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AT A GLANCE
A look at some ballot measures across the country.
SAME-SEX MARRIAGE BANS
Approved: Colorado, Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin
Rejected: Arizona
EMINENT DOMAIN LIMITS
(Restricting government power to take private property for a private use)
Approved: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Nevada, Oregon, Sough Carolina
Rejected: California, Idaho
MINIMUM WAGE RAISE
Approved: Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio
TOBACCO TAX INCREASE
Approved: Arizona, South Dakota
Rejected: California, Missouri
ALSO OF NOTE
Arizona approved a measure to make English the state's official language and rejected one to award $1 million to a random voter each general election.
California rejected a measure to require parental notification before a minor could have an abortion.
Colorado rejected a measure to legalize possession of as much as 1 ounce of marijuana.
Michigan approved a measure to scrap affirmative action programs in university admissions and government hiring.
Missouri approved a measure to allow stem cell research, including on embryos.
Nevada rejected a measure to legalize possession of as much as 1 ounce of marijuana.
Oregon rejected a measure to require parental notification before a minor could have an abortion.
South Dakota rejected measures to ban all abortions except to save a pregnant woman's life, and to strip judges of immunity.
OTHER STATE RACES
GOVERNORS
Jubilant Democrats saw their victories in Tuesday's gubernatorial elections as a pathway to the presidency in 2008.
The Democrats reversed GOP dominance that reached back to 1994, seizing a 28-22 edge in governor's mansions, and stretching into several states that had been in Republican hands for eight years or longer, many of them rich with swing voters -- Ohio, Colorado and Arkansas among them. Still, Republicans kept several of the nation's largest states, including California, Texas and Florida.
LEGISLATURES
Riding voter discontent with national Republican leadership, state-level Democrats cemented control of both legislative chambers in 23 states and improved their position in others. With an estimated net gain of nearly 300 seats, the vote resulted in the most one-sided gains for either party since the Republican rout of 1994. Democrats' pickup of legislative seats will break what had been a very close divide, and give the party's lawmakers more power to shape state policy and to play a key role in drawing congressional districts.