Minnesota Amendment 2|
|
|
|
Choice |
Votes |
% |
| Yes |
1,362,030 |
46.16% |
| No |
1,588,752 |
53.84% |
| Valid votes |
2,950,782 |
100.00% |
| Invalid or blank votes |
0 |
0.00% |
| Total votes |
2,950,782 |
100.00% |
|
|
Congressional district results
|
Yes
90–100%
80–90%
70–80%
60–70%
50–60% |
No
90–100%
80–90%
70–80%
60–70%
50–60% |
Other
Tie
No data
|
Results by county |
Minnesota Amendment 2 (also called Voter ID Amendment) was a proposed legislatively referred constitutional amendment that was on the ballot on November 6, 2012. If approved, it would have required a form of photographic identification before being permitted to vote in Minnesota municipal, state, and federal elections. However, it was defeated with 53.84% voting against and 46.16% for the measure.