Atlanta Progressive News Hosts Town Hall on Georgia Ballot Access

Atlanta Progressive News will hold one of its Town Hall meetings on Tuesday, September 21, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.  This meeting is on Georgia ballot access.  See here for the event’s facebook page.  The location is 728 Spring Street, at the Spring/4th Center.

Confirmed speakers include Faye Coffield, lead plaintiff in the federal ballot access lawsuit; Brad Ploeger, Libertarian nominee for State House whose petition was rejected this year; Allan Williamson, independent candidate for State House whose petition was rejected this year; David Chastain, Libertarian Party nominee for Secretary of State; and Garland Favorito of the Constitution Party.  Invited, and possibly attending, are Mary Norwood, independent candidate for Fulton County office whose petition was rejected this year; Ray Boyd, whose independent gubernatorial petition drive did not succeed this year; Georgia Sinkfield, Democratic nominee for Secretary of State; and others.  Georgia’s incumbent Secretary of State, Brian Kemp, who is running for re-election as the Republican nominee, will not attend but has promised to issue a statement.

Even sophisticated Georgians generally are not informed about Georgia’s ballot access laws.  There is confusion because the statewide Libertarian nominees are always on the ballot, without the need for a petition.  Virtually no one in Georgia understands that even Libertarians, recognized by the state for statewide office, cannot get on the ballot for U.S. House, or for legislature, or for partisan county office, unless they submit a petition signed by 5% of the registered voters.  Nor do many Georgians realize that every attempt to place an independent or minor party candidate on the ballot for U.S. House, in the last 45 years, has failed, if the 5% petition was in effect.  Special elections do not require any petition, so there have been some minor party and independent candidates on the ballot for U.S. House in special elections.


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