Ballot Access News
November 1, 2011 – Volume 27, Number 6
This issue was printed on gray paper. |
Table of Contents
- SUPREME COURT REJECTS TWO MORE MINOR PARTY CASES
- CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR VETOES HARMFUL BILL
- 8th CIRCUIT UPHOLDS NORTH DAKOTA LAW
- PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY SEASON IS LONGER THAN EVER
- 2012 PETITIONING FOR PRESIDENT
- SOCIALIST PARTY CONVENTION
- GREEN PARTY CONVENTION
- WEST VIRGINIA ELECTION RESULTS
- LOUISIANA 2011 ELECTION
- GREENS ALMOST ELECT A LEGISLATOR
- SUBSCRIBING TO BAN WITH PAYPAL
SUPREME COURT REJECTS TWO MORE MINOR PARTY CASES
COURT HAS SHUNNED ALL SUCH CASES FOR 20 YEARS
During October, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Libertarian Party ballot access cases from Massachusetts and New Hampshire. This continues the Court’s policy of refusing to hear any election law appeal brought by a minor party or an independent candidate. The Court has refused all 49 such cases during the last twenty years, unless a major party was in the same case and on the same side as the minor party.
The only exception to that statement is that in 1996 the Court did accept a Georgia Libertarian case against a state law mandating drug tests for candidates for state office, but that decision, Chandler v Miller, was based on the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches, and did nothing to help minor parties and independents with their particular election law problems.
The two cases the Court refused to hear last month are (1) Libertarian Party of New Hampshire v Gardiner, which challenged the state policy that prints party labels on the general election ballot for candidates who were not nominated by that party; and (2) Barr v Galvin, which challenged Massachusetts policy of having no objective standards on when an unqualified party may list a stand-in presidential candidate on a petition. This policy makes it impossible for a minor party that is not ballot-qualified in Massachusetts to hold its presidential convention in June of presidential election years, and leaves the law ambiguous for parties that hold conventions in July.
During those same twenty years, when a minor party or independent candidate won in the court below, and the losing state appealed to the Supreme Court, half the time, the Supreme Court accepted the case.
Each time during the past twenty years when the Court accepted a state’s appeal, the Court then reversed the lower court and awarded a victory to the state.
The Supreme Court’s hostility toward minor parties and independent candidates is documented in the chart on page 3, which lists the 49 cases the Court refused to hear in the last twenty years.
In the last twenty years, states that lost a lawsuit in the court below to a minor party or independent candidate appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court at six instances. The Court accepted these three: (1) Arkansas Educational TV Foundation v Forbes; (2) Clingman v Beaver; (3) Timmons v Twin Cities Area New Party. The subjects of these cases were debates, whether a minor party can demand an open primary for itself, and fusion.
The three instances at which a state appealed to the Court, and the Court refused to hear the case, are: (1) Brewer v Nader; (2) Davidson v Campbell; (3) New York State Board of Elections v Lerman. The issues in these three cases were an early petition deadline, residency requirements for petition circulators, and whether a congressional candidate must be a registered voter.
The record above means that when a state asks for help from the U.S. Supreme Court, it gets help 50% of the time. But when a minor party or independent asks for help from the Court, over the last twenty years, they get help zero percent of the time.
Lack of Basis for Court Behavior
There is no justification for the Court’s hostility toward minor parties and independent candidates.
The language of the Constitution, the writings of the founding fathers, the opinions of political scientists, and the language of international treaties that the U.S. has signed, all condemn state election laws that discriminate against minor parties and independent candidates, and prevent voters from voting for such candidates.
The Constitution: In decisions between October 1968 and January 1992, the U.S. Supreme Court itself interpreted the First and Fourteenth Amendments to protect the right of voters to vote for minor party and independent candidates. Furthermore, in 1995, the Court interpreted Article One to protect the right of voters to vote for anyone for Congress who meets the qualifications to be in Congress, a decision that protects major party voters and candidates as well as minor party and independent voters and candidates.
The Court has never said that any of these good precedents are no longer good law. But the Court won’t act when lower courts don’t follow t
hose precedents. For example, in 1979 and again in 1992, the Court said states can’t require more signatures for an office in just part of the state, than in the state as a whole. But Alabama violates this principle, and when the lower courts upheld the Alabama law, the Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal.
Opinions of the Founding Fathers: in Federalist Paper No. 10, James Madison said factionalism is bad, but it can be ameliorated if there are many factions instead of just two. "Faction" means "party". Madison wrote of the "security afforded by a greater variety of parties…In an equal degree does the increased variety of parties comprised within the Union increase this security."
The Founding Fathers would have been aghast at the thought of giving legal advantages to two particular "factions", relative to all others. In their day, there were no restrictions on whom a voter could vote for, because there were no government-printed ballots, no candidacy declaration forms, no filing fees, no petitions. There were provisions on who was eligible to hold office, but they did not prevent voters from voting for someone who didn’t meet the qualifications; they just meant, if such candidates were elected, they ran a risk of not being sworn in.
Treaties the U.S. has signed: in 1990 the United States signed the Copenhagen Document of the Conference on the Human Dimension of the CSCE, known informally as the Helsinki Accords. The United States, and the other signatory nations, promised "to respect the right of individuals and groups to establish, in full freedom, their own political parties or other political organizations and provide such political parties and organizations with the necessary legal guarantees to enable them to compete with each other on a basis of equal treatment before the law."
Opinions of Academics: some Supreme Court Justices believe that it is bad policy to encourage voters to support minor parties and independents, but there is no academic support for this view. A review of scholarly books and articles published in the last twenty years about ballot access for minor parties and independent candidates finds many writings criticizing harsh ballot access laws, but none defending them.
The last scholarly writing that did defend harsh ballot access laws for minor parties and independent candidates was Political Scientist Larry Sabato’s 1988 book, "The Party’s Just Begun." But Sabato changed his mind about that, and commented in 1994 that it was very good that the Virginia ballot access laws that year were easy enough that four candidates for U.S. Senate qualified for the November ballot.
Vox Pop, the newsletter of the section of the American Political Science Association that deals with Political Parties, featured in its Spring 2011 issue an article by Professor J. David Gillespie, a political scientist/historian who was highly critical of restrictive ballot access laws in that article, and also in his books. Political scientists have several times filed amicus curiae briefs with the U.S. Supreme Court, urging the Court to hear ballot access cases. No political scientists have ever filed an amicus with the Court opposing liberal ballot access for minor parties and independents.
Political scientist W. Dean Burnham testified in favor of the New Party, in its lawsuit that argued that states must let two different political parties jointly nominate the same candidate. That case reached the U.S. Supreme Court after the 8th circuit had agreed with the New Party. The U.S. Supreme Court opinion which reversed the 8th circuit, Timmons v Twin Cities Area New Party, quoted Professor Burnham to make it seem as though that the Professor was opposed to the position of the New Party, when the truth was the opposite.
Only three members of the current Court have ever written any opinion, concurrence or dissent while they were on the Supreme Court that defends minor parties or independents. Those justices are Stephen Breyer Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Anthony Kennedy.
U.S. SUPREME COURT REFUSALS TO HEAR MINOR PARTY, INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE ELECTION LAW LAWSUITS, 1991-2011
STATE |
REFUSAL DATE |
NAME OF CASE |
ISSUE |
N.H. |
Oct. 11, 2011 |
Libertarian Party of NH v Gardner |
Political party protection of its name on ballot |
Mass. |
Oct. 3, 2011 |
Barr v Galvin |
Presidential stand-ins on petition |
Ct. |
June 28, 2011 |
Green Party of Ct v Lenge |
Discriminatory public funding |
Hawaii |
May 5, 2011 |
Nader v Nago |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Georgia |
Jan. 18, 2011 |
Coffield v Kemp |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Virginia |
Sep. 30, 2010 |
Lux v Rodrigues |
Residency requirement for circulators |
Ala. |
June 7, 2010 |
Shugert v Chapman |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
La. |
June 7, 2010 |
Libertarian Party v Dardenne |
Deadline for qualified party to submit electors |
Illinois |
May 18, 2009 |
Stevo v Keith |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Maine |
Aug. 20, 2008 |
Hoffman v Dunlap |
Validity of signatures |
Ala. |
Jan. 7, 2008 |
Swanson v Chapman |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Mont. |
Oct. 9, 2007 |
Jones v Montana University System |
Government-sponsored discriminatory debates |
Pennsy. |
Oct. 1, 2007 |
Rogers v Cortes |
Petitions needed for nominees of qualified parties |
Pennsy. |
Feb. 16, 2007 |
Romanelli v Election Board |
Large fees when petition is held invalid |
Pennsy. |
Jan. 8, 2007 |
Nader v Seroty II |
Large fees when petition is held invalid |
Ohio |
June 5, 2006 |
Lawrence v Blackwell |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
Oregon |
May 23, 2005 |
Kucera v Bradley |
Arbitrary invalidation of petition signatures |
Texas |
March 21, 2005 |
Nader v Connor |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Pennsy. |
Jan. 10, 2005 |
Nader v Seroty I |
Burdensome procedure for checking signatures |
Calif. |
Nov. 29, 2004 |
Baum v Superior Court |
Validity of certain type of write-in votes |
Ohio |
Oct. 26, 2004 |
Blankenship v Blackwell |
Residency requirement for circulators |
Pennsy. |
Oct. 4, 2004 |
Zulick v Wise |
Discriminatory law on fusion |
Calif. |
Jan. 13, 2004 |
Van Susteren v Shelley |
Party can’t nominate a non-member |
Georgia |
March 10, 2003 |
Cartwright v Barnes |
Minor party U.S. House number of signatures |
Arizona |
Dec. 16, 2002 |
Browne v Bayless |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
Ohio |
Oct. 7, 2002 |
Nader v Blackwell |
Ballot labels, candidates who use indp. procedure |
Ill. |
March 18, 2002 |
Tobin for Gov. v Bd. of Elections |
Immunity for election officials |
Ohio |
Oct. 1, 2001 |
Schrader v Blackwell |
Ballot labels, candidates who use indp. procedure |
Virginia |
April 30, 2001 |
Wood v Quinn |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
federal |
April 30, 2001 |
Nader v Fed. Elec. Commission |
Access to corporate-funded presidential debates |
Mich. |
Oct. 9, 2000 |
Buchanan v Miller |
State fails to adjudicate internal party dispute |
P.R. |
Oct. 2, 2000 |
Civil Action Party v Puerto Rico |
Only notary-attorney may circulate petition |
So. D. |
Oct. 2, 2000 |
Nader 2000 v Hazeltine |
When deadline held invalid, what relief due |
Idaho |
Sep. 28, 2000 |
Nader 2000 v Cenarrusa |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Virginia |
March 20, 2000 |
DeBauche v Trani |
Government-sponsored discriminatory debates |
Iowa |
Jan. 11, 1999 |
Marcus v Iowa Public Television |
Government-sponsored discriminatory debates |
Ohio |
Oct. 5, 1998 |
Miller v Lorain Co. Bd. Elections |
Independent candidate number of signatures |
Fla. |
Oct. 6, 1997 |
Libertarian Party of Fl. V Smith |
Discriminatory filing fees |
Ill. |
Oct. 6, 1997 |
Libertarian Party of Il. V Rednour |
Minor party U.S. House number of signatures |
Maine |
March 25, 1996 |
McLaughlin v N.C. Bd. Elections |
How a party remains on ballot |
Okla. |
Oct. 2, 1995 |
COFOE v McElderry |
Write-in ban combined with tough ballot access |
Ark. |
Feb. 21, 1995 |
Langguth v McKuen |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
Kansas |
Jan. 23, 1995 |
Hagelin for President v Graves |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
Me. |
Oct. 11, 1993 |
Libertarian Party of Me. v Diamond |
Number of signatures in small party primary |
Illinois |
June 21, 1993 |
Reed v Kusper |
Must new party run a full slate |
Calif. |
Feb. 22, 1993 |
Lightfoot v Eu |
Number of write-ins to win a party primary |
Cal. |
Sep. 24, 1992 |
Natural Law Party v Eu |
Independent candidate petition deadline |
Wisc. |
June 22, 1992 |
Swamp v Kennedy |
Ban on two parties nominating same candidate |
Colo. |
Apr. 20, 1992 |
Libertarian Party v Colo. Sec. of State |
Party can’t nominate a non-member |
Most of these instances are denials of cert petitions; a few are denials of injunctive relief.
On October 7, California Governor Jerry Brown vetoed SB 205, which would have made it illegal to pay registration workers on a per-registration basis. Because (due to Proposition 14) the only way California minor parties can remain ballot-qualified is to have approximately 110,000 registrants, this bill, if it had taken effect, would have crippled registration drives needed to preserve party existence.
On October 17, the 8th Circuit upheld a North Dakota law that has kept all minor party legislative candidates off the general election ballot since 1976. Libertarian Party of North Dakota v Jaeger, 10-3212. The decision is by Judge Kermit Bye, a Clinton appointee, and co-signed by Judge Roger Wollman, a Reagan appointee, and Judge Bobby Shepherd, a Bush Jr. appointee.
The law requires that no one may be nominated for the legislature in a party primary, even if that person got the most votes, unless he or she polls a number of votes that equals 1% of the population (including children and aliens). In 2010, the turnout in all three primaries (Democratic, Republican, and Libertarian) was low, so that in some districts, 15% of the voters who voted in all three primaries put together would have needed to choose the Libertarian primary ballot, in order for the party to place its nominee on the November ballot. In other words, 1% of the population equaled 15% of the actual voters in all party primaries put together.
Minor parties, even when they have considerable voter appeal, almost always have very low turnout in their primaries. In 1998, only 3% of the voters who actually voted in all party primaries chose to vote in the Minnesota Reform Party primary. Notwithstanding that, the Reform Party elected the Governor in November.
The judges erroneously believed that once a party submits 7,000 valid signatures, it is on the ballot forever after. The decision says that the primary vote restriction is needed to keep the ballot from being crowded with too many candidates, because party qualification is so easy.
Actually, submitting the petition only puts a party on the ballot for one election year, and the party must re-do that same petition every two years unless it polls 5%. On October 31, the party filed a request for a rehearing that points out this error.
Americans Elect says one reason it exists is because the system by which the major parties choose presidential nominees is so unfair and chaotic. This argument is especially powerful in 2012, when the length of the presidential primary season is an unprecedented 178 days long, almost six months. The first primary is on January 10 and the last is June 26. By contrast, in all presidential elections from 1912 through 1972, the primary season was never more than 90 days long.
The chart on page 4 has all presidential primary dates for elections 1988-201
2. The chart also shows the median date (i.e., the date on which half the primaries are over) for the years 1988-2012. The 2012 median date is two months later than it was in 2008. This is because so many states that used February presidential primaries in 2008 have shifted to later months for 2012.
DATES OF PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES
State
|
2012
|
2008
|
2004
|
2000
|
1996
|
1992
|
1988
|
Alabama |
March 13 |
February 5 |
June 1 |
June 6 |
June 4 |
June 2 |
March 8 |
Arizona |
February 28 |
February 5 |
February 3 |
February 22 |
February 27 |
– – – |
– – – |
Arkansas |
May 22 |
February 5 |
May 18 |
May 23 |
May 21 |
May 26 |
March 8 |
California |
June 5 |
February 5 |
.March 2 |
March 7 |
March 26 |
June 2 |
June 7 |
Colorado |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
March 5 |
March 3 |
– – – |
Connecticut |
April 24 |
February 5 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
March 24 |
March 29 |
Delaware |
April 24 |
February 5 |
February 3 |
February 5 |
February 24 |
– – – |
– – – |
D. |
April 3 |
February 12 |
January 13 |
May 2 |
May 7 |
May 5 |
May 3 |
Florida |
January 31 |
January 29 |
March 9 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Georgia |
March 6 |
February 5 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
March 3 |
March 8 |
Idaho |
May 15 |
May 27 |
May 25 |
May 23 |
May 28 |
May 26 |
May 24 |
Illinois |
March 20 |
February 5 |
March 16 |
March 21 |
March 19 |
March 17 |
March 15 |
Indiana |
May 8 |
May 6 |
May 4 |
May 2 |
May 7 |
May 5 |
May 3 |
Kansas |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
April 7 |
– – – |
Kentucky |
May 22 |
May 20 |
May 18 |
May 23 |
May 28 |
May 26 |
March 8 |
Louisiana |
March 24 |
February 9 |
March 9 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Maine |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
March 7 |
March 5 |
– – – |
– – – |
Maryland |
April 3 |
February 12 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
March 3 |
March 8 |
Mass. |
March 6 |
February 5 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Michigan |
Feb. 28 |
January 15 |
– – – |
February 22 |
March 19 |
March 17 |
– – – |
Minnesota |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
April 7 |
– – – |
Mississippi |
March 13 |
March 11 |
March 9 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Missouri |
February 7 |
February 5 |
February 3 |
March 7 |
– – – |
– – – |
March 8 |
Montana |
June 5 |
June 3 |
June 8 |
June 6 |
June 4 |
June 2 |
June 7 |
Nebraska |
May 15 |
May 13 |
May 11 |
May 9 |
May 14 |
May 12 |
May 10 |
Nevada |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
March 26 |
– – – |
– – – |
New Hamp. |
Jan. 10 |
January 8 |
January 27 |
February 1 |
February 20 |
February 18 |
February 16 |
New Jersey |
June 5 |
February 5 |
June 8 |
June 6 |
June 4 |
June 2 |
June 7 |
New Mex. |
June 5 |
June 3 |
June 1 |
June 6 |
June 4 |
June 2 |
June 7 |
New York |
April 24 |
February 5 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 7 |
April 7 |
April 19 |
No. Car. |
May 8 |
May 6 |
– – – |
May 2 |
May 7 |
May 5 |
March 8 |
No. Dakota |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
February 27 |
June 9 |
June 14 |
Ohio |
June 12 |
March 4 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 19 |
June 2 |
May 3 |
Oklahoma |
March 6 |
February 5 |
February 3 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Oregon |
May 15 |
May 20 |
May 18 |
May 16 |
March 12 |
May 19 |
May 17 |
Pennsyl. |
April 24 |
April 22 |
April 27 |
April 4 |
April 23 |
April 28 |
April 26 |
Puerto Rico |
– – – |
June 1 |
– – – |
February 27 |
– – – |
April 5 |
March 21 |
Rhode Is. |
April 24 |
March 4 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
So. Caro. |
Jan. 21 |
January 19 |
February 3 |
February 19 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
So. Dakota |
June 5 |
June 3 |
June 1 |
June 6 |
February 27 |
February 25 |
February 23 |
Tennessee |
March 6 |
February 5 |
February 10 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Texas |
March 6 |
March 4 |
March 9 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
March 10 |
March 8 |
Utah |
June 26 |
February 5 |
February 24 |
March 10 |
– – – |
– – – |
– – – |
Vermont |
March 6 |
March 4 |
March 2 |
March 7 |
March 5 |
– – – |
March 1 |
Virginia |
March 6 |
February 12 |
February 10 |
February 29 |
– – – |
– – – |
March 8 |
Washington |
– – – |
February 19 |
– – – |
February 29 |
March 26 |
May 19 |
– – – |
West Va. |
May 8 |
May 13 |
May 11 |
May 9 |
May 14 |
May 12 |
May 10 |
Wisconsin |
April 3 |
February 19 |
February 17 |
April 4 |
March 19 |
April 7 |
April 5 |
MEDIAN |
April 13 |
February 12 |
March 2 |
March 14 |
March 12 |
April 7 |
March 8 |
RANGE |
168 days |
147 days |
147 days |
126 days |
105 days |
112 days |
119 days |
STATE
|
REQUIREMENTS
|
SIGNATURES COLLECTED
|
DEADLINES
|
|||||
FULL PARTY
|
CAND
|
LIB’T
|
GREEN
|
CONSTI
|
AM. ELE
|
Party
|
Indp.
|
|
Ala. |
44,829 |
5,000 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
*53,000 |
Mar. 13 |
Sep. 6 |
Alaska |
(reg) 7,406 |
#3,271 |
already on |
*2,158 |
*19 |
already on |
June 1 |
Aug. 8 |
Ariz. |
23,041 |
(est) #27,000 |
already on |
already on |
0 |
already on |
Mar. 1 |
Sep. 7 |
Ark. |
10,000 |
#1,000 |
already on |
*3,500 |
0 |
0 |
June 30 |
Aug. 1 |
Calif. |
1,030,040 |
172,859 |
already on |
already on |
negotiation |
finished |
Jan. 2 |
Aug. 10 |
Colo. |
(reg) 1,000 |
#pay $500 |
already on |
already on |
already on |
*finished |
Jan. 8 |
June 4 |
Conn. |
no procedure |
#7,500 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 8 |
Del. |
(est.) (reg) 650 |
(est.) 6,500 |
already on |
540 |
*finished |
0 |
Aug. 21 |
July 15 |
D.C. |
no procedure |
(est.) #3,900 |
can’t start |
already on |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 21 |
Florida |
0 |
112,174 |
already on |
already on |
already on |
already on |
*Sep. 1 |
July 15 |
Georgia |
*50,334 |
#*51,845 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
*25,000 |
Aug. 6 |
Aug. 6 |
Hawaii |
691 |
#4,536 |
already on |
500 |
0 |
finished |
Feb. 22 |
Sep. 7 |
Idaho |
13,102 |
1,000 |
already on |
0 |
already on |
0 |
Aug. 30 |
Aug. 24 |
Illinois |
no procedure |
#25,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
June 25 |
Indiana |
no procedure |
#34,195 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
0 |
– – – |
June 30 |
Iowa |
no procedure |
#1,500 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
– – – |
Aug. 17 |
Kansas |
16,776 |
5,000 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
already on |
June 1 |
Aug. 6 |
Ky. |
no procedure |
#5,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Sep. 7 |
La. |
(reg) 1,000 |
#pay $500 |
already on |
already on |
0 |
0 |
May 17 |
Sep. 4 |
Maine |
28,639 |
#4,000 |
0 |
already on |
0 |
*5,000 |
Dec 8, 11 |
Aug. 8 |
Md. |
10,000 |
(est.) 35,000 |
already on |
already on |
*300 |
0 |
Aug. 6 |
Aug. 6 |
Mass. |
(est) (reg) 40,000 |
#10,000 |
15,857 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
Nov. 1, 11 |
July 31 |
Mich. |
32,261 |
30,000 |
already on |
already on |
already on |
|
July 19 |
July 19 |
Minn. |
105,352 |
#2,000 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
May 1 |
Aug. 21 |
Miss. |
be organized |
1,000 |
already on |
already on |
already on |
0 |
Jan. 6 |
Sep. 7 |
Mo. |
10,000 |
10,000 |
already on |
0 |
already on |
finished |
July 30 |
July 30 |
Mont. |
5,000 |
#5,000 |
already on |
0 |
200 |
*3,000 |
Mar. 15 |
Aug. 15 |
Nebr. |
4,880 |
2,500 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Aug. 1 |
Sep. 1 |
Nev. |
7,013 |
7,013 |
already on |
0 |
already on |
already on |
April 13 |
July 6 |
N. Hamp. |
13,698 |
#3,000 |
*14,000 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Aug. 8 |
Aug. 8 |
N.J. |
no procedure |
#800 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
– – – |
July 30 |
N. M. |
3,009 |
18,053 |
already on |
700 |
0 |
0 |
Apr. 2 |
June 27 |
N.Y. |
no procedure |
#15,000 |
can’t start |
already on |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 21 |
No. Car. |
85,379 |
85,379 |
already on |
*500 |
3,000 |
*2,000 |
May 16 |
June 14 |
No. Dak. |
7,000 |
#4,000 |
*150 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Apr. 13 |
Sep. 7 |
Ohio |
*show support |
5,000 |
already on |
*already on |
*already on |
*already on |
unsettled |
Aug. 8 |
Okla. |
51,739 |
43,890 |
*19,000 |
0 |
0 |
*5,000 |
March 1 |
July 15 |
Oregon |
21,804 |
18,279 |
already on |
*8,956 |
already on |
*12,000 |
Aug. 28 |
Aug. 28 |
Penn. |
no procedure |
(es) #25,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 1 |
R.I. |
17,115 |
#1,000 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
*4,000 |
June 1 |
Sep. 7 |
So. Car. |
10,000 |
10,000 |
already on |
already on |
already on |
*3,000 |
May 6 |
July 15 |
So. Dak. |
7,928 |
3,171 |
*6,300 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Mar. 27 |
Aug. 7 |
Tenn. |
40,042 |
275 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
*5,000 |
April 5 |
Aug. 16 |
Texas |
49,729 |
80,778 |
already on |
already on |
can’t start |
can’t start |
May 20 |
May 14 |
Utah |
2,000 |
#1,000 |
already on |
0 |
already on |
finished |
Feb. 15 |
Aug. 15 |
Vermont |
be organized |
#1,000 |
already on |
organizing |
0 |
organizing |
Jan. 1 |
Jun 14 |
Virginia |
no procedure |
#10,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 24 |
Wash. |
no procedure |
#1,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
can’t start |
– – – |
Aug. 28 |
West Va. |
no procedure |
#7,135 |
0 |
already on |
0 |
0 |
– – – |
Aug. 1 |
Wisc. |
10,000 |
#2,000 |
can’t start |
can’t start |
already on |
can’t start |
June 1 |
Sep. 7 |
Wyo. |
3,740 |
3,740 |
already on |
0 |
*3,500 |
0 |
June 1 |
Aug. 28 |
TOTAL STATES ON
|
29
|
16*
|
12*
|
7*
|
“ | ` |
#partisan label permitted (other than "independent").
"AMER ELE" = Americans Elect Party.
* change since Oct. 1 issue.
On October 14-16, the Socialist Party held its presidential convention in Los Angeles. Stewart A. Alexander, 60, of Murrieta, California, was nominated for President. He is black and is the first racial or ethnic minority the Socialist Party has ever nominated for President. He was the party’s vice-presidential nominee in 2008.
The Socialist Party has not had its presidential nominee on the California ballot since 1940. Stewart hopes the Peace & Freedom Party will nominate him so that he can be on in California.
For vice-president, the convention chose Alejandro Mendoza, 35, who is currently seeking his Masters Degree in Geosciences at the University of Texas in Dallas.
The Green Party presidential convention will be July 14-15, either in Baltimore or Sacramento.
West Virginia elected a Governor on October 4. The results: Democrat Earl Tomblin 149,346 (49.54%); Republican Bill Maloney 141,991 (47.10%); Mountain Party nominee Bob Henry Baber 6,083 (2.02%); Marla Ingalls, independent, .2,875 (.95%); Harry V. Bertram of American Third Position, 1,111 (.37%). The Constitution Party candidate, Phil Hudok, received 79 write-ins.
Louisiana held its election for state officers on October 22.
For Governor, Republican Bobby Jindal, received 673,239 (65.80%). The four Democrats received 288,161 (28.16%). The Libertarian, Scott Lewis, received 12,528 (1.22%). The four independents received 49,235 (4.81%).
For Agriculture and Forestry Commission, the results are: Republican Mike Strain 640,886 (66.50%); Democrat Jamie LaBranche 267,942 (27.80%); Reform Party nominee Belinda Alexandrenko 54,888 (5.70%).
On October 18, Massachusetts held a special election for State House, Berkshire 3 District. The official results are still not available, and the Secretary of State will not release unofficial results. Press reports vary. One report says the Green Party nominee, Mark C. Miller, lost to the Democrat by only 92 votes; another report says he lost by 192 votes. Miller easily outpolled the Republican nominee and the independent nominee. The next issue of B.A.N. will carry the official results.
Minnesota also held a special legislative election on October 18, and in the State Senate 61st district, the Green Party nominee placed second and outpolled the Republican nominee. The results are: Democrat Jeff Hayden 1,856 (68.34%); Green Party nominee Farheen Hakeem 595 (21.91%); Republican Bruce Lundeen 221 (8.14%); Independence Party nominee Matt Brillhart 44 (1.62%).
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The two major parties have turned the United States into a judicial dictatorship. The judicial branch of government was supposed to be the weakest. All major decisions are now made by judges appointed for life. Congress does nothing except borrow money. The President does nothing except borrow money.
It is time for the people to support the United States instead of these two self-created societies, the classification George Washington gave to political parties. There is a government agency which is required to apply all contributions toward payment of the national debt. Send your political contributions to Attention Dept G, The Bureau of the Public Debt, P.O. Box 2188, Parkersburg, W.V. 26106-2188
As independent voters, we are still required by law to pay taxes to the Bureau of Internal Revenue, but realistically speaking, we cannot expect to see our tax money applied to free and open elections. That being the case, we can regard anything we pay in taxes as money stolen by the two major parties and expect it to be applied to generating excuses for increasing the national debt.
The best political option independent voters have is to contribute money to pay the national debt until party politicians beg for mercy. It would not take long for them to become alarmed and start denouncing payment of the debt as un-American.
I think it would be insane for private citizens to try to pay down the US debt. What, all 78 trillion in unfunded liabilities? Sorry. Not possible.
Also, the fourth and supreme branch of government is the jury. We might not be able to stop the jerks at the Federal Reserve from sticking guns in our faces and outlawing our use of real money (via the legal tender laws), but we can at least play damage control when the state asks us to participate in the destruction of our fellow man (like Bernard von Nothaus).
Until the US public gets serious about comprehending and using their power as members of the jury, the USA will be a tyrannical place to live, and it will get a lot worse. When the jury gets organized, we will have the prospect of peace and freedom.
All it takes is a simple “Yes, I could apply the law as it’s given to me.” and then a “not guilty.” And if you want to do more, let your family and friends know that they must behave with the same integrity. And if you want to do more than that, stand in front of your local courthouse and hand out FIJA pamphlets that inform the incoming jury members. With 6 degrees of separation, this allows us to take back our republic without a single intervening election, and without violence.
…But we have to want freedom badly enough to pursue it.
Until then, I’ll be supporting Ron Paul and any other candidates that are smart enough to not bow and scrape before their Federal Reserve overseers.
Who knows? Maybe even the independent that’s being chosen online this time will be a good choice. Noone can deny that Demopublican and Republicrat power-seeking sociopaths are the problem. Just walk into any courtroom and watch the mala prohibita being enforced on the unwitting.
-J
Well, go ahead and invest your money in contributions for political party candidates, Jake. The only thing left to United States citizens after two hundred years of political party rule is a 15 trillion dollar debt. I think it is time someone is honest about it. I am choosing the debt because it is real. So I will invest in reality by sending a contribution to reality from time to time.
For you people who still believe in Santa Claus, the Republicans and Democrats will be happy to take your money in taxes, political contributions, and any other way you choose to contribute to their deception. I will pay the taxes to keep from going to jail, but I do not regard it as anything but stealing.
Your post only proves what I have said all along. Political parties and their followers have no loyalty to the United States. Everything they do is calculated to provide excuses for increasing the national debt.
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