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Local control, tobacco tax initiatives qualify for November ballot

An interior view of the dome of the Missouri State Capitol.
(via Flickr/jennlynndesign)
An interior view of the dome of the Missouri State Capitol.

Missouri voters will be asked in November to raise the state's tobacco tax and let St. Louis run its own police department.

Secretary of State Robin Carnahan announced Tuesday that supporters of those proposals had submitted enough signatures from voters to put the questions on the statewide ballot.

Two other initiatives failed to make the ballot. One would raise Missouri's minimum wage, while the other would place new restrictions on payday loans.

Proponents of those measures immediately said they would challenge their exclusions in court.

The St. Louis Police Department has been governed since the Civil War era by a state commission.

  • For more on this year’s campaigns and elections, go to Beyond November, a coordinated election project of St. Louis Public Radio, Nine Network of Public Media and The St. Louis Beacon.

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