Court Dates Set in Three Election Law Cases

On December 4, 2012, a U.S. District Court in Brooklyn will hear oral arguments in Credico v New York State Board of Elections. The hearing will be at 10 a.m. in Courtroom 13B. The issue is the constitutionality of a New York law that says two unqualified parties who jointly nominate the same candidate cannot both appear on the ballot for that race. Instead the minor party candidate must choose which party line he or she wishes to appear on. Yet New York does permit two qualified parties to jointly nominate the same candidate, and let the candidate appear on the ballot twice, so that voters can choose which label they prefer to support. This is a case that was filed in 2010.

On February 25, 2013, a U.S. District Court in Colorado will hear Riddle v Hickenlooper. This is the case over the constitutionality of a state law that says individuals may donate twice as much money to a candidate for the legislature who is nominated by primary than to a candidate for the legislature who is nominated by convention or petition. The lead plaintiff, Joelle Riddle, wants to donate $400 to an independent candidate for the legislature, Kathleen Curry. But the state law only permits her to donate $200. Yet if Riddle wanted to donate to a Republican or a Democrat who is running for the same seat, Riddle could donate $400. This case was also filed in 2010.

On Wednesday, October 24, 2012, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Curtis Karnow will hear oral arguments over whether the six plaintiffs who challenged two particular aspects of the top-two law should be required to pay almost $250,000 in attorneys fees to the California Independent Voters Project, and Californians for an Open Primary, the groups who intervened in support of California’s top-two law. Judge Karnow had awarded the fees on August 1, and is being asked to reconsider that decision. It had been thought that the reconsideration hearing would be before a different judge and would be on Monday, August 22, but on August 19, the other judge said the reconsideration decision belongs to Judge Karnow. Anyone in the San Francisco area who is interested in this matter, which affects me and five of my friends, is urged to attend. The hearing is at 400 McAllister, at the corner of Polk and McAllister, at 9:30 a.m.


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