Illinois Governor Recall Amendment

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Illinois Governor Recall Amendment, 2010

Concerns the Adoption of Gubernatorial Recall Elections
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 1,639,158 65.93%
No 846,966 34.07%
Valid votes 2,486,124 100.00%
Invalid or blank votes 0 0.00%
Total votes 2,486,124 100.00%

On November 2, 2010, Illinois voters approved the Illinois Governor Recall Amendment, a legislatively referred constitutional amendment to the Constitution of Illinois. The amendment changed the state constitution to allow recall elections of Illinois governors.[1]

Illinois had seen four of the eight governors that preceded the incumbent governor, Pat Quinn, be convicted of felonies.[1] The movement to adopt the amendment also was riding the recent public sentiment following the scandals related to former governor Rod Blagojevich, who was removed from office by impeachment.[1]

Passage in the state legislature

It was required that, in order to qualify for the ballot, the measure be approved by 60% approval of both the Illinois House of Representatives and the Illinois Senate.

The amendment had been proposed by state representative Jack D. Franks and state senator Daniel Cronin.[1] Michael Noland was the one to formally introduce it when it came before the Illinois Senate.[1]

Changes to the state constitution

Referendum

References

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