U.S. District Court Upholds Wisconsin Law Requiring Absentee Voters to Find a Witness to Watch Them

On May 9, U.S. District Court Judge James D. Peterson, an Obama appointee, upheld a Wisconsin law that says when someone votes absentee, the voter must find some other adult U.S. citizen to watch the voter vote, and then the witness must sign the outer envelope, give his or her address, and certify that the the witness observed the voter prepare the ballot. The witness is not supposed to watch how the voter votes, just that the witness saw the voter seal up the ballot in the envelope. Liebert v Millis, w.d., 3:23cv-672.

Third Circuit Agrees with Lower Court that Local Ordinance Treating Campaign Lawn Signs Worse than Other Types of Signs is Unconstitutional

On May 9, the Third Circuit agreed with a U.S. District Court that Camp Hill Borough, Pennsylvania, cannot put more limits on campaign lawn signs than other types of signs. Camp Hill Borough Republican Association v Borough of Camp Hill, 23-1746. Here is the eleven-page opinion.

Minnesota Supreme Court Issues Opinion Eliminating the Legal Marijuana Now Party from the Ballot

On May 10, the Minnesota Supreme Court issued an opinion in Martin v Simon, A24-0216. It immediately removes the Legal Marijuana Now Party from the ballot, even though the party has already had a government-administered presidential primary this year and was about to have a primary for congress and state office August 13. The deadline for candidates to file in that primary is June 4, less than a month away.

The vote is 5-0. The Minnesota Supreme Court has seven members. Two justices, Margaret Chutich and Karl Procaccini, did not participate. All members of the court except one were appointed by Democratic Governors.

On February 6, the Minnesota Democratic Party had filed the lawsuit to remove the Legal Marijuana Now Party on the basis that the party failed to maintain a state central committee subject to the state convention’s control. There was no allegation that any member of the party objected to the party’s less formal procedure. The U.S. Supreme Court had ruled in 1989 in Eu v San Francisco County Democratic Central Committee that the First Amendment’s Freedom of Association clause protects a party’s right to determine its own structure, and that should have caused the lawsuit to be rejected. The California Libertarian Party had won that lawsuit, because it objected to a state law telling the party to have a state central committee based on county central committees, and the party preferred to have regions of its own choosing rather than counties as the basic units.

Unfortunately, however, in 1979 in Marchioro v Cheney, ten years before the Eu decision, the U.S. Supreme Court had upheld a Washington state law that required a qualified party to have a state central committee with two members from each county. That is the only precedent the Minnesota Supreme Court mentioned in its summary of its own decision, See page four. The Marchioro decision is widely considered to be obsolete, and in any event the Court had felt the Washington law didn’t hurt the Washington Democratic Party (which had brought the case) because a party was free under Washington law to provide that the state central committee have virtually no power within the party.

The Legal Marijuana Now Party had also argued that the Purcell Principle prevents a court from making a change to election procedures very close to a primary or an election. But the Minnesota Supreme Court said that the Purcell Principle, which was created in 2006 by the U.S. Supreme Court, only applies to federal courts, not state courts.

The Minnsota Supreme Court did not mention any court precedents that say ballot access rules cannot be made more restrictive in the middle of the campaign season. The leading such case is Hudler v Austin, a 3-judge U.S. District Court decision from Michigan in 1976 that was summarily affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court, 430 U.S. 924. The Minnesota law that made the Legal Marijuana Now Party vulnerable was passed in 2023, and signed May 23.

The Minnesota Supreme Court did not mention Williams v Rhodes, the 1968 U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down Ohio ballot access laws for new parties. In that opinion, Justice William O. Douglas wrote a concurrence when he suggested one reason the Ohio law was unconstitutional was that it required new parties to have a big formal structure.

The Legal Marijuahna Now Party will ask for U.S. Supreme Court involvement.

Kennedy Qualifies in Oklahoma

On May 9, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., qualified for the November ballot in Oklahoma, by paying the huge filing fee of $35,000. See this story.

The filing fee alternative to a petition has only existed in Oklahoma since 2017. In the 2020 presidential election, three candidates paid the fee: Kanye West, Brock Pierce, and Jade Simmons, all of them independents. The law applies to unqualified party presidential nominees also.

Qualified parties are on the ballot automatically without the need for the fee. Oklahoma has three qualified parties: Republican, Democratic, and Libertarian. The Green Party hopes to use the filing procedure this year. If they do, the party label “Green” will be on the ballot next to the presidential candidate’s name.

New Louisiana Registration Data

As of May 9, 2024, these are the Louisiana state totals of registered voters: Democratic 1,133,813; Republican 1,021,571; Independent Party 136,125; Libertarian 15,839; Green 2,583; No Labels 2,296; Reform 823; Conservative 794; Constitution 154; Socialist 85; American Solidarity 103; PSL 5; independent and miscellaneous 665,154.

Percentages are: Democratic 38.06%; Republican 34.29%; Independent Party 4.57%; Libertarian .53%; Green .09%; No Labels .08%; Reform .03%; Conservative .03%; Constitution .01%; independent and other 22.31%.

In November 2023, the percentages were: Democratic 38.63%; Republican 33.86%; Independent Party 4.45%; Libertarian .53%; Green .09%; Reform .03%; Conservative .03%; Constitution .01%; independent and other 22.37%.

No Labels has enough registrants to be a qualified party, but it isn’t a qualified party because to complete the process it needs to submit of fee of $1,000, and it has not done that and does not intend to. The registration requirement is 1,000 members.