Oklahoma House Rules Committee Drastically Re-Writes Primary Date Bill

On April 13, the Oklahoma House Rules Committee completely revamped SB 602, which had already passed the Senate. The original bill moved the primary from July to June, and moved the petition deadline for new parties from May 1 to March 1.

As amended, the bill moves the primary from July to the last Tuesday in August. It also eliminates the runoff primary. It is likely that the motivation for the amendment is concern that the original bill, setting the new party petition so early, would cause the state’s procedure for new parties to get on the ballot to be held unconstitutional.

The part of the bill abolishing the runoff primary would be a dramatic change for Oklahoma, which has had runoff primaries ever since 1946. State legislators for decades have resisted the idea of a abolishing the run-off primary. But, faced with a choice between eliminating the runoff primary, or putting the state in peril of having its ballot access law declared unconstitutional, the Rules Committee made the former choice. It will be interesting to see how the full House, and the Senate, feel about abolishing the runoff. Oklahoma must do something different because the federal law, requiring that overseas absentee ballots be mailed at least 45 days before an election, makes the existing system unworkable.

One would think that because the bill moves the primary to late August, the bill would also move the deadline for a new party to get on the ballot from May 1 to May 31, but the bill does not do that. If this bill passes, it it somewhat plausible that the May 1 petition deadline would be held unconstitutional. Before 2003, Oklahoma primaries were in late August and the new party petition deadline was May 31. Because this bill proposes returning to a late August primary, one wonders why the bill doesn’t also return the petition deadline to May 31. Ever since the deadline has been May 1, no new party petition has succeeded in Oklahoma.

Like several other bills pending in the Oklahoma legislature, this bill moves the presidential primary from February to March. The date of the presidential primary has no impact on petition deadlines. Oklahoma has never required a new party to participate in a presidential primary.

The Oklahoman, the state’s largest newspaper, had editorialized on April 12 that the run-off primary should be eliminated.


Comments

Oklahoma House Rules Committee Drastically Re-Writes Primary Date Bill — 5 Comments

  1. How soon before ALL of the ex-Donkey de facto ONE party regimes get rid of run-off primaries ???

    P.R. and App.V. — NO primaries are needed.

  2. What is so sacred about the ‘federal law, requiring that overseas absentee ballots be mailed at least 45 days before an election’? Is imperial snail mail really that slow? Suppose the ballots were faxed to an Embassy or Consulate 21 days before an election where they could be picked up in person by an overseas voter? If the military can’t get vital information or documents in the hands of the ‘troops’ within 21 days, then maybe it would be better to just fly the voters back to the U.S. to vote.

  3. Pingback: Digest for 4/16 | Stuck in a Digital-Haze

  4. # 2 What is the speed of top secret military orders going around the world nonstop — and now being instantly decoded at the receiving end ???

    How many code bits — 128, 256, more ???

    i.e. 10 to the zillion years needed to break New Age codes.

  5. Pingback: Oklahoma House Rules Committee Drastically Re-Writes Primary Date Bill | ThirdPartyPolitics.us

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