Libertarian Party Loses Presidential Stand-in Case in New Hampshire

On February 17, a U.S. District Magistrate issued a 30-page opinion, upholding New Hampshire’s policy of not allowing stand-ins on presidential petitions, and also upholding New Hampshire’s policy of not having any procedure by which an unqualified party may protect its name from use by independent candidates who choose the party label as a ballot label, regardless of whether the party has nominated that person.

In 2008, the New Hampshire Libertarian Party was not a qualified party. It submitted a petition for Bob Barr for President, and he appeared on the ballot with the “Libertarian” label. Supporters of George Phillies also submitted a petition for President, and he also appeared on the ballot with the “Libertarian” label. The party filed a lawsuit to gain the right to use stand-in presidential candidates, and also to argue that the ballot label “Libertarian” should be reserved for candidates nominated by the state party, but Magistrate James Muirhead ruled against the party on both issues.

The Magistrate appears not to have read the party’s reply brief of November 6, 2009. The party’s reply brief says on page one, “The post-election declaratory relief that plaintiffs now seek need not include a determination that Phillies should have been removed from the ballot entirely, as defendant suggests. After all, Phillies met the New Hampshire requirements for being listed on the ballot as an independent candidate for president.”

Notwithstanding that, the Magistrate Judge says in his opinion that the Libertarian Party wanted the Secretary of State to remove George Phillies from November 2008 ballot. The decision does not name any of the many precedents that say unqualified parties do have certain rights in election law, including a decision from New Hampshire courts that unqualified parties have a constitutional right to a list of the registered voters. The decision does not mention the four precedents that say unqualified parties have a constitutional right to substitute new nominees for old ones. The decision does not mention the five precedents that voters have a right to register into unqualified parties, or the many decisions that unqualified parties have a right to the list of registered voters, on the same basis as the qualified parties. The Magistrate simply assumes that if a party is not a qualified party, then it enjoys none of the rights that qualified parties enjoy. The Libertarian Party will exercise its right to have the U.S. District Court Judge review the Magistrate’s decision. UPDATE: the party will instead appeal to the First Circuit. It turns out that rules in U.S. District Court in New Hampshire do not permit the party to ask a U.S. District Court Judge for relief.


Comments

Libertarian Party Loses Presidential Stand-in Case in New Hampshire — No Comments

  1. Vindication.

    I told the folks pushing for this that this would be the outcome. Richard, you’re ignoring the facts of the law: removal and substitution against the will of the nominee _would_ violation his NH constitutional rights. Nothing else need be said, since that covers this case in particular. Perhaps next time, you’ll avoid pushing for a lawsuit when the case can only generate worse precedents for the future.

    In fact, kudos to John Babiarz, who predicted one very interesting element of this decision way back, and is now proven to be correct. I leave it to you to figure out which.

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