Illinois State Court Refuses to Recognize that Green Party is Ballot-Qualified in Any Districts

On November 23, a Circuit Court in Cook County, Illinois, refused to grant an injunction that would have required election officials to recognize the Green Party as a ballot-qualified party in the four U.S. House districts and four legislative districts in which it polled over 5% in 2010. The party is appealing. Here is the 8-page decision.

Illinois election law says if a party got 5% of the vote in the previous election for any partisan office, then it is a ballot-qualified party automatically in the next election for that office. But election officials believe that if the partisan office is a district office, and the district boundaries change, that status lapses. In 2010, the Green Party polled 34.5% for State Representative in the 39th district in Chicago, and 25.6% for State Representative in the 115th district in Carbondale, and 17.4% for State Representative in the 105th district in Pontiac. However, even the Green Party’s status in those districts will go unrecognized, unless the party’s appeal changes the legal outcome.


Comments

Illinois State Court Refuses to Recognize that Green Party is Ballot-Qualified in Any Districts — 3 Comments

  1. Pingback: Cook County Circuit Court screws over Green Party

  2. Separate is NOT equal.

    Each election is NEW and has ZERO to do with any prior stuff in the history of the universe — except perhaps the number of actual voters in the election areas involved — for having equal nominating petitions in the next election.

  3. Pingback: Illinois State Court Refuses to Recognize that Green Party is Ballot-Qualified in Any Districts | ThirdPartyPolitics.us

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.