U.S. Supreme Court Asks New York to Respond in Lawsuit Over Discriminatory Campaign Finance Limits

On November 20, the U.S. Supreme Court asked New York state to respond to the cert petition Upstate Jobs Party v Kosinski, 24-503. This is the lawsuit that challenges New York campaign finance limits. The law lets individuals give more money to the nominee of a qualified party than to an independent or the nominee of an unqualified party.

This is a sign that the U.S. Supreme Court might possibly be interested in the case. The state’s response is due December 20.

“Other Vote” for President in 2024 is Now Slightly Higher than the “Other Vote” in 2020

As more votes are counted, President-Elect Donald Trump now seems unlikely to have polled a majority of the popular vote. The GreenPapers tally, which is constantly refreshed as more results are released, shows Trump at 49.88%. It shows Kamala Harris at 48.23%, and others at 1.89%.

In 2020, the percentages were: Biden 51.31%; Trump 46.86%; other 1.83%.

Connecticut Finishes Write-in Tally for President

The Connecticut Secretary of State has released write-in totals for the declared presidential candidates. For those candidates who were on the ballot in at least one other state, the results are: Peter Sonski (American Solidarity) 162; Claudia De la Cruz (Socialism & Liberation) 257; Cornel West 127; Shiva Ayyadurai 20.

In 2020 the American Solidarity Party presidential candidate had received 219 write-ins in Connecticut.