A special type of vote called a "popular referendum" gives voters the opportunity to cancel a law passed by their legislature. It's available to voters in twenty-four states. After the state legislature approves a law, voters can circulate a referendum petition. They must collect a specified number of voters' signatures within a certain number of days—generally ninety—and deliver them to a designated state official, usually the secretary of state. The official then must review and verify that the petition contains a sufficient number of valid signatures of registered voters. Once the signatures are certified, the referendum is placed on the ballot in a statewide election. At that point, the voters decide whether to approve or disapprove the law. If they disapprove it, it never goes into effect.

Which organizational structure does this text primarily use?

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The text primarily uses a sequential organizational structure. It presents the process of how a popular referendum works in a step-by-step manner, detailing the chronological order of actions that voters must follow after a law is passed by the legislature. Each step is clearly outlined, moving from the approval of the law to the final decision made by the voters.