local option
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A policy or law-making power: The freedom granted to a local government (such as a city, town, or county) to determine, typically through a popular vote by its residents, whether a specific and often controversial law will apply within its own jurisdiction. This allows local communities to make decisions that reflect their preferences, separate from state or national laws.
Usage
The term is used primarily in political and legal contexts to describe a decentralized decision-making process. - It often applies to laws concerning issues like the sale of alcohol, zoning regulations, or other morally or socially debated topics. - The decision is made via a local referendum or ballot measure.
Examples
- Noun:
- The state passed the law but included a local option, allowing each county to vote on whether to permit casinos.
- Through a local option, the dry town maintained its ban on alcohol sales despite state-level legalization.
Advanced Usage
- "to exercise the local option": To hold a vote or make use of this decentralized power.
- The council decided to exercise the local option on the new tax proposal.
- "local option law": A statute that explicitly grants this power to municipalities.
- The debate centered on passing a local option law for school funding.
Variants and Related Words
- Home rule (n): A broader concept of self-government granted to a local polity.
- Referendum (n): A general vote by the electorate on a single political question, which is the mechanism often used for a local option.
- Municipal discretion (n): The authority of a city or town to make its own decisions.
Synonyms
- Local veto
- Community choice
- Municipal option
Related Phrases
- "put it to a local vote": To decide an issue via a referendum in the area.
- The controversial issue was put to a local vote.
- "opt-in/opt-out provision": A clause allowing a locality to choose whether to participate in a broader law, similar in function to a local option.
Noun
- freedom of a local government to determine by popular vote the applicability of a controversial law in their jurisdiction