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There were three statewide ballot questions, all initiatives, which Massachusetts voters considered in this election. There were also various local ballot questions around the commonwealth.
Abolishing the state income tax. A law to eliminate any state personal income tax for income or other gain realized on or after July 1, 2003.
Question 1: Abolishing the state income tax
Candidate
Votes
%
±
Yes
885,683
45.3%
✓
No
1,069,467
54.7%
Question 2
English Language Education in Public Schools Initiative: Abolishing bilingual education and replacing it with a one-year program of rapid English immersion. A law that would require that, with limited exceptions, all public-school children must be taught all subjects in English.
Question 2: Abolishing bilingual education
Candidate
Votes
%
±
✓
Yes
1,359,935
67.98%
No
640,525
32.02%
Question 3
Massachusetts Question 3 (2002)
Taxpayer Funding for Clean Elections
Results
Choice
Votes
%
Yes
517,285
26.13%
No
1,462,435
73.87%
Valid votes
1,979,720
100.00%
Invalid or blank votes
0
0.00%
Total votes
1,979,720
100.00%
County results Municipality results
Yes
70–80%
60–70%
50–60%
No
80–90%
70–80%
60–70%
50–60%
Taxpayer funding for Clean Elections. A non-binding question relative to the funding of political campaigns for public office, with the "no" vote indicating voters were not in favor of publicly funded elections. This was a reversal of opinion against the Clean Elections Law passed by voter referendum in 1988. The law was repealed by the legislature as part of the 2003 state budget. The legislature had refused to fund the law, which prompted state courts to order the sale of a disused state hospital, state-owned automobiles, and desks and sofas in the offices of legislative leaders Thomas M. Finneran, Salvatore F. DiMasi, and Joseph F. Wagner.