BEGGING THE QUESTIONS — Voters could get to weigh in on issues ranging from high school graduation requirements to the power of the auditor’s office next year if the ballot measures being set in motion today make it all the way. Supporters of ending MCAS as a graduation requirement plan to file a question for the 2024 ballot that would ask voters to replace the standardized tests with school certifications of students' academic skills. The Massachusetts Teachers Association is backing the measure, and the union's board of directors will vote Sunday on a campaign to support its passage, according to a person familiar with the plans. Those hoping to move away from the compulsory exams are turning to voters for support as Beacon Hill leaders show little immediate appetite for eliminating the MCAS graduation requirement. A Lexington high schooler’s mom similarly filed a ballot petition to do away with the prerequisite. Supporters of Diana DiZoglio’s attempt to audit the Legislature are also turning to the ballot to back up her authority to review the House and Senate’s practices and procedures. DiZoglio maintains she already has the power to conduct the review, both through state statute and the past precedent of 113 audits of the Legislature since the mid-1800s. But House and Senate leaders have refused to open their books, citing the state Constitution’s “separation of powers” clause. DiZoglio is now trying to break the stalemate by moving to sue lawmakers into compliance. But backers of her effort can’t wait to see whether Attorney General Andrea Campbell clears DiZoglio to proceed. Campbell has an indefinite amount of time to decide whether DiZoglio’s intended lawsuit passes legal muster. But the deadline to submit initiative petitions for the 2024 ballot is 5 p.m. today. And so DiZoglio’s supporters intend to file a ballot question that would make clear that the Legislature is subject to the same audit authority as other state agencies, according to a person familiar with their plans. Northwind Strategies’ Doug Rubin, who advised DiZoglio’s campaign for auditor, set the stage for the potential ballot campaign by filing paperwork last month to create a “Committee for Transparent Democracy." But it’s also up to the attorney general to decide which ballot questions proceed. Petitioners who do earn Campbell’s certification on Sept. 6 will then have to go through two more rounds of signature collections, reviews by the secretary of state’s office and the Legislature, and potential court challenges to get their questions before voters. The Massachusetts Coalition for Independent Work appears to be gearing up to give that arduous process another go. Rideshare and delivery drivers affiliated with the coalition that's been pushing to classify app-based drivers as independent contractors are launching a new ballot initiative at 10:30 a.m. on the Boston Common. The tech-backed group also filed a ballot campaign committee with state campaign finance regulators yesterday. They’ll likely be met with continued resistance from labor groups . Unions stood up their own coalition to oppose the independent contractor push last year, before the state’s top court upended the multimillion-dollar ballot battle by rejecting the Uber-and-Lyft-backed petition on a technicality . Unions have also been pushing competing legislation on Beacon Hill that would classify app-based drivers as employees under state law. “This is an attack on our wage and hour system and it’s much broader than people think,” Massachusetts AFL-CIO President Steve Tolman, whose union was part of the Massachusetts is Not For Sale coalition, told Playbook. “I hope Massachusetts voters will also see through Big Tech’s attempt to buy a law that benefits nobody.” GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. One group that's not going ahead with a 2024 ballot question: Raise Up Massachusetts. The coalition that successfully pushed for a $15 minimum wage and the millionaires surtax said it’s passing on pursuing a ballot question for another wage hike and is instead focusing on its legislative efforts TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey announces a new labor agreement with the MBTA and Boston Carmen’s unions at 9:45 a.m. at Cabot Yard and is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 11 a.m. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu is on “Java with Jimmy” at 9 a.m. and visits Franklin Park Zoo at noon. Sen. Ed Markey hosts a press conference on green hospitals at 11 a.m. at Baystate Medical Center and surveys flood damage at Natural Roots Farm in Conway at 1 p.m. and Deerfield at 2:30 p.m. Sen. Elizabeth Warren visits Yawkey Housing Resource Center in Quincy at noon and the New Bedford Port Authority at 2:30 p.m. Tips? Scoops? Filing a ballot question? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .
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