A ballot measure seeking to repeal a new conservative-backed law that provides taxpayer money for private school tuition should appear on the state's November ballot, the state Supreme Court ruled Friday.
The court found that the ballot measure does not illegally target a government appropriation, which was what lawyers who sought to pull the repeal measure from the ballot had argued.
An order to strip the repeal measure from the ballot ''would frustrate the fundamental purpose of the referendum provision to give the people the right to vote on specific legislation,'' the unanimous ruling read.
The ruling came just days after the state's high court heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit brought by an eastern Nebraska woman whose child received one of the first private school tuition scholarships available through the new law. Her lawsuit argued that the referendum initiative violates the state constitution's prohibition on voter initiatives to revoke legislative appropriations for government functions.
An attorney for the referendum effort countered that the ballot question appropriately targets the creation of the private school tuition program, not the $10 million appropriations bill that accompanied it, and the court agreed.
Republican Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnen certified the repeal measure last week after finding that organizers of the petition effort had gathered thousands more valid signatures than the nearly 62,000 needed to get the repeal question on the ballot.
But in an eleventh-hour brief submitted to the state Supreme Court before Tuesday's arguments, Evnen indicated that he believed he made a mistake and that ''the referendum is not legally sufficient.''
The brief went on to say that Evnen intended to rescind his certification and keep the repeal effort off the ballot unless the high court specifically ordered that it remain.