Oklahoma Bill Moving Non-Presidential Primary from June to March Advances

On March 5, the Oklahoma House Rules Committee passed HB 2425. It moves the non-presidential primary from June to early March. The presidential primary would then be combined with the primary for other offices. This is a drastic change. Because the date of the non-presidential primary is tied to the deadlines for new parties and non-presidential independent candidates. The petition for a new party would be due in November of the year before the election, and the deadline for non-presidential independents (who don’t need a petition) would be close to New Year’s Day of the election year.

California State Trial Court Puts Republican Candidate for Congress on Ballot Despite His Refusal to Declare He Supports California Constitution

On March 4, a California state trial court ordered the Secretary of State to put William Scott on the June 2026 ballot as a candidate for U.S. House, 26th district. Scott v Weber, Sacramento Superior Court, 26WM000040. Scott is a Republican.

Since 1996, the California election code has required candidates for congress or state office to sign a document saying the candidate supports the California Constitution. Scott argued that this law was an additional qualification to run for Congress, which contradicted a U.S. Supreme Court from 1995, U.S. Term Limits v Thornton, that states cannot add to the qualifications listed in the U.S. Constitution for congressional candidates.

California argued that the oath was just a “procedure”.

Other state laws that have been struck down on the basis of the qualifications argument are term limits, laws barring felons, laws requiring residency in the state at the time the candidate files to run for congress, and laws requiring congressional candidates to be registered voters.

U.S. District Court Upholds North Carolina’s Ban on Photographing a Voter’s Voted Ballot

On March 9, U.S. District Court Judge Louise Wood Flanagan, a Bush Jr. appointee, upheld North Carolina’s ban on a voter taking a picture of that voter’s voted ballot. Hogarth v Bell, e.d., 5:24cv-481. The ruling says the ban is necessary to prevent a voter from being bribed. This is an unconvincing reason. The law does not prevent a voter from taking a photo (allegedly to show the briber) but then requesting a new ballot, and voting differently on the new, replacement ballot, and casting that replacement ballot. Here is the Opinion.

California Primary Ballot Will Include Gubernatorial Candidates of Socialist Workers Party and American Solidarity Party

Filing has closed for the June 2026 California top-two primary. The gubernatorial candidates of the Socialist Workers Party and of the American Solidarity Party each qualified, although the law won’t allow their party names to be listed on the ballot. The candidates are Margaret Trowe for the Socialist Workers Party, and Duane Loynes for the ASP.