,500 feet from occupied buildings and other areas designated as vulnerable. (the current setbacks are 500' from homes and 1000' from schools)
Colorado Ballot Initiatives 2018
Nationally, the top self-funders of their campaigns for federal office (over $9 million) are:
Rick Scott (R), U.S. Senate in Florida: $51 million
Bob Hugin (R), U.S. Senate in New Jersey: $27.5 million
David Trone (D), Maryland’s 6th Congressional District: $16 million
Scott Wallace (D), Pennsylvania’s 1st Congressional District: $12.8 million
Mike Braun (R), U.S. Senate in Indiana: $9.6 million