Three Minor Parties Have Nominees for Florida Legislature

On June 20, filing closed for the candidates for the Florida legislature. Only three qualified minor parties have any candidates running for the legislature. The Green Party has five candidates, the Constitution Party has one, and the British Reformed Sectarian Party has one. This is the largest number of state legislative candidates the Green Party has ever had in Florida. UPDATE: all five Green Party candidates are unknown to the state Green Party officers. It is conceivable that they were recruited to run (and perhaps even recruited to change their partisan affiliation from something else, to Green), by Republicans. The state Green Party officers will research this in the coming days.

By contrast, in 2006, there were two Libertarians running for the Florida legislature, two Constitution Party members, and one Green.

The British Reformed Sectarian Party was created in 2003 by Thomas J. Kelly. Kelly had been an elected Florida Republican county party official in 2000, and he was offended to learn that he was expected to sign a loyalty oath, pledging that he would not endorse, or financially support, the nominee of any party other than the Republican Party. He researched the issue and determined that such oaths violate the Florida and U.S. Constitutions. He brought a lawsuit in federal court against the Secretary of State, but lost the case in both U.S. District Court and in the Eleventh Circuit. In the Eleventh Circuit, the judges who ruled against him were Susan Black, Paul Roney, and Walter Stapleton.

Kelly then left the Republican Party and determined to start his own party, to satirize the view that parties are private organizations. He wrote outrageous membership rules for his own new party, which he decided to name the “Black, Roney, Stapleton Party”, to poke fun at the three judges who had ruled against him. Then he thought that it might violate the rights of the judges to name a party after them without their permission, so he switched the name to the “British Reformed Sectarian Party”, keeping the initials “B,R,S”. Most Florida counties won’t spell out the full name of political parties on the ballot anyway, so when the British Reformed Sectarian Party appears on the ballot, it is with the label “BRS”. Kelly is the BRS Party candidate for state representative this year, just as he was in 2004.


Comments

Three Minor Parties Have Nominees for Florida Legislature — No Comments

  1. Ah, so much becomes clear when the story behind the story is revealed. Kinda like the Independence Party shills and the so called Independent Green Party in states with a long standing Green Party USA affiliate.

  2. So, in theory, the Monster Raving Loony Party could thrive in Florida.. (provided they have signatures or filing fees and free time)

  3. Oh for Heaven’s sake! While politics does have its funny moments, it is (and should remain) very serious for the most part. If it were not, I would not be bothered with it. Please: no more British Reformed Sectarian Parties!

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