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Continued debate over the enactment of a Martin Luther King, Jr., holiday in Arizona.
1990 (Nov 6)
Debate increased over the enactment of a Martin Luther King, Jr., holiday in Arizona. Voters in that state defeated a referendum on the issue, proposing a paid holiday for state employees, by a narrow 17,226 margin. Only two other states, Montana and New Hampshire, had not yet observed a state holiday marking King's birthday. The National Football League had threatened to move the 1993 Super Bowl from Phoenix unless the state adopted the holiday—an act that would cost the state more than $200 million in lost revenues. The defeated legislation also led to the cancellation of a golf tournament memorializing the slain civil rights leader as well as numerous other conventions and special events. The referendum was intended to help voters decide whether to overturn Governor Evan Mecham's 1987 decision to cancel the holiday. Since that decision, the state had lost about 58 conventions and about an estimated $30 million in financial revenues.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.