Missouri voters passed Amendment 3, a redistricting and lobbying measure meant to amend a ballot initiative approved in 2018, with 51% of the vote on Election Day. The amendment’s biggest impact is changing who draws state legislative districts. A bipartisan commission of 20 state senators and 20 state representatives appointed by Gov. Mike Parson will now create the boundaries. Seventy percent of them must agree on a map to finalize it. Amendment 3 also lowers the amount lobbyists can give politicians from $5 to $0, and it lowers the campaign contribution limit for state Senate campaigns from $2500 to $2400. Amendment 3 amends much of Amendment 1, which Missouri voters brought to the ballot via initiative in 2018 and passed with 62% of the vote. Missouri used a bipartisan commission to draw state legislative districts before 2018, but Amendment 1 replaced the commission with a nonpartisan demographer appointed by State Auditor Nicole Galloway. This demographer was responsible for drawing the map, but a legislative commission could alter the map if 70% of them agreed to do so.