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Washington AG Nick Brown is defending the emergency clause on the new state income tax (SB 6346). He says using the clause's "necessary for the support of state government" language is standard practice on revenue bills — the routine way to take voters' referendum power off the table.

We checked the record. It isn't standard. It's brand new.

From 2005 through 2024, the legislature passed 163 tax bills. Only 2 used the referendum-blocking "necessity-only" version of the emergency clause. That's 1.2% — over two decades.

In the 2025 regular session, that rate jumped to 41.7% (5 of 12 tax bills). And of the 5 tax bills that received any emergency clause at all, every single one used the necessity-only referendum-blocking version. Five for five — a formula that had appeared twice in twenty years suddenly accounted for 100% of EC tax bills in a single session.

Then in 2026, lawmakers reverted. 4 tax bills got an emergency clause; none used the necessity-only referendum-blocking variant.

If this were "standard practice," it wouldn't have appeared in one session and vanished the next.

https://picsterola.github.io/wa-ec-tracker/#/comparison

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