IN RE DALLAS HERO (Opinion)
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A grassroots organization, Dallas HERO, collected over 169,000 signatures to place three proposed amendments to the City of Dallas charter on the ballot. The city council, however, proposed three additional amendments that would effectively nullify the citizen-initiated amendments by including primacy provisions. The city council's propositions were designated as Propositions K, M, and N, while the citizen-initiated propositions were designated as Propositions S, T, and U. The council passed an ordinance to include all these propositions in a special election scheduled for November 5, 2024.
Relators sought emergency mandamus relief from the Fifth Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court of Texas, arguing that the council-initiated propositions were misleading and would confuse voters. The Fifth Court of Appeals denied the petition, stating that relators failed to comply with procedural rules and did not demonstrate entitlement to mandamus relief. The relators then brought their case to the Supreme Court of Texas.
The Supreme Court of Texas held that the ballot language for the council-initiated propositions K, M, and N was misleading because it did not acknowledge the contradictions with the citizen-initiated propositions S, T, and U. The court found that the ballot language would confuse and mislead voters by omitting the effect of the primacy provisions, which are central to the council-initiated propositions. The court directed the city council to remove Propositions K, M, and N from the ballot to avoid redundancy and confusion, ensuring that the election process remains clear and comprehensible for voters. The court denied relief on the issue of amending the agreed-upon ballot language for Propositions S, T, and U, as relators were estopped from challenging it.
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