SALT LAKE CITY — Utah voters will not decide this November on a constitutional amendment asking voters to cede power over ballot measures to lawmakers after the Utah Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a lower court decision voiding the amendment.
The five-justice panel grilled attorneys for the Legislature earlier Wednesday before siding with opponents of the amendment who argued it would have been presented to voters in a misleading manner. Republican legislative leaders, who penned the ballot question, had asked the high court to overturn a district judge's ruling and put Amendment D back before the public.
The amendment would have given lawmakers constitutional authority to rewrite voter-approved ballot measures or repeal them entirely. Lawmakers also could have applied their new power to initiatives from past election cycles.
But the summary that voters would have seen on their ballots only asked if the state constitution should be changed to ''strengthen the initiative process'' and to clarify the roles of legislators and voters.
''The description does not submit the amendment to voters ‘with such clarity as to enable the voters to express their will,'" the high court wrote in its opinion.
The justices said District Judge Dianna Gibson ruled correctly in mid-September when she ordered that any votes cast for or against the amendment should not count. She ruled that the ballot question language was ''counterfactual'' and did not disclose to voters the unfettered power they would be handing to state lawmakers.
The state Supreme Court also agreed with Gibson's assessment that the Legislature had failed to publish the ballot question in newspapers across the state during the required time frame.
Because of ballot-printing deadlines, the amendment text will still appear on Utah ballots this November, but votes will not be counted.