TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Is Florida’s ballot initiative process broken? Or is it set to become ‘pay-to-play democracy?’ That was the central question debated in Tallahassee Thursday as lawmakers discussed a proposed bill aimed at reforming Florida’s petition-gathering process ahead of the 2026 election. In Florida’s last cycle, two high-profile ballot initiatives — one to loosen abortion restrictions and another to legalize recreational marijuana — failed to reach the 60% threshold needed to become law. Now, state lawmakers are considering raising the bar even higher for future proposed amendments to reach voters. Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka (R-Fort Myers), sponsor of HB 1205 , argued that the petition process is in urgent need of reform to protect Floridians from fraud. “The initiative petition process is broken, and we need to put in safeguards to protect the citizens of the state of Florida from the known fraud that we know is occurring,” Persons-Mulicka said. “This process is incredibly important,” Persons-Mulicka said. “Our state constitution, it’s our constitution. It belongs to the people of Florida, and we need to ensure we have integrity in the initiative process.”
The reform was initially championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), who called for a special session months ago, in part, to address concerns of signature fraud in the 2024 election. A state report revealed that more than 100 petition gatherers had engaged in criminal activity, leading to the invalidation of thousands of signatures.
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The reform was initially championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), who called for a special session months ago, in part, to address concerns of signature fraud in the 2024 election. A state report revealed that more than 100 petition gatherers had engaged in criminal activity, leading to the invalidation of thousands of signatures.