2014 Oregon Ballot Measure 92

Oregon Ballot Measure 92 was a ballot measure in the U.S. state of Oregon to determine whether or not to enact a "law requiring the labeling of genetically engineered foods produced and sold in Oregon".[1] Measure 92 was close enough to trigger a recount, and ultimately did not pass with 50.3% of the state voting against labeling GMOs.[2]

Results by county
  Yes
  No

Vote counts

Certification Votes For Votes Against
Original 752,687 753,489
Recount 752,737 753,574

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Yes No Undecided
SurveyUSA October 23–27, 2014 552 ± 4.3% 44% 43% 13%
SurveyUSA October 16–19, 2014 561 ± 4.2% 44% 37% 19%
SurveyUSA September 22–24, 2014 568 ± 4.2% 53% 21% 26%
SurveyUSA August 1–5, 2014 564 ± 4.2% 54% 16% 30%
SurveyUSA June 5–9, 2014 560 ± 4.2% 51% 14% 35%
gollark: Sure, they get arbitrarily close, but billionaires don't need to know that.
gollark: See, my plans only *approach* 100%.
gollark: I think I made a mistake somewhere.
gollark: New tax policy?!
gollark: Oops, this is the wrong way round.

References

  1. Wong, Peter (August 1, 2014). "Numbers assigned to state measures". Portland Tribune. Retrieved August 7, 2014.
  2. "Results" (PDF). sos.oregon.gov. 2014.
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