U.S. District Court Strikes Down Some Arkansas Restrictions on Initiative Petitions and Sets Trial for Other Issues

On June 30, U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Brooks, an Obama appointee, struck down some Arkansas restrictions on the initiative petitioning process. He set a trial to decide certain other issues, and he upheld the county distribution requirement. League of Women Voters of Arkansas v Jester, w.d., 5:25cv-5087. Here is the Opinion.

The ban on out-of-state circulators will go to trial. Also the ban on paying petitioners per-signature will go to trial.

Laws struck down include forcing initiative petitioners to show everyone they approach the petitioner’s photo-ID; the requirement that petitioners tell everyone they approach that initiative fraud is a criminal offense; that initiative sponsors disclose a list of all petitioners before the drive starts; that petitioners must have not committed any crime in the past; and a requirement that initiative sponsors pay the state for the costs of running legal notices in newspapers.

Kenneth Bush, an Independent Voter in Minnesota, Launches a Campaign to Ease Minnesota Ballot Access Laws

This TV news story says that an independent voter in Rochester, Minnesota, has launched a campaign to ease Minnesota ballot access laws for independent candidates. His organization, Open the Ballot Minnesota”, wants to (1) legalize electronic signatures; (2) decrease the number of signatures for independent candidates and the nominees of unqualified parties who want to run for legislature: (3) expand the absurdly cramped two-week petitioning period for non-presidential petitions.