North Dakota 2026 ballot measures

From Ballotpedia
2028
2024

As of February 16, 2026,three statewide ballot measures were certified for theballot inNorth Dakota in2026.

HIGHLIGHTS
  • TheNorth Dakota State Legislature referred three constitutional amendments to the ballot during the 2025 legislative session.
  • On the ballot

    June 9, 2026:

    TypeTitleSubjectDescription

    LRCA

    Single-Subject Requirement for Constitutional Amendments MeasureInitiative process;Ballot measuresCreate a single-subject requirement for initiated constitutional amendments and legislatively referred constitutional amendments in North Dakota


    November 3, 2026:

    TypeTitleSubjectDescription

    LRCA

    60% Vote Requirement for Constitutional Amendments MeasureSupermajority;Initiative process;Ballot measuresRequire constitutional amendments to receive a 60% supermajority vote to be adopted

    LRCA

    Changes to State Legislative Term Limits AmendmentTerm limitsEstablish term limits for state legislators of four complete four-year terms in the state legislature regardless of chamber; provide that a term that is less than four-years does not count toward the term limit; repeal the constitutional provision established by Constitutional Measure 1 of 2022 which provided that term limits could only be amended or repealed by initiative petition and not by the state legislature


    Potential measures

    NameTypeSubjectDescription
    North Dakota Free School Meals Initiative (2026)

    CISS

    Public education fundingRequire public schools to provide one free breakfast and one free lunch to students
    North Dakota Remove Restrictions on Vehicle Window Tinting Initiative (2026)

    CISS

    VehiclesRemove the restriction prohibiting windshield tints


    Getting measures on the ballot

    See also:Signature requirements for ballot measures in North Dakota

    North Dakota allows citizen-initiated measures in the form ofinitiated state statutes,initiated constitutional amendments, andveto referendums. The completed petition must be submitted at least 120 days prior to the election. Each initiative has its own unique deadline of one year after it was approved to circulate.

    Since North Dakota does not have a voter registration system, the number of signatures required is tied to the population reported by the last decennial census. For statutes and veto referendums, the number of signatures required is 2% of the population. For constitutional amendments, it is 4% of the population. The requirement for 2026 is 15,582 signatures forinitiated state statutes andveto referendums and 31,164 signatures forinitiated constitutional amendments. Each initiative petition may circulate for one year after it is approved for circulation. All signatures must be submitted by July 6, 2026.

    TheNorth Dakota Legislature has the power to placeconstitutional amendments on the ballot when a majority of members in each house of the legislature approve the amendment. Once on the ballot, the amendment must be approved by a simple majority of the electors. Thelegislature only convenes legislative sessions during odd-numbered years.

    Historical facts

    See also:List of North Dakota ballot measures

    North Dakota statewide ballot measures

    In North Dakota, a total of 135 ballot measures appeared on statewide ballots between 1986 and 2024. A total of 63 ballot measures were approved, and 72 ballot measures were defeated.


    North Dakota statewide ballot measures, 1986-2024
    Total numberAnnual averageAnnual minimumAnnual maximumApprovedDefeated
    #%#%
    135
    2.79
    0
    15
    63
    46.67%
    72
    53.33%


    Ballot initiative certification rates

    See also:Ballot initiatives filed for the 2024 ballot

    The following table shows the rate of certification for ballot initiatives in North Dakota between 2010 and 2024:

    North Dakota statewide ballot initiatives filed and certified, 2010-2024
    Year
    Ballot initiatives filed
    Certified #
    Certified %
    2010
    10
    1
    10.0%
    2012
    13
    6
    46.2%
    2014
    4
    4
    100.0%
    2016
    5
    4
    80.0%
    2018
    6
    4
    66.7%
    2020
    5
    0
    0.0%
    2022
    7
    2
    28.6%
    2024
    4
    3
    75.0%
    Averages
    6.0
    2.7
    56.3%

    State profile

    Demographic data for North Dakota
     North DakotaU.S.
    Total population:756,835316,515,021
    Land area (sq mi):69,0013,531,905
    Race and ethnicity**
    White:88.7%73.6%
    Black/African American:1.6%12.6%
    Asian:1.2%5.1%
    Native American:5.3%0.8%
    Pacific Islander:0%0.2%
    Two or more:2.2%3%
    Hispanic/Latino:2.9%17.1%
    Education
    High school graduation rate:91.7%86.7%
    College graduation rate:27.7%29.8%
    Income
    Median household income:$57,181$53,889
    Persons below poverty level:12.2%11.3%
    Source:U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2010-2015)
    Clickhere for more information on the 2020 census andhere for more on its impact on the redistricting process in North Dakota.
    **Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the censushere.

    Presidential voting pattern

    See also:Presidential voting trends in North Dakota

    North Dakotavoted Republican in all seven presidential elections between 2000 and 2024.

    Pivot Counties (2016)

    Ballotpedia identified 206 counties that voted forDonald Trump (R) in 2016 after voting forBarack Obama (D) in 2008 and 2012. Collectively, Trump won thesePivot Counties by more than 580,000 votes. Of these 206 counties, four are located in North Dakota, accounting for 1.94 percent of the total pivot counties.[1]

    Pivot Counties (2020)

    In2020, Ballotpedia re-examined the 206 Pivot Counties to view their voting patterns following that year's presidential election. Ballotpedia defined those won by Trump won asRetained Pivot Counties and those won byJoe Biden (D) asBoomerang Pivot Counties. Nationwide, there were 181 Retained Pivot Counties and 25 Boomerang Pivot Counties. North Dakota had three Retained Pivot Counties, 1.66 percent of all Retained Pivot Counties.

    More North Dakota coverage on Ballotpedia

    Not on the ballot

    NameTypeSubjectDescription
    North Dakota Prohibit Lottery or Game of Chance Proceeds from Financing Candidate or Ballot Measure Campaigns Amendment (2026)

    LRCA

    Campaign financeProhibit using proceeds from games of chance, lotteries, or similar activities to support or influence political campaigns, candidates for office, ballot measures, or political organizations


    See also

    Alabama

    Footnotes

    1. The raw data for this study was provided by Dave Leip ofAtlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.
    2026 ballot measures
    States:  •Alabama •Alaska •Arizona •Arkansas •California •Colorado •Florida •Georgia •Hawaii •Idaho •Indiana •Kansas •Louisiana •Maryland •Massachusetts •Michigan •Missouri •Nebraska •Nevada •New Mexico •North Carolina •North Dakota •Oklahoma •Oregon •South Dakota •Tennessee •Utah •Vermont •Virginia •Wisconsin •Wyoming

    Topics:Abortion policy • Affirmative action • Age limits for officials • Agriculture policy • Bail policy • Ballot measure process • Ballot measure supermajority requirements • Bond issues • Budget stabilization funds • Business taxes • Campaign finance • Citizenship voting requirements • Civil service • Collective bargaining • Constitutional rights • Crime victims' rights • Criminal sentencing • Criminal trials • Drug crime policy • Election administration and governance • English language policy • Family-related policy • Firearms policy • Flood infrastructure and management • Food and beverage taxes • Forestry and timber • Fuel taxes • Healthcare governance • Homestead tax exemptions • Immigration policy • Initiative and referendum process • LGBTQ issues • Law enforcement officers and departments • Local government finance and taxes • Local government officials and elections • Local government organization • Marijuana laws • Minimum wage laws • Parks, land, and natural area conservation • Pollution, waste, and recycling policy • Primary election systems • Property tax exemptions • Property taxes • Psychedelic substances laws • Public assistance programs • Public economic investment policy • Public education governance • Public employee retirement funds • Public health insurance • Public school teachers and staff • Race and ethnicity issues • Ranked-choice voting • Recall process • Redistricting policy • Restricted-use funds • Salaries of government officials • Sales taxes • Sewage and stormwater • Sex and gender issues • State constitutional conventions • State executive branch structure • State executive powers and duties • State judicial selection • State judiciary oversight • State legislative authority • State legislative processes and sessions • State legislative term limits • Storm infrastructure • Transportation taxes and fees • Vehicle and driver regulations • Voter ID policy • Voting rights for persons with criminal convictions • Water irrigation policy

    Overviews
     •Scorecard •Tuesday Count •Deadlines •Filed ballot initiatives •Potential ballot measures •Polls •Campaign finance •Signature costs •Readability
    Flag of North Dakota
    v  e
    State ofNorth Dakota
    Bismarck (capital)
    Elections

    What's on my ballot? |Elections in 2026 |How to vote |How to run for office |Ballot measures

    Government

    Who represents me? |U.S. President |U.S. Congress |Federal courts |State executives |State legislature |State and local courts |Counties |Cities |School districts |Public policy