League of Educ. Voters v. State ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •            FILE
    IN CLERKS OFFICE
    IUPREME COURT, STATE OF WAS! N1t1N
    --""'A~   D"TE_    FEB 2 8 2013
    /r~,cif;=
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    LEAGUE OF EDUCATION VOTERS, a Washington              )
    non-profit corporation; WASHINGTON EDUCATION          )         No. 87425-5
    ASSOCIATION, a Washington non-profit corporation;     )
    LAURIE JINKINS, an individual taxpayer and            )          EnBanc
    Washington State Representative; DAVID FROCKT, an     )
    individual taxpayer and Washington State Senator;     )
    JAMIE PEDERSEN, an individual taxpayer and            )
    Washington State Representative; ROBERT UTTER, an     )
    individual taxpayer and former Chief Justice of the   )
    Washington Supreme Court; KIM BIELSKI, an             )
    individual taxpayer; ANDY BUNN, an individual         )
    taxpayer; REBECCA BUNN, an individual taxpayer;       )
    REUVEN CARLYLE, an individual taxpayer and            )
    Washington State Representative; JOHN                 )
    CHESBROUGH, an individual taxpayer; DEB EDDY,         )
    an individual taxpayer and Washington State           )
    Representative; SAM HUNT, an individual taxpayer      )
    and Washington State Representative; AMY              )
    MCKENNEY, an individual taxpayer; KURT MILLER,        )
    an individual taxpayer and President of the Tacoma    )
    Public Schools Board of Directors; JIM MOELLER, an    )
    individual taxpayer and Washington State              )
    Representative; TIMM ORMSBY, an individual            )
    taxpayer and Washington State Representative; RYAN    )
    PAINTER, an individual taxpayer; ERIC PETTIGREW,      )
    an individual taxpayer and Washington State           )
    Representative; CHRIS REYKDAL, an individual          )
    taxpayer, Washington State Representative and         )
    Tumwater School Board Member; CINDY RYU, an           )
    individual taxpayer and Washington State              )
    Representative; MIKE SELLS, an individual taxpayer     )
    and Washington State Representative; and KRISTIN       )
    SKANDERUP, an individual taxpayer,                    )
    )
    Respondents,        )
    ) Filed _ _ _F_E_B_2_8_2_01_3_
    v.                                            )
    )
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                  )
    )
    Appellant,               )
    )
    CHRISTINE GREGOIRE, in her official capacity as       )
    Governor of the State of Washington,                  )
    )
    Respondent.              )
    _____________________________________)
    OWENS, J. -- Before us is a constitutional challenge to two provisions of
    voter-enacted former RCW 43.135.034 (2011) (Initiative 1053 (I-1053)). The first
    provision requires that any bill containing a tax increase be passed by a two-thirds
    majority vote of the legislature (Supermajority Requirement), and the second
    provision requires that any tax bill increasing spending beyond the state spending
    limit be approved by the voters (Referendum Requirement). At the outset, we note
    that our opinion does not reflect whether these provisions embody sound policies. We
    agree with the dissenting justices that such judgment is reserved for the people and the
    legislature. However, as Chief Justice John Marshall wrote, "[I]fboth the law and the
    constitution apply to a particular case, ... the court must determine which of these
    conflicting rules governs the case." Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177-
    78,2 L. Ed. 60 (1803). We meet that task today by addressing only whether the
    challenges to the two provisions are justiciable and whether the challenged provisions
    violate the Washington Constitution. The King County Superior Court found the
    challenge to both provisions justiciable and held that the Supermajority Requirement
    2
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    violated article II, section 22 and the Referendum Requirement violated article II,
    section 1(b). The State appealed, contending this dispute is nonjusticiable and that
    both provisions of former RCW 43.135.034 are constitutional.
    We affirm the trial court in part and reverse in part. We affirm the trial court's
    decision regarding the justiciability and the constitutionality of the Supermajority
    Requirement. Article II, section 22 states that "[n]o bill shall become a law unless ...
    a majority of the members elected to each house" vote in its favor. The plain
    language, constitutional history, and weight of persuasive authority support reading
    this provision as setting both a minimum and a maximum voting requirement.
    Therefore, the Supermajority Requirement violates article II, section 22 by requiring
    certain legislation to receive a two-thirds vote. However, we reverse the trial court's
    decision that the Referendum Requirement presents a justiciable controversy.
    Because the Referendum Requirement is not justiciable, we make no determination as
    to its constitutionality.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    In 2010, voters passed I-1053, which is codified at former RCW 43.135.034.
    LAws OF 2011, ch. 1, § 2. Former RCW 43.135.034 was another iteration of a long
    line of initiatives that have established two requirements for certain tax legislation: the
    Supermajority Requirement and the Referendum Requirement.
    3
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    A rich litigious history surrounds both the Supermajority Requirement and the
    Referendum Requirement. These requirements were first imposed by Initiative 601
    (I-601), which was approved by the voters in 1993. LAWS OF 1994, ch. 2. Before the
    initiative went into effect, a group of legislators, public advocacy groups, and citizens
    sought a writ of mandamus in this court ordering the legislature to prevent I-60 1's
    implementation, claiming it was unconstitutional. Walker v. Munro, 
    124 Wash. 2d 402
    ,
    406-07, 879 P .2d 920 ( 1994). The court dismissed the dispute, refusing to use
    mandamus to compel legislative officers to perform discretionary acts or duties like
    determining whether I-601 applied to a particular bill. Id. at 410.
    I -60 1 remained in effect for several years until the legislature suspended it for
    two years in 2005. Brown v. Owen, 
    165 Wash. 2d 706
    ,713,
    206 P.3d 310
     (2009). 1 Then
    in 2007, voters passed Initiative 960 (I-960). Id. I-960, like I-601 before it, contained
    a Supermajority Requirement and a Referendum Requirement. Id. at 714. I-960
    spawned two separate cases. First, a group of challengers sought to prevent the
    secretary of state from even placing I -960 on the ballot. Futurewise v. Reed, 
    161 Wash. 2d 407
    , 408, 
    166 P.3d 708
     (2007). This court dismissed the action as
    nonjusticiable because the dispute did not fit the narrow requirements for challenging
    initiatives preelection. Id. at 415. The second case arose postenactment. There, a
    1
    The legislature is ordinarily required to wait at least two years before amending any
    initiative unless two-thirds of the legislature approves amending the initiative sooner.
    WASH. CONST. art. II, § 41.
    4
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    state senator sought a writ of mandamus in this court to force the senate president to
    forward a tax bill to the house of representatives that received only a simple majority
    in the senate. Brown, 165 Wn.2d at 711, 716. The court again did not address the
    constitutionality of the Supermajority Requirement because the case raised a
    nonjusticiable political question. !d. at 727.
    The legislature suspended I -960 after two years, just as it had suspended I -60 1.
    LAWS OF 2010, ch. 4. Knowing such a suspension was a possibility, voters passed I-
    1053 in 2010, which again contained the Supermajority Requirement and the
    Referendum Requirement and prevented the legislature from suspending the
    requirements for another two years. Sponsors also filed Initiative 1185 (I-1185) for
    the 2012 ballot, which again contained these two requirements. LAWS OF 2013, ch. 1.
    Voters passed I-1185.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In July 2011, respondents-the League ofEducation Voters (LEV),
    Washington Education Association (WEA), 12 individual legislators, and numerous
    individual taxpayers (hereinafter collectively referred to as "LEV" unless otherwise
    noted)-filed a complaint in King County Superior Court seeking a declaratory
    judgment that the Supermajority Requirement and Referendum Requirement violated
    article II, section 22 and article II, section 1(b) of the Washington Constitution. LEV
    5
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425~5
    filed its complaint only after the attorney general refused to challenge the
    constitutionality of former RCW 43.135.034.
    The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment in January 2012, and
    Governor Gregoire filed a brief requesting a decision on the merits, although she
    expressed no view on the merits of the dispute. After oral argument, the trial court
    granted LEV's motion for summary judgment, holding that (1) the dispute was
    justiciable; (2) the dispute constituted a matter of great public importance; (3) article
    II, section 22 prohibited the Supermajority Requirement; and (4) article II, section
    1(b) prohibited the Referendum Requirement.
    The State then appealed directly to this court. We accepted direct review.
    ISSUES
    1. Are the constitutional challenges to the Supermajority Requirement and the
    Referendum Requirement justiciable?
    2. If justiciable, is the Supermajority Requirement constitutional under article
    II, section 22 and is the Referendum Requirement constitutional under article II,
    section 1(b)?
    3. Is the Supermajority Requirement or the Referendum Requirement severable
    from former RCW 43.135.034?
    6
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    ANALYSIS
    I.     Justiciability
    We must first determine whether LEV's constitutional challenges to the
    Supermajority Requirement and the Referendum Requirement constitute justiciable
    controversies. We conclude that the Supermajority Requirement's constitutionality is
    justiciable because the requirement has nullified the legislator respondents' votes by
    preventing the passage of tax legislation that received a simple majority vote.
    However, the constitutionality of the Referendum Requirement is not justiciable given
    the hypothetical nature of the claim and the lack of injury.
    Under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act (UDJA), chapter 7.24 RCW,
    courts have the "power to declare rights, status and other legal relations" by a
    declaratory judgment. RCW 7.24.010. Unless a dispute involves "issues of major
    public importance, a justiciable controversy must exist before a court's jurisdiction
    may be invoked under the [UDJA]." Nollette v. Christianson, 
    115 Wash. 2d 594
    , 598,
    
    800 P.2d 359
     (1990). A justiciable controversy requires
    "( 1) ... an actual, present and existing dispute, or the mature seeds of
    one, as distinguished from a possible, dormant, hypothetical, speculative,
    or moot disagreement, (2) between parties having genuine and opposing
    interests, (3) which involves interests that must be direct and substantial,
    rather than potential, theoretical, abstract or academic, and (4) a judicial
    determination of which will be final and conclusive."
    7
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    To-Ro Trade Shows v. Collins, 
    144 Wash. 2d 403
    ,411, 
    27 P.3d 1149
     (2001) (alteration
    in original) (quoting Diversified Indus. Dev. Corp. v. Ripley, 
    82 Wash. 2d 811
    , 815, 
    514 P.2d 137
     (1973))_2
    Here, there is little question that the constitutionality of the Supermajority
    Requirement constitutes a justiciable controversy. To satisfy the justiciable
    controversy requirement, LEV points to the failed passage of Substitute House Bill
    2078, 62d Leg., 1st Spec. Sess. (Wash. 2011) (SHB 2078), as a concrete example of
    the Supermajority Requirement's impact. SHB 2078 would have funded a reduction
    in kindergarten through third grade class sizes by closing tax loopholes. Closing tax
    loopholes constitutes a tax increase subject to the Supermajority Requirement. See
    former RCW 43.135.034(1), (6). As a result of triggering the Supermajority
    Requirement, SHB 2078 failed to pass the house even though it received a simple
    majority of votes.
    In his dissent, Justice Charles Johnson claims that the "essence" of SHB 2078
    was passed in Engrossed Senate Bil16635, 62d Leg., 2d Spec. Sess. (Wash. 2012)
    (ESB 6635). Dissent (C. Johnson, J.) at 3. While ESB 6635 certainly closed the same
    tax loophole as SHB 2078, ESB 6635 differed substantially in that it did not fund a
    reduction in school class sizes. Compare ESB 6635, with SHB 2078, at 4; Clerk's
    2
    As with any discussion of justiciability, some of the concepts discussed are similar in
    nature to a discussion of standing. See Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587 v. State,
    
    142 Wash. 2d 183
    , 203, 
    11 P.3d 762
    , 
    27 P.3d 608
     (2000).
    8
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    Papers (CP) at 672-94. Moreover, ESB 6635 created four new tax loopholes, thus
    reducing the overall revenue generated by the bill. Compare ESB 6635, at 4-44, with
    SHB 2078; CP at 672-94. Accordingly, the dissent's claim that ESB 6635 contained
    the "essence" of SHB 2078 is inaccurate.
    The failed passage of SHB 2078 satisfies the four elements of a justiciable
    controversy. The legislator respondents "have a plain, direct and adequate interest in
    maintaining the effectiveness of their votes." Coleman v. Miller, 
    307 U.S. 433
    , 438,
    
    59 S. Ct. 972
    , 
    83 L. Ed. 1385
     (1939). 3 The legislator respondents' interest in
    maintaining the effectiveness of their votes was harmed by the Supermajority
    Requirement when a bill they voted for failed to pass despite receiving a simple
    majority. "[L]egislators whose votes would have been sufficient to defeat (or enact) a
    specific legislative Act have standing to sue if that legislative action goes into effect
    (or does not go into effect), on the ground that their votes have been completely
    nullified." Raines v. Byrd, 
    521 U.S. 811
    , 823, 
    117 S. Ct. 2312
    , 
    138 L. Ed. 2d 849
    (1997). 4 The specific example of SHB 2078 moves the legislator respondents' claim
    from the realm of abstract diluted legislative power to the realm of actual vote
    nullification. Consequently, there is an actual dispute between the State and LEV.
    3
    As the legislator respondents may properly bring this dispute, we need not consider
    whether the other respondents may as well. See Bowsher v. Synar, 
    478 U.S. 714
    , 721,
    
    106 S. Ct. 3181
    , 
    92 L. Ed. 2d 583
     (1986) (reasoning that the presence of one party with
    standing satisfies the jurisdictional requirement).
    4
    Because SHB 2078 and ESB 6635 are substantially different bills, the factual basis for
    Justice C. Johnson's analysis of Raines is inapposite.
    9
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    Finally, neither party disputes that a determination from this court will be final and
    conclusive. Thus, the failed passage of SHB 2078 demonstrates that the
    Supermajority Requirement's constitutionality presents a justiciable controversy. 5
    Further, we note that the State's position would effectively insulate the
    Supermajority Requirement from review. Under the State's theory, review would be
    proper only if the legislature ignored the Supermajority Requirement and passed a tax
    bill without a two-thirds majority vote. The State's position, however, would require
    the legislature to ignore the well-established principle that statutes are presumed
    constitutional, Island County v. State, 
    135 Wash. 2d 141
    , 146, 
    955 P.2d 377
     (1998).
    Given that the legislator respondents cannot ignore the Supermajority Requirement
    without violating their obligation to uphold the laws of the state, the State's position
    would render the Supermajority Requirement unreviewable and is therefore
    unacceptable.
    The State also argues that the court should dismiss this action as nonjusticiable
    because it dismissed similar disputes in three prior decisions-Walker, Brown, and
    Futurewise. This argument ignores the fundamental procedural distinctions between
    those cases and this one. Both Walker and Brown involved mandamus actions filed
    directly with this court, which differ greatly from the declaratory judgment action
    filed in superior court in this case. See Walker, 124 Wn.2d at 405; Brown, 
    165 Wash. 2d 5
    Having concluded that the dispute is justiciable, we decline to address whether the
    dispute constitutes a matter of great public importance warranting review.
    10
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    at 711. And, in Futurewise, the preelection challenge to an initiative's
    constitutionality at issue was nonjusticiable because it did not meet the stringent
    requirements for a preelection challenge. 161 Wn.2d at 411-12. Consequently, the
    fact that we have been unable to address the merits of the Supermajority Requirement
    previously does not inform the current discussion. The Supermajority Requirement's
    constitutionality is properly before us.
    In contrast, LEV's challenge to the Referendum Requirement is not justiciable.
    Unlike the Supermajority Requirement, the Referendum Requirement has not harmed
    any of the respondents. The legislator respondents do not claim it has nullified their
    votes, nor do any of the other respondents claim harm from the Referendum
    Requirement. Without identifying a legal interest at issue, let alone an injury to that
    interest, LEV cannot establish a justiciable controversy. See To-Ro Trade Shows, 144
    Wn.2d at 411-14. The circumstances surrounding the Referendum Requirement have
    not changed since we stated in Walker that addressing the requirement is premature.
    124 Wn.2d at 413.
    Perhaps the Legislature can comply with [the Supermajority
    Requirement], without taking action which will result in expenditures
    over the expenditure limit, such that no referral to the voters will occur
    under [the Referendum Requirement] .... The course of future events
    is, at this time, purely speculative and subject to a challenge when a
    specific dispute arises in regard to a particular bill.
    I d.
    11
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    Even though there is no identifiable legal interest harmed by the Referendum
    Requirement or specific dispute, LEV believes its challenge to the Referendum
    Requirement is justiciable because this court declared a similar provision
    unconstitutional in Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587 v. State, 
    142 Wash. 2d 183
    ,
    244, 
    11 P.3d 762
    , 
    27 P.3d 608
     (2000) (ATU). ATU, however, does not inform the
    current discussion because justiciability was explicitly not considered in ATU. !d. at
    203. The court refused to consider whether the dispute was justiciable because the
    party challenging justiciability had failed to properly brief the issue. !d. Granted, we
    noted in a footnote that the claims in the case were justiciable, id. at 203 n.4, but the
    footnote was merely dicta. Justiciability was properly briefed in this case, and LEV's
    challenge to the Referendum Requirement is not justiciable because no legal interest
    has been identified.
    We also note that the Referendum Requirement does not constitute a matter of
    major public importance warranting review under these circumstances. For the public
    importance exception to apply, the dispute must be ripe, Walker, 124 Wn.2d at 414,
    and, as discussed above, the Referendum Requirement has never been triggered or
    otherwise affected any legal interests. Accordingly, the constitutionality of the
    Referendum Requirement is not properly before this court.
    12
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    II.    Whether the Supermajority Requirement Violates Article II, Section 22
    The central question remaining before us is whether former RCW
    43.135.034(1), the Supermajority Requirement, is constitutional. The party
    challenging a statute's constitutionality "must prove that the statute is unconstitutional
    beyond a reasonable doubt." Sch. Dists. 'Alliance for Adequate Funding ofSpecial
    Educ. v. State, 
    170 Wash. 2d 599
    , 605, 
    244 P.3d 1
     (2010). This court has consistently
    stated that '"the legislature's power to enact a statute is unrestrained except where,
    either expressly or by fair inference, it is prohibited by the state and federal
    constitutions."' Wash. State Farm Bureau Fed'n v. Gregoire, 
    162 Wash. 2d 284
    , 300-
    01, 
    174 P.3d 1142
     (2007) (alteration omitted) (quoting State ex rel. Citizens Against
    Tolls v. Murphy, 151 Wn.2d 226,248, 
    88 P.3d 375
     (2004)). Thus, the question before
    us is whether article II, section 22 prohibits the legislature from requiring a two-thirds
    majority vote for tax legislation. We conclude that it does.
    Determining whether the constitution prohibits a particular legislative action
    requires the court to first examine the plain language of the constitutional provision at
    issue. Wash. Water Jet Workers Ass'n v. Yarbrough, 151 Wn.2d 470,477,90 P.3d 42
    (2004). The court gives the words "their common and ordinary meaning, as
    determined at the time they were drafted." !d. (citing State ex rel. 0 'Connell v.
    Slavin, 
    75 Wash. 2d 554
    , 557, 
    452 P.2d 943
     (1969)). The court may look to the
    constitutional history for context if there is ambiguity. Id. In this particular case, the
    13
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    historical context necessarily includes other provisions adopted contemporaneously
    with article II, section 22.
    The plain language of article II, section 22 states in relevant part, "No bill shall
    become a law unless on its final passage ... a majority of the members elected to each
    house be recorded thereon as voting in its favor." By providing the words their
    ordinary meaning near the time of ratification, the provision essentially states that a
    bill cannot become a law upon any condition less than receiving more than half the
    vote. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1578 (1899) (defining "unless" as
    "[u]pon any less condition than ... ; if not"); id. at 885 (defining "majority" as "[t]he
    greater number; more than half'). In other words, if a bill has become law, then it
    must have been supported by a simple majority vote.
    Under a commonsense understanding, any bill receiving a simple majority vote
    will become law. No language in the provision qualifies that requirement by stating a
    bill needs "at least a majority vote." The court's decision in Gerberding v. Munro,
    
    134 Wash. 2d 188
    , 207-11, 
    949 P.2d 1366
     (1998), supports such a reading. In
    Gerberding, this court rejected the argument that a negatively phrased constitutional
    provision merely sets a minimum requirement to which the legislature may add. !d.
    The court held that two constitutional provisions established the exclusive
    constitutional qualifications for state constitutional officers. Id. Despite the
    14
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    provisions' negative phrasing, 6 the court held that the legislature could not impose
    additional requirements, such as term limits. Id. at 210. In reaching its decision, the
    court relied on a principle favoring eligibility for office-a principle not evident from
    the plain language of the provision-and the framers' explicit consideration and
    rejection of term limits for the officers at issue. ld. at 202-04, 210.
    Gerberding can be contrasted with Robb v. City of Tacoma, 
    175 Wash. 580
    ,
    587, 
    28 P.2d 327
     (1933), where the court allowed the legislature to add requirements
    to a negatively phrased constitutional provision governing municipal debt. Article
    VIII, section 6 provided, "'No [municipality] shall for any purpose become indebted
    in any manner to an amount exceeding one and one-half per centum ... without the
    assent of three-fifths of the voters .... Provided further, that any [municipality], with
    such assent, may be allowed to become indebted to a larger amount.'" I d. at 584
    (emphasis added) (quoting WASH. CONST. art. VIII, § 6). The court focused on the
    permissive language in the final proviso and found it "carrie[ d] a very positive
    implication that the legislature still has the power to fix an additional limitation." ld.
    at 587.
    The State primarily relies on the negative phrasing of article II, section 22, and
    the reasoning in Robb, to claim the provision sets a minimum voting requirement
    6
    The provisions stated, "No person shall be eligible to the legislature who shall not be a
    citizen of the United States and a qualified voter in the district for which he is chosen"
    and "No person, except a citizen of the United States ... shall be eligible to hold any
    state office." WASH. CONST. art. II, § 7 (emphasis added), art. III, § 25 (emphasis added).
    15
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    only. Article II, section 22, however, is more like the provision in Gerberding than
    the provision in Robb. As in Gerberding, where a principle favored the result, there is
    an informal principle here favoring a simple majority vote for ordinary legislation.
    Additionally, like the constitutional history in Gerberding that supported the outcome,
    the constitutional language and history in this case illustrates that the framers never
    intended ordinary legislation to require a supermajority vote.
    This dispute also raises constitutional concerns not at issue in either
    Gerberding or Robb-the very form and function of this state's govermnent. The
    language and history of the constitution evince a principle favoring a simple majority
    vote for legislation. The State's proposed reading of article II, section 22 would
    fundamentally alter our system of government, and such alteration is possible only
    through constitutional amendment. Washington's government was founded as a
    representative democracy based on simple majority rule. See WASH. CONST. art. II,§
    1 (orig. text) ("The legislative powers shall be vested in a senate and house of
    representatives."), art. II,§ 22; Kristen L. Fraser, Method, Procedure, Means, and
    Manner: Washington's Law of Law-Making, 39 GONZ. L. REV. 447,449-50,480
    (2004) (noting that a simple majority is "the number of votes ordinarily required to
    pass a bill"). More importantly, the framers were particularly concerned with a
    tyranny of the minority. Fraser, supra, at 449-50 (noting that the framers feared
    "special interests that might capture or corrupt public institutions"); see also ROBERT
    16
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    F. UTTER & HUGH D. SPITZER, THE WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTION: A
    REFERENCE GUIDE 51 (G. Alan Tarred., 2002).
    This preference for simple majority rule is evident from the very language of
    the constitution, which required only a simple majority vote for ordinary legislation
    and reserved a supermajority vote for special circumstances. The seven supermajority
    requirements in the original constitution were all relegated to special circumstances,
    not the passage of ordinary legislation? These circumstances included expelling a
    member of the legislature or overriding a veto. WASH. CONST. art. II, § 9, art. III, §
    12. Thus, the framers were aware of the significance that a supermajority vote
    requirement entailed and consciously limited it to special circumstances; the passage
    of ordinary legislation is not one of those.
    When debating article II, section 22, the framers specifically included the
    majority vote requirement. THE JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON STATE
    CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION 1889: WITH ANALYTICAL INDEX 535-36 (Beverly
    Paulik Rosenow ed., 1999). More to the point, the framers rejected a move to exclude
    the words "majority vote." !d. at 536. They also rejected a motion to allow a majority
    of those present to pass a bill. !d. There was no discussion of whether the legislature
    should be allowed to alter this requirement. Had the framers wished to give the
    legislature the ability to alter the majority vote requirement of article II, section 22,
    7
    WASH. CONST. art. II, §§ 9, 36, art. III, § 12, art. IV, § 9, art. V, § 1, art. XXIII, §§ 1, 2.
    17
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    they could easily have included the proviso "and under such rules as the legislature
    shall prescribe" as the framers did in article II, section 32. The existence of the
    proviso in article II, section 32-also framed in the negative-illustrates that the
    framers intended the provisions in article II to be exhaustive unless otherwise
    provided. Any other reading would render the proviso in section 32 superfluous,
    contrary to our canons of constitutional interpretation. Wash. Econ. Dev. Fin. Auth. v.
    Grimm, 
    119 Wash. 2d 738
    , 746, 
    837 P.2d 606
     (1992) ("constitutional provisions should
    be construed so that no clause ... shall be superfluous").
    Moreover, as mentioned above, allowing a supermajority requirement for
    ordinary legislation alters our system of government. The framers of the United
    States Constitution expressed as much in the Federalist papers:
    If a pertinacious minority can controul the opinion of a majority
    respecting the best mode of conducting it; the majority in order that
    something may be done, must conform to the views of the minority; and
    thus the sense of the smaller number will over-rule that of the greater.
    THE FEDERALIST NO. 22, at 141 (Alexander Hamilton) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 1961);
    accord THE FEDERALIST No. 58 (James Madison). In the same way, a supermajority
    requirement for ordinary legislation would allow special interests to control resulting
    legislation. While the current Supermajority Requirement applies only to tax
    increases, if carried to its logical conclusion, the State's argument could allow all
    legislation to be conditioned on a supermaj ority vote. In other words, under the
    State's reasoning, a simple majority of the people or the legislature could require
    18
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    particular bills to receive 90 percent approval rather than just a two-thirds approval,
    thus essentially ensuring that those types of bills would never pass. Such a result is
    antithetical to the notion of a functioning government and should be rejected as such.
    Cf ATU, 142 Wn.2d at 242 (rejecting an argument because "[s]uch a result would be
    inconsistent with the representative form of government in this state").
    Finally, analogous authority from other states supports reading article II,
    section 22 as establishing both a minimum and a maximum vote requirement.
    Although the State argues the court should not consider authority from other states,
    we follow the precedent of both Gerberding and Robb where the court looked to such
    authority before reaching its conclusion. Gerberding, 134 Wn.2d at 206-08; Robb,
    175 Wash. at 588-92.
    The most analogous case, Alaskans for Efficient Government, Inc. v. State, held
    that a negatively phrased constitutional provision prohibited the legislature from
    requiring more than a simple majority vote for bills. 
    153 P.3d 296
    , 299, 302 (Alaska
    2007). The court noted that the negative phrasing of a constitutional provision does
    not automatically warrant distinguishing it from positively phrased provisions. !d. at
    300-01 (citing Powell v. McCormack, 
    395 U.S. 486
    , 538-39, 
    89 S. Ct. 1944
    , 
    23 L. Ed. 2d
     491 (1969); Gerberding, 134 Wn.2d at 201-03; Cathcart v. Meyer, 
    2004 WY 49
    ,
    
    88 P.3d 1050
    , 1070-71). The court also noted that every other state, except for
    Washington, that has passed a supermaj ority vote requirement has done so through
    19
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    constitutional amendment, thus indicating it is a subject properly addressed by
    constitutional amendment, not legislation. !d. at 299-300 & n.12 (listing 13 states that
    have adopted supermajority requirements through constitutional amendment).
    Additional support is found in a California Court of Appeal case. The court
    held that a negatively phrased constitutional provision prevented local governments
    from requiring a two-thirds majority vote for local tax legislation. Howard Jarvis
    Taxpayers Ass'n v. City ofSan Diego, 120 Cal. App. 4th 374,392, 
    15 Cal. Rptr. 3d 457
     (2004 ). Although the case involved local government authority, the court still
    addressed whether a negatively phrased constitutional provision could prohibit
    requiring more than simple majority vote for the passage of certain legislation. The
    court concluded that the "constitutional language clearly and unambiguously ...
    requires only a majority vote, and a two-thirds vote cannot be required." !d.
    Ultimately, article II, section 22 requires that bills receive a majority vote
    before they can become a law. Article II, section 22 is exhaustive under an ordinary
    reading of the provision. The Supermajority Requirement unconstitutionally amends
    the constitution by imposing a two-thirds vote requirement for tax legislation. More
    importantly, the Supermajority Requirement substantially alters our system of
    government, thus enabling a tyranny of the minority. The framers were aware of the
    extraordinary nature of a supermajority requirement as evidenced by their decision to
    use it only under special circumstances. The passage of ordinary legislation is not one
    20
    League ofEduc. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    of those circumstances. If the people and the legislature wish to adopt such a
    requirement, they must do so through constitutional amendment. We also note that
    our holding is supported by other jurisdictions that have addressed this issue.
    Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's decision.
    III.   Severability
    Next, we must determine whether the unconstitutional Supermajority
    Requirement is severable from the remaining provisions of former RCW 43.135.034.
    Whether provisions should be severed depends on
    "whether the constitutional and unconstitutional provisions are so
    connected ... that it could not be believed that the legislature would
    have passed one without the other; or where the part eliminated is so
    intimately connected with the balance of the act as to make it useless to
    accomplish the purposes of the legislature."
    State v. Abrams, 
    163 Wash. 2d 277
    , 285-86, 
    178 P.3d 1021
     (2008) (alteration in original)
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Hall v. Niemer, 
    97 Wash. 2d 574
    , 582, 
    649 P.2d 98
     (1982)). Because former RCW 43.135.034 was passed by initiative, we must
    determine if the voters, not the legislature, intended severability. See McGowan v.
    State, 
    148 Wash. 2d 278
    , 296, 
    60 P.3d 67
     (2002).
    Here, the complete text ofi-1053 contained a severability clause stating, "If
    any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held
    invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or
    circumstances is not affected." LAws OF 2011, ch. 1, § 7. Where the initiative passed
    21
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    by the people contains a severability clause, the court may view this as "'conclusive
    as to the circumstances asserted' unless it can be said that the declaration is obviously
    false on its face." McGowan, 148 Wn.2d at 296 (quoting State v. Anderson, 81 Wn.2d
    234,239, 
    501 P.2d 184
     (1972)). LEV claims it is obviously false because the intent of
    the initiative was to impose both the Supermajority Requirement and the Referendum
    Requirement.
    However, the fact that voters intended to impose both requirements is
    inconsequential. Anytime a bill or initiative contains multiple provisions, it can be
    argued that the legislators or voters intended to pass multiple provisions. Whether
    those provisions were intended to be severable is a different inquiry. More
    importantly, the voters intended the initiative to make passing tax increases more
    difficult. LAws OF 2011, ch. 1, § 1 ("These important policies ensure that taking more
    of the people's money will always be an absolute last resort."). The Referendum
    Requirement hinders the legislature's ability to pass tax increases in a different way
    from the Supermajority Requirement. Thus, the Referendum Requirement serves the
    voters' intent even absent the Supermajority Requirement. There is no reason to
    believe the voters passed the Referendum Requirement only because it was
    accompanied by the Supermajority Requirement. Consequently, the unconstitutional
    Supermajority Requirement is severable from the remainder of the statute and the
    Referendum Requirement stands.
    22
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    CONCLUSION
    As Justice Robert F. Utter affirmed, "Both history and uncontradicted authority
    make clear that '"[i]t is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department
    to say what the law is.'"" In re Salary ofJuvenile Dir., 
    87 Wash. 2d 232
    , 241, 
    552 P.2d 163
     (1976) (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Nixon, 
    418 U.S. 683
    , 703,
    
    94 S. Ct. 3090
    , 
    41 L. Ed. 2d 1039
     (1974) (quoting Marbury, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) at
    176)). Today we hold that article II, section 22 prohibits either the people or the
    legislature from passing legislation requiring more than a simple majority for the
    passage of tax legislation-or any other ordinary legislation. Such a result is
    supported by article II, section 22's plain language and the language from surrounding
    provisions, section 22's history, and current case law. Accordingly, we affirm the
    trial court's decision with respect to the Supermajority Requirement. But we reverse
    the trial court's decision as it relates to the Referendum Requirement because we hold
    the dispute is not justiciable. We therefore do not reach the merits of the Referendum
    Requirement's constitutionality.
    Our holding today is not a judgment on the wisdom of requiring a
    supermajority for the passage of tax legislation. Such judgment is left to the
    legislative branch of our govermnent. Should the people and the legislature still wish
    to require a supermajority vote for tax legislation, they must do so through
    constitutional amendment, not through legislation.
    23
    League of Educ. Voters v. State
    No. 87425-5
    ~¥--
    WE CONCUR:
    League ofEducation Voters v. State
    Dissent by C. Johnson, J.
    No. 87425-5
    C. JOHNSON, J. (dissenting)-In its eagerness to embroil itself in the
    political arena, the majority abandons any semblance of judicial restraint to declare
    the process of legislative enactment constitutionally infirm. For the past two
    decades, the people of this state have repeatedly voted for the supermajority
    provision, as has the legislature when no initiative occurred. The majority hardly
    recognizes, let alone analyzes, that this court has been repeatedly asked to step in
    and decide this issue, and we have consistently held and rejected that invitation. In
    Walker v. Munro, 
    124 Wash. 2d 402
    , 
    879 P.2d 920
     (1994), in Futurewise v. Reed,
    
    161 Wash. 2d 407
    , 
    166 P.3d 708
     (2007), and again in Brown v. Owen, 
    165 Wash. 2d 706
    , 
    206 P.3d 310
     (2009), we rejected the invitation to engage in this political
    dispute, exercising the wisdom, restraint, and temperance not to step outside the
    court's constitutional authority. Evidently something has changed, though the
    majority does not tell us what, to cause it to abandon these limiting principles and
    chart a new course for the court to more actively engage in the political process.
    This change is both unwise and unprecedented.
    No. 87425-5
    The majority summarily claims that since, procedurally, this case involves
    review of a declaratory judgment that makes a difference. But this procedural
    distinction does not make sense and is unsupported by any logical analysis.
    Justiciability questions are broader and more important than the specific
    mechanism used to get a case in front of the court. Surely more than this
    distinction is required to disregard 20 years of precedent. The majority does not
    tell us why in this case the issue must suddenly be answered when, in our prior
    cases, addressing this exact issue, we concluded that any resolution of the dispute
    required a legislative solution. Concepts of judicial restraint, justiciability, and
    separation of powers and issues raising political questions do not change based on
    the type of proceeding.
    Although these doctrines do somewhat overlap, they have been applied in
    those cases where the issue raised required a determination of whether and when
    courts should decide an issue. These concepts of judicial restraint are not new or
    remarkable and have been applied consistently in cases raising the exact same
    issue presented here.
    The majority anchors its cursory analysis of justiciability by focusing on
    Substitute House Bill (SHB) 2078's failure to pass. SUBSTITUTE H.B. 2078, 62d
    Leg., 1st Spec. Sess. (Wash. 2011). However, the bill focused on by the majority
    2
    No. 87425-5
    was later largely passed through the legislative process and enacted into law. SHB
    2078 dealt with closing certain tax loopholes. The problem with the majority's
    assertion is that a core component of SHB 2078 did pass. The legislature instead
    enacted Engrossed Senate Bill (ESB) 6635, 62d Leg., 2d Spec. Sess. (Wash. 2012),
    which, in substantive effect, contained the exact language of SHB 2078. Compare
    SHB 2078, § 2(3)(a)-(e), with ESB 6635, § 102(3)(a)-(e). The majority does not
    explain, presumably because no credible explanation exists, how the enactment of
    a law supports its conclusion that the political process in that enactment is
    constitutionally infirm.
    When this bill was first proposed, the house majority vote to enact SHB
    2078 could have resulted in several outcomes, as is always the political reality.
    The speaker could have ruled it passed, and it then would go to the senate, which
    could have passed it, rejected it, or revised it. If it passed both the house and the
    senate and was submitted to the governor, it could have been signed into law or
    vetoed. No certainty exists as to what ultimately would have occurred in the
    political legislative process had the speaker ruled "favorably." What did happen in
    this case is that the "essence" of SHB 2078 went through the legislative process
    and was later enacted as part ofESB 6635. The majority does not tell us or
    acknowledge in any way how the passage of these provisions can support a finding
    3
    No. 87425-5
    of justiciability based on the same provisions' failure to pass. At the very least,
    that passage moots any dispute concerning how votes were counted or how the
    speaker ruled on SHB 2078.
    The legislative process works precisely this way, and any disgruntled
    legislator can pursue a legislative remedy. When the speaker ruled against the bill,
    a member could have challenged that decision and ask that it be overturned, which
    may require majority vote. The proposal could have, as here, resurfaced as part of
    a different proposal. The proposal might have been relegated by its sponsors into
    the political process and debate and prioritized as part of that process. The point is
    that this effort to enact a legislative proposal has consistently been recognized by
    this court as a political legislative action, in which courts have not interfered, nor
    should they. Because of the multitude of possible outcomes, the essence of the
    political legislative process involves many competing political choices into which
    courts should not intrude to act as referee. It should be further noted that the
    majority's decision does absolutely nothing that affects SHB 2078, which, as
    indicated, later passed.
    In leaping to its result that the case is justiciable, the majority incredibly
    cites the "completely nullified" statement from the United States Supreme Court
    decision in Raines v. Byrd, 
    521 U.S. 811
    , 823, 
    117 S. Ct. 2312
    , 
    138 L. Ed. 2d 849
    4
    No. 87425-5
    (1997). Because the bill was enacted, the majority's claim is simply wrong that the
    legislators' votes were '"completely nullified.'" Majority at 9 (quoting Raines,
    521 U.S. at 823). Moreover, the majority does not acknowledge that in Raines the
    United States Supreme Court rejected this argument. Raines involved a challenge
    brought by members of Congress claiming the line-item veto, which gave the
    president a "veto-type" power over acts passed by Congress, effectuated a
    complete nullification of the votes supporting passage of those acts. In concluding
    that the Court lacked jurisdiction to decide the dispute, it recognized two principles
    that directly apply to the individual legislators here. First, the Court found that the
    individual members of Congress could not represent the interests of Congress
    itself. Second, the court recognized that, as here, an adequate political remedy
    existed to resolve the dispute, a principle which our cases have consistently held.
    Raines, 521 U.S. at 824, 829; see Brown, 
    165 Wash. 2d 706
    ; Walker, 
    124 Wash. 2d 402
    .
    The majority misrepresents the holding of Raines, which, if thoroughly reviewed,
    rejects the majority's position here.
    Similarly, the majority's claim that the determination of justiciability hinges
    on the nature of the proceedings, declaratory action versus original jurisdiction,
    lacks foundation and misunderstands the concept of justiciability. "Justiciability"
    is defined as "[t]he quality or state of being appropriate or suitable for adjudication
    5
    No. 87425-5
    by a court." BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 943 (9th ed. 2009). In determining
    justiciability, it makes no difference where or how a claim is instituted. Our prior
    cases do not support any distinction, and the majority (absent the bare assertion
    that a distinction exists) cites no case or authority where such a difference was
    recognized. No such cases exist.
    If the issue in this case looks somewhat familiar, we recently decided this
    exact issue. In Brown, we rejected a challenge to a decision made by the lieutenant
    governor that a bill failed to pass by not receiving the required supermajority vote,
    which is the precise claim brought here. We extensively discussed and analyzed
    the history of the supermajority requirement. In that case we recognized that,
    under the senate rules, the decision could have been overruled by a simple majority
    vote. We correctly found that this type of dispute involved the legislative process
    and was a political question and, utilizing a separation of powers analysis, we
    would not intervene to referee. We have consistently and wisely embraced this
    approach since this supermajority restriction was first challenged in Walker. The
    majority makes no meaningful attempt to discuss, analyze, or distinguish the
    Brown case or any of our prior case holdings from the issue again raised here.
    In addition to the comprehensive discussion and analysis in Brown, our
    rulings have been consistent on this issue. The list of cases includes Walker and
    6
    No. 87425-5
    Washington State Farm Bureau Federation v. Gregoire, 
    162 Wash. 2d 284
    , 
    174 P.3d 1142
     (2007). These cases are not unique but are instead consistent with the results
    in many other cases. State v. Manussier, 
    129 Wash. 2d 652
    , 670, 
    921 P.2d 473
     (1996)
    (political questions are not within the judicial power to determine); Roehl v. Pub.
    Util. Dist. No. 1 of Chelan County, 
    43 Wash. 2d 214
    , 238, 
    261 P.2d 92
     (1953)
    (political questions lie outside the cognizance of the judiciary); see also Gilbreath
    v. Pac. Coast Coal & Oil Co., 
    75 Wash. 2d 255
    , 259, 
    450 P.2d 173
     (1969) (taxation
    issues are not within the purview of the courts in the absence of an attack upon the
    constitutionality of the legislation involved); Skidmore v. Fuller, 
    59 Wash. 2d 818
    ,
    822, 
    370 P.2d 975
     (1962) (the truth or falsity of the allegations in a recall demand
    is a political question to be determined by the voters); Capitol Hill Methodist
    Church v. City of Seattle, 
    52 Wash. 2d 359
    , 368, 
    324 P.2d 1113
     (1958) (the power to
    vacate streets is a political function, which, in the absence of collusion, fraud, or
    interference with a vested right, will not be judicially reviewed); State ex rel.
    Donohue v. Coe, 
    49 Wash. 2d 410
    , 417, 
    302 P.2d 202
     (1956) (determination of
    questions arising incidental to the submission of an initiative measure to the voters
    is a political and not a judicial question, except when there may be express
    statutory or written constitutional law making the question judicial); State ex rel.
    York v. Ed. ofComm'rs, 
    28 Wash. 2d 891
    , 911, 
    184 P.2d 577
     (1947) (protection of
    7
    No. 87425-5
    the public from unreasonable uses of the highways is a political question, not a
    judicial one). The majority never mentions these cases or acknowledges why these
    holdings are being abandoned.
    The majority also fails to apply or meaningfully analyze the factors our
    cases require when determining justiciability. We have defined a "justiciability
    controversy" as
    "( 1) ... an actual, present and existing dispute, or the mature seeds of
    one, as distinguished from a possible, dormant, hypothetical,
    speculative, or moot disagreement, (2) between parties having genuine
    and opposing interests, (3) which involves interests that must be direct
    and substantial, rather than potential, theoretical, abstract or academic,
    and (4) a judicial determination of which will be final and
    conclusive."
    To-Ro Trade Shows v. Collins, 
    144 Wash. 2d 403
    , 411, 
    27 P.3d 1149
     (2001)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Diversified Indus. Dev. Corp. v. Ripley, 
    82 Wash. 2d 811
    , 815, 
    514 P.2d 137
     (1973)). We have elaborated that "the four justiciability
    factors must 'coalesce' to ensure that the court will be rendering a final judgment
    on an actual dispute between opposing parties with a genuine stake in the
    resolution." To-Ro Trade Shows, 144 Wn.2d at 411 (quoting Diversified Indus.
    Dev. Corp., 82 Wn.2d at 815). None of the factors are satisfied here. As indicated,
    the first factor is not satisfied because the dispute over SHB 2078 no longer exists
    8
    No. 87425-5
    as it later passed under ESB 6635 and became law. Any current dispute is
    hypothetical at this time and certainly moot as to SHB 2078.
    As to the second factor, perhaps an argument can be envisioned that the
    parties have opposing interests, but no genuine dispute actually exists concerning a
    current situation. Any disagreement between the parties involves what might
    possibly occur in the future in the legislative process. Because of this, even
    assuming the second factor is satisfied, the third factor is not because we can only
    speculate as to what bills may be pursued sometime in the future. Based on these
    factors, justiciable controversy does not exist in this case.
    The fourth factor could be established under the majority's holding but,
    predictably, the future dispute over the raising of taxes and political choices about
    the appropriation of revenues involves ongoing political discourse, which this court
    lacks power to affect or influence. Under any approach, the dispute is, at best,
    possible to recur in the future.
    Whether the justiciability factors are thoroughly analyzed or the holdings of
    our prior cases are applied and followed, this case is nonjusticiable. The decision
    of the superior court should be reversed and the matter remanded with direction to
    dismiss.
    9
    No. 87425-5
    10
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    Dissent by J.M. Johnson, J.
    No. 87425-5
    J.M. JOHNSON, J. (dissenting)-Article II of our constitution, as modified
    by Amendment 7 to authorize initiatives and referenda, requires action on the part
    of the legislature or a direct vote of the people to resolve legislative political issues
    such as taxation. The majority ironically overrides our constitution and prior case
    law to enforce an invented policy concern: the fear that laws requiring a
    supermajority to raise taxes permit a "tyranny of the minority." Majority at 20.
    There is, of course, no historical evidence justifying such a concern in Washington.
    With regard to taxation, the historical record in this state is to the contrary; taxes
    often need a special vote of the people to qualify or pass. School levies and special
    assessments for special purpose districts are only a few examples. 1 See, e.g.,
    CONST. art. VII,§ 2(a) (excess levies require "three-fifths of the voters ... [and/or]
    1
    The United States Supreme Court's decision upholding the "supermajority" requirements is
    discussed infra.
    1
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    the number of voters voting 'yes' on the proposition shall constitute three-fifths of
    a number equal to forty percent of the total number of voters voting in such taxing
    district at th~ last preceding general election .... "); Gordon v. Lance, 
    403 U.S. 1
    ,
    7, 
    91 S. Ct. 1889
    , 
    29 L. Ed. 2d 273
     (1971) (upholding a supermajority
    requirement).
    There is considerable irony in today's decision given the majority's claimed
    fear of tyrannical minority control. Through a single decision, a court of nine
    people (actually only six votes) is imposing their policy preference over that of the
    1,575,655 voters who passed Initiative 1053 (I-1053) and the millions who
    qualified and passed similar tax protections. 2 ' 3 I regretfully observe that this court
    has become the tyrannous minority it purports to guard against. This violation of
    2
    I-1053 passed in 2010 with 1,575,655 (63.75%) votes for and 895,833 (36.25%) votes against.
    November 02, 2010 General Election Results: Initiative Measure 1053 Concerning tax andfee
    increases imposed by state government, WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST. (Nov. 29, 2010 9:49AM),
    http://vote. wa. gov/results/20 1011 02/Initiative-Measure-1 0 53 -Concerning-tax -and-fee-increases-
    imposed-by-state-government.html; see also infra App. A.
    3
    This court is also imposing its agenda over that of the 1,892,969 voters who passed Initiative
    1185 in 2012. November 06, 2010 General Election Results: Initiative Measure 1185
    Concerning tax and fee increases imposed by state government; WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST.
    (Nov. 27, 2012 4:55PM), http://vote.wa.gov/results/20121106/Initiative -Measure-No-1185-
    Concerns-tax-and-fee-increases-imposed-by-state-government.html. After its initial adoption in
    1993, each time the supermajority requirement has been put before the voters it has passed by a
    higher percentage of the vote than the last time. See infra App. A.
    2
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    our constitution can only detract from public respect for this court and its
    decisions. I therefore dissent. 4
    The majority opinion suffers from three obvious and grave infirmities. First,
    the majority's historical interpretation of the Washington Constitution and its
    separation of powers incorrectly place the court in a position of preeminence over
    the legislature and the people. Second, the majority's plain language reading of
    article II, section 22 is contrived and illogical. It will be repeatedly observed that
    our founders could have written article II, section 22 to read as follows: "Every bill
    attaining a simple majority shall become law." They choose not to and, as is
    further explained below, were aware of other states' constitutional provisions in
    existence at the time that more clearly establish a simple majority vote as a ceiling.
    Third, the majority's historical analysis of article II, section 22 ignores the only
    evidence this court has ruled admissible to show our framers' intent.                        This
    evidence conclusively establishes that the framers intended this section to create a
    quorum requirement for bill passage.
    4
    I also join in senior Justice C. Johnson's dissent, which correctly analyzes the jurisdiction of
    this court and the many cases in which we have held partisan political matters are charged to the
    legislature, the elected governor, and the people, not to the courts.
    3
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    This state's geographical size and the slow means of travel available at that
    time could enable legislators from areas closer to the capitol to meet and pass
    legislation before legislators could arrive from areas located far away.     Snow-
    clogged mountain passes were likely a common source of this problem. Thus,
    adopting the simple majority language would not protect the citizens of this state
    living in remote areas. The framers had to adopt article II, section 22 as it is
    currently written in order to secure a quorum requirement and protect voters living
    in the far comers of our state. See Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention,
    SEATTLE TIMES, Aug. 9, 1889, at 1, in WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTIONAL
    CONVENTION 1889: CONTEMPORARY NEWSPAPER ARTICLES (Marian Gallagher Law
    Library 1998) (further discussed infra).
    ANALYSIS
    I.     The Washington State Constitution First and Foremost Serves to Protect
    Individual Rights and Private Property
    Incredibly, this six-vote majority overrides the votes of an overwhelming
    majority of Washington voters out of an invented concern that laws like 1-1053
    could impose a "tyranny of the minority." Majority at 20. This policy concern is
    better directed at opposing a constitutional amendment that would establish a
    permanent two-thirds majority requirement than it is for a court decision
    4
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    overturning an initiative that can be changed by the legislature or be periodically
    renewed by a majority of the voters.
    In the Federalist papers, the founding fathers of our nation briefly addressed
    their desire to guard against minority control in a few specific policy areas. See
    THE FEDERALIST No. 22, at 141-42 (Alexander Hamilton) (Jacob E. Cooke ed.,
    1961); THE FEDERALIST No. 58, at 392 (James Madison) (Jacob E. Cooke ed.,
    1961).     The majority's myopic reliance on this narrow concern, however, is
    unfounded.
    First, historical accounts indicate that the framers of the Washington
    Constitution had goals and anxieties distinct from those of the framers of the
    United States Constitution. Above all, the Washington Constitution is predicated
    on the protection of individual rights, including those related to property, which is
    clearly affected by taxes. The framers declared the primacy of individual rights in
    their vision of the role of state government in the very first section of the
    constitution: "All political power is inherent in the people, and governments derive
    their just powers from the consent of the governed, and are established to protect
    and maintain individual rights." CONST. art. I, § 1. A key component of that
    protection is the direct influence on state government the constitution affords
    voters. Second, more so than any contrived "tyranny of the minority," the framers
    5
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No.   87425~5
    sought to prevent corruption and special interests from controlling state
    government.       Again, the framers and those who have drafted constitutional
    amendments 7 and 8 thought that this was best accomplished by allowing the
    voters to have more of a direct say in the management of their government, not
    less.
    Washington's framers forged a distinct path predicated on mistrust of
    government and the primacy of individual rights. The citizens of Washington were
    not alone in these views toward government. The Washington Constitution was
    adopted during a period of national skepticism toward legislative bodies
    collectively referred to as "populis[m]." ROBERT F. UTTER & HUGH D. SPITZER,
    THE WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTION: A REFERENCE GUIDE 50-51 (2002).
    Even after the ratification of a constitution especially designed to limit
    government and promote individual rights, Washingtonians have felt the need to
    periodically reinforce popular control. Legislators (and courts) sometimes forget
    article I, section I: it is the citizens of this state that empower the legislature. The
    power is vested in the people.            Consequently, in 1912, out of a concern that
    individual rights needed further protection from elected (and sometimes corrupt)
    officials, Washingtonians passed Amendment 7, which established the power of
    initiative and referendum.        Passed concurrently, Amendment 8 allowed for the
    6
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    recall of all elected officers except judges. 5 UTTER & SPITZER, supra, at 50. To
    this day, the powers of initiative, referendum, and recall vest in the people the
    ability to hold government accountable. The majority essentially contends that
    because our nation's founders expressed their concerns about minority control in a
    few areas of national concern, Washington's framers intended to keep Washington
    voters from limiting the power of the legislature to tax.                Given Washington's
    unique reliance on popular governance, the majority's contention is unfounded.
    Historical records reveal that the nation's founders' main fear was that some
    states could gain disproportionate power in Congress through bicameralism. See
    THE FEDERALIST No. 58, at 392 (James Madison) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 1961). In
    Federalist No. 22, quoted in the majority opinion, Alexander Hamilton expressed
    the additional concern that a minority of the states might be able to prevent the
    nation from making peace during wartime. THE FEDERALIST No. 22, at 141-42
    (Alexander Hamilton) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 1961). Fortunately, history has proved
    these concerns to be overstated. Indeed, this has never been a problem. Certainly,
    these particular national issues were irrelevant to the framers of our state
    constitution. Washington's framers did not have to consider national security or
    5
    Raising one obvious and simple solution, if the people decide that their judges are disregarding
    their constitution, recall should apply to judges as well.
    7
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    congressional decision making when designing Washington's government.
    Washington's framers instead faced more pressing local and personal 1ssues
    relating to private property, individual rights, and corruption in government.
    In fact, the prospect of a tyranny (or corruption) of the majority was a far
    more pressing concern for drafters of a state constitution. While the United States
    Constitution was created to grant limited and enumerated powers to the federal
    government, the Washington State Constitution was created to limit the broader,
    nearly plenary, police power of the state. UTTER & SPITZER, supra, at 2. In 1889,
    the framers were justifiably worried that a legislature would harm minority groups
    through abuse of its power. The historical record is replete with criticism in this
    vein. See, e.g., Lebbeus J. Knapp, The Origin of the Constitution of the State of
    Washington, 4 WASH. HIST. Q. 227, 250 (1913) ("These restrictions on legislative
    action then, we may conclude, are indicative of the onward march of true
    democracy, for, of all oppressive and unjust instruments of government the
    legislature is the greatest and most irresponsible.") A supermajority requirement
    for the passage of legislation is a powerful tool for combating abuse by a short-
    term majority and addresses the concerns of the framers. 6
    6
    I feel compelled to again point out that it is a majority of the voters who have imposed this
    limitation on the legislature's power.
    8
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    Furthermore, providing such protection against taxation is affirmed in
    express United States Supreme Court precedent.                 See Gordon, 403 U.S. at 7
    (holding that state constitutional requirement of 60 percent of voters to approve
    bonded indebtedness and approve the tax increase to pay for the debt did not
    violate equal protection even though each vote who favored taxes would have a
    proportionately smaller impact on the outcome of the election than those
    opposed). 7
    In Federalist No. 10, James Madison directly noted that taxation                      IS   a
    tempting tool for a majority to use in its abuse of a minority:
    The apportionment of taxes on the various descriptions of property, is
    an act which seems to require the most exact impartiality; yet, there is
    perhaps no legislative act in which greater opportunity and temptation
    are given to a predominant party, to trample on the rules of justice.
    Every shilling with which they over-burden the inferior number, is a
    shilling saved to their own pockets.
    THE FEDERALIST No. 10, at 60 (James Madison) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 1961). This
    idea was echoed by Chief Justice John Marshall when he penned the axiomatic
    words "the power to tax involves the power to destroy." McCulloch v. Maryland,
    
    17 U.S.
    ( 4 Wheat.) 316, 431, 
    4 L. Ed. 579
     (1819).
    7
    I- 1053's supermajority requirement is not without precedent at the federal level. United States
    Senate rules permit filibuster by allowing senators to speak as long as they wish unless a three-
    fifths vote closes the debate by invoking cloture. Standing Rules of the Senate Rule XXII, § 2.
    9
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    The majority correctly notes that Washington's framers were familiar with
    supermajority requirements and specifically employed their use seven times in the
    constitution. See majority at 16 n.7. Absolutely no evidence exists, however, to
    suggest that the framers intended those uses to be exclusive. There is certainly no
    constitutional provision to that effect.
    In Federalist No. 51, James Madison wrote, "In framing a government
    which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you
    must first enable the government to controul the governed; and in the next place,
    oblige it to controul itself." THE FEDERALIST No. 51, at 349 (James Madison)
    (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 1961 ). Through the initiative process, the voters of this state
    placed a limitation on the legislature's power to tax, which fully accords with our
    state constitution.      This court's interference today unlawfully invalidates a
    legitimate action of the people of this state under the initiative power. See CoNST.
    art. II, § 1 ("[T]he people reserve to themselves the power to propose bills, laws,
    and to enact or reject the same at the polls, independent of the legislature, and also
    reserve power, at their own option, to approve or reject at the polls any act, item,
    section, or part of any bill, act, or law passed by the legislature.")
    10
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    II.    The Plain Language of Article II, Section 22 Allows the People to Institute
    Supermajority Requirements Through Initiative
    T~e   majority would rewrite the plain language of article II, section 22 to
    mean that "any bill receiving a simple majority vote will become law." Majority at
    13-14.     This reading defies logic and assumes the framers were incapable of
    expressing themselves clearly.
    Article II, section 22 reads, "No bill shall become a law unless ... a majority
    of the members elected to each house be recorded thereon as voting in its favor."
    CoNST. art. II, § 22. This section establishes the principle that any vote less than a
    majority is not enough to pass a bill. Put another way, this language describes the
    circumstances under which a bill does not pass. The likely frequent problem of
    delay in arriving from across the state for the legislative sessions was anticipated.
    Snow-blocked passes were common, travel was hard and slow, and the likely
    impact fell directly on legislators from eastern Washington.
    Had the framers wished to require only a simple majority vote for passage,
    they could have worded the section to accomplish this.          Wording as simple as
    "Every bill attaining a simple majority shall become a law" would have sufficed.
    In fact, the framers could have modeled such a simple provision after a number of
    other states' constitutions in existence at that time. Notably, Washington's framers
    drew from the Indiana Constitution, which contains a provision much more akin to
    11
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    a voting floor and ceiling than does our constitution. See Arthur S. Beardsley,
    Sources of the Washington State Constitution, in 2011-2012 LEGISLATIVE MANUAL
    386. Article IV, section 25 ofindiana's 1851 constitution reads: "A majority of all
    the members elected to each House, shall be necessary to pass every bill or joint
    resolution; and all bills and joint resolutions so passed, shall be signed by the
    Presiding Officers of the respective Houses." This language has not been amended
    and remains in Indiana's constitution today.
    Indiana's article IV, section 25 stands m stark contrast to Washington's
    article II, sections 22 and 32, which read, "No bill shall become a law unless ... a
    majority of the members elected to each house be recorded thereon as voting in its
    favor [and] [n]o bill shall become a law until the same shall have been signed by
    the presiding officer of each of the two houses."                    CoNST.    art. II, §§ 22, 32. 8
    Washington's language, worded in the negative, describes only the circumstances
    under which a bill will not become a law. These include not gaining a majority
    vote and not being signed by the presiding officers.                        In contrast, Indiana's
    positively worded provision provides that all bills gaining a majority shall be
    signed by the presiding officers.              Having derived 7 sections directly from the
    8
    It is not clear how the court's majority deals with abstention in a close vote.
    12
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    Indiana Constitution and creating 10 others with marked similarities, the
    Washington framers could have written a positively worded provision similar to
    Indiana's article IV, section 25. See Beardsley, supra, at 387. They did not by
    choice. We must presume that the words were deliberately chosen by the framers
    to effectuate their desired goals. The voters read and ratified what was written.
    Importantly, the majority makes another logical error in order to reach their
    rewrite of article II, section 22. They explain, "In other words, if a bill has become
    law, then it must have been supported by a simple majority vote." Majority at 14.
    The next sentence reads, "Under a commonsense understanding, any bill receiving
    a simple majority vote will become law." Id.         These two sentences present a
    textbook example of a logical fallacy: they confuse necessary and sufficient
    conditions. The majority is correct, a simple majority is necessary for the passage
    of a bill. However, the majority is wrong when it contends that just because a
    simple majority is necessary, it is also always sufficient.        The majority has
    obviously forgotten abstentions or "present" votes. Furthermore, the confusion of
    necessary and sufficient conditions defies basic rules of logic and provides support
    for the majority to misinterpret the plain language of article II, section 22 as
    written by its founders and ratified by the state. See majority at 14.
    13
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    The legislature has itself relied upon the plain language of article II, section
    22 to affirm supermajority requirements and has specifically done so with regard to
    taxes.    For example, Initiative 601 (I-601), originally enacted in 1993, which
    created a two-thirds supermajority requirement for raising taxes, was codified at
    chapter 43.135 RCW (the Taxpayer Protection Act or TPA). See Brown v. Owen,
    
    165 Wash. 2d 706
    , 712, 
    206 P.3d 310
     (2009). Since then, "'[t]he TPA has been
    revised, amended, and reenacted many times."' Id. at 713 (quoting Wash. State
    Farm Bureau Fed'n v. Gregoire, 
    162 Wash. 2d 284
    , 292, 
    174 P.3d 1142
     (2007)).
    The legislature "reenacted and reaffirmed" Initiative 601 (I -601) in 1998. LAws OF
    1998, ch. 321, § 14. The legislature later strengthened portions ofthe TPA, again
    reenacting and reaffirming it before finally temporarily suspending some of its
    requirements. Brown, 165 Wn.2d at 713. The majority's holding today implies
    that the history of the TP A shows frequent unconstitutional legislative action.
    Unlike the majority, I presume that the legislators have acted in accordance with
    their oaths of office to uphold the state constitution. Given the plain language of
    article II, section 22, I am confident in this conclusion.
    III.    The History Surrounding Article II, Section 22 Shows that the Section
    Simply Establishes a Quorum Requirement
    The majority opinion disregards historical evidence that clearly establishes
    that the framers intended to create a quorum requirement, not prospectively
    14
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    prevent supermajority requirements.            See Proceedings of the Constitutional
    Convention, SEATTLE TIMES, Aug. 9, 1889, at 1. The proceedings of Washington's
    constitutional convention were recorded. The members of the convention recorded
    summaries of motions and votes in the "Minutes of Proceedings." Court reporters
    did take shorthand notes but no appropriation covered the cost of transcribing the
    shorthand notes and they were destroyed.            THE JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON
    STATE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION 1889: WITH ANALYTICAL INDEX, at vi-vii
    (Beverly Paulik Rosenow ed., 1999).
    We have previously recognized, in the absence of transcripts, we must rely
    on the proceedings of the convention as recorded in newspaper articles published
    at the time. Fortunately, these articles remain as an important tool to ascertain the
    intent of the framers. See Witters v. Comm'n for the Blind, 
    112 Wash. 2d 363
    , 385,
    
    771 P.2d 1119
     (1989) ("[T]his court has used contemporary newspapers' accounts
    of the state constitutional convention to supplement the official minutes since no
    verbatim record of the convention exists." (citing Yelle v. Bishop, 
    55 Wash. 2d 286
    ,
    293, 
    347 P.2d 1081
     (1959))).
    The minutes of the convention indicate that there were two relevant motions
    concerning article II, section 22:
    Motion:        Turner moved that the words "majority vote" be [ ]
    stricken.
    15
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    Action:       Motion lost.
    Motion:       Power moved to insert a provision that a majority of
    those present could pass a bill.
    Action:       Motion lost.
    THE JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION                     1889,
    supra, at 536. These motions and rulings were published in both the Seattle Times
    and the Tacoma Ledger.
    The Seattle Times article from August 9, 1889, describes the first motion:
    "Turner moved to strike out the provision that a majority vote of the members
    elected be necessary to pass a bill. The motion was lost and the section passed."
    Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention,       SEATTLE TIMES,   Aug. 9, 1889, at 1.
    This article provides a key piece of information that is otherwise left out of the
    minutes: namely, that the debate surrounding article II, section 22 was whether the
    majority of the members elected could pass a bill, as opposed to simply the
    majority of members present.
    This is further supported by the second motion, to insert a provision that a
    majority of those present could pass a bill. This motion also failed, and the article
    II, section 22 controlling today was enacted. When read in this light, article II,
    section 22 is clearly and unequivocally a quorum requirement.
    That article II, section 22 is a quorum requirement is understandable given
    the historical context within which the framers were operating. As I noted before,
    16
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    m 1889, the state was still relatively undeveloped, rendering travel difficult and
    unexpected delays not uncommon-storm- or snow-closed passes have been noted
    supra. The framers did not want legislators from areas closer to the capitol to be
    able to pass legislation in the absence of legislators traveling from areas farther
    away. Because the debate surrounding article II, section 22 related to a quorum
    requirement, no evidence exists to support the majority's conclusion that the
    framers intended to prevent the institution of a supermajority requirement.
    CONCLUSION
    The majority disregards the importance of individual rights as the
    centerpiece for the state constitution and our populist roots; illogically construes
    the plain language of article II, section 22; and fails to consider historical evidence
    that establishes that the provision simply sets out a quorum requirement. The
    supermajority requirement created by I-1053 in no way violates our state
    constitution.
    If the history of this great state can teach us anything, it is this: the power of
    the people will prevail. If the legislature passes a tax the people oppose, the people
    will find a way to repeal it. That "way" may include throwing out legislators or
    using other article II remedies. In an even more commanding exercise of their
    power, the people may choose to enact a constitutional amendment requiring a
    17
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    supermajority to pass taxes. The changes in the way our state values property and
    limits levies followed a similar history. Consistent with the spirit and history of
    our Washington Constitution, I am sure democracy will carry the day; the voters
    will not be denied their rights.
    The framers of our constitution, and the electors who ratified it and then
    added the initiative and referendum as additional ways for the people to control the
    legislature, would be appalled by this court's blatant rewrite of our constitution. I
    agree with our framers and the voters who ratified article II, section 22, and
    therefore dissent. 9
    9
    I also vehemently agree with Justice C. Johnson's scholarly jurisdictional and historical
    analysis opposing the majority and have signed that opinion.
    18
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    19
    League of Educ. Voters v. State, No. 87425-5
    Appendix A
    Washington State Supermajority Initiative Statistics
    Initiative           Year              Votes for         Votes against        Pass or Fail
    I-1185 w             2012              1,892,969 .         1,069,083               Pass
    (63.91 o/o)          (36.09%)
    11
    I-1053               2010              1,575,655             895,833               Pass
    (63.75%)             (36.25%)
    12
    I-960               2007               816,792              777,125               Pass
    (51.24%)             (48.76%)
    I-60 1 u            1993               774,342              737,735               Pass
    (51.21o/o)           (48.79%)
    10
    November 02, 2010 General Election Results: Initiative Measure 1053 Concerning tax andfee
    increases imposed by state government, WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST. (Nov. 29, 2010 9:49AM),
    http://vote. wa. gov/results/20 1011 02/Initiative-Measure-1 053 -Concerning-tax -and-fee-increases-
    imposed-by-state-government.html.
    11
    November 06, 2010 General Election Results: Initiative Measure 1185 Concerning tax andfee
    increases imposed by state government, WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST. (Nov. 27,2012 4:55PM),
    http://vote. wa. gov/results/20 1211 06/Initiative -Measure-No-118 5-Concerns-tax -and-fee-
    increases-imposed-by-state-government.html.
    12
    November 06, 2007 General Election Results: Initiative Measure 960 Concerns tax and fee
    increases imposed by state government, WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST. (Nov. 29, 2007 4:08PM),
    http://vote. wa. gov/results/200711 06/Initiati ve-Measure-960-concerns-tax -and-fee-increases-
    imposed-by-state-government.html.
    13
    November 1993 General, WASHINGTON SECRETARY ST.,
    http://www.sos.wa.gov/elections/results_report.aspx?e=22&c=&c2=&t=&t2=5&p=&p2=&y=
    (last visited Feb. 25, 2013).
    20