The Alibi, Albuquerque’s alternative weekly newspaper, has this story about New Mexico ballot access for new and minor parties. The article points out that in November 2010, New Mexico is the only state with no minor party or independent candidates for any statewide race or for any congressional race. It also points out that New Mexico is the only state that requires the nominees of a qualified party to each submit a difficult petition. Note the word “nominee”. It is true that many states require candidates running in a party primary to submit petitions to get on a primary ballot, but those individuals aren’t yet party nominees; they are seeking a party nomination.
It is fundamentally irrational for New Mexico to require a ballot-qualified party, which has already submitted one petition to show that it has a modicum of voter support, to submit separate petitions for each of the people it has just nominated. Maryland once had a similar requirement, but the state’s highest state court, the Court of Appeals, invalidated it in 2003.
Separate is still NOT equal — in ALL States, rational and irrational.
Brown v. Bd of Ed 1954
If New Mexico is going to require on petition to qualify a minor party, and then seperate petitions to qualify each candidate of that minor party, the least that they could do is lower the signature requirements for each of those seperate petitions for each candidate. The signature requirement to qualify a minor party in New Mexico is not that bad, but the signature requirments for each candidate for minor parties after their party qualifies for the ballot is crazy high.