Five minor parties in Michigan have formed the Michigan Third Parties Coalition, which has a website at www.mithirdparties.org. Three of the parties in the coalition are already on the ballot, and two are not. The five parties are Constitution, Green, Libertarian, (those three parties are on the ballot), and Reform and Socialist (those two parties are not on the ballot).
The Coalition wants ballot access improvements, and will lobby to reduce the number of signatures needed for a party to get on the ballot, and also for the ability of a party to get on the ballot in just part of the state, if it can’t get on statewide.
The Coalition also wants more inclusive campaign debates.
Michigan has one of the easiest laws in the nation for a party to REMAIN on the ballot, once it has qualified. Of course, that is no comfort to the parties that aren’t on the ballot. The petition for a party to GET on the ballot is more difficult than the average state.
The Reform Party was qualified in 2004, but it was unable to place any nominees on the ballot because two separate groups (each claiming to be the legitimate party officers) submitted different slates of nominees, and the Michigan Secretary of State refused to decide the issue. Because the party had no candidates on the ballot in 2004, it was unable to poll any votes for any nominees, and so was disqualified.
One flaw in Michigan law that the Coalition has not mentioned so far is that Michigan is one of the few states that refuses to let qualified parties change their name. This injures the Constitution Party, because Michigan still insists on calling it the “U.S. Taxpayers Party”, which was that party’s name until 1999, when it was changed to “Constitution Party” by the national convention.
Why doesn’t the Constitution Party file a lawsuit against Michigan?
Richard; Could you email me some contact info on that group ? or have the contact me ? I have a question for them about independents.
What is the state process for a new or independent candidate to get on the ballot?
The petition to get a new party on the ballot in Michigan is 1% of the last gubernatorial vote, which is now 38,024 signatures.
According to its website, this group has also agreed to promote IRV — although not, apparently, proportional voting.
As a former third-party candidate in Michigan, I think this is a bunch of whining. I think the ease of staying on the ballot and qualifying individual candidates (a mere signature) leads to the “paper candidates” who discredit REAL third-party hopefuls. I feel so strongly about it, I wrote a blog:Third parties of Michigan form ‘Coalition of the Whining’.