Attorney General Tim Griffin | Attorney General Tim Griffin Official U.S. House Headshot
Attorney General Tim Griffin | Attorney General Tim Griffin Official U.S. House Headshot
LITTLE ROCK – After certifying the popular name and ballot title for Citizens for Arkansas Public Education and Students’ (CAPES) proposed referendum on the LEARNS Act, Attorney General Tim Griffin issued the following statement:
“The legislature has authorized the Attorney General to reject a ballot title for only one reason: if it is misleading. Because this ballot title largely cuts and pastes at great length from LEARNS, I cannot conclude that it is misleading. I have therefore certified it. My certification does not mean the ballot title meets all of the requirements of legal sufficiency set out in Arkansas Supreme Court precedent, including the requirement that ballot titles not be too lengthy or complex. This ballot title, which is more than 8,000 words, is the longest in Arkansas history by a large margin. The Court has cited length and complexity as major factors in rejecting ballot titles with 550, 587, 709 and 727 words. The Arkansas Supreme Court will be the sole arbiter of whether this ballot title is too lengthy and complex if it is challenged at a later stage in the referendum process.”
To read Griffin’s opinion, click here.
Original source can be found here.