At the November 4, 2014 election, 4.6% of the voters supported minor party nominees or independent candidates for the office at the top of the ballot. “Office at the top of the ballot” means Governor, in states that elected a Governor. In other states, it is U.S. Senate. For the five states that had neither Governor nor U.S. Senate on the ballot, it means the office actually at the top of the ballot: U.S. House in North Dakota and Washington, Attorney General in Utah, Auditor in Missouri, and Secretary of State in Indiana. The District of Columbia is included and the vote for Mayor is used.
This is the lowest “other” share in a midterm election since 1994, when the “other” vote was 4.5%. One reason the 2014 “other” vote was lower is that late in the campaign season, independent candidates for Governor in South Carolina and Connecticut said they were withdrawing and recommended that the voters vote for one of the major party nominees. In Maine, the independent candidate for Governor said he was not withdrawing but said all his supporters who felt he wouldn’t win should vote for a major party nominee.
Another reason the “other” vote was lower is that California, which had provided 539,645 “other” votes for Governor in 2010, had since then switched to the top-two system, so it was literally impossible for any California voter to vote for anyone for Governor other than a Democrat and a Republican.
Besides California, the other states in which only a Republican and a Democrat were on the ballot for the top office are Alabama, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Washington..
Jurisdictions in which the 2014 “other” vote exceeds 10% of the total vote cast are: Alaska, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Missouri, New York, Rhode Island, and Wyoming.
If the Constitution(al) Party of Alabama would change it’s name to ALABAMA CONSTITUTION(AL)PARTY, and then successfully petition for ballot access statewide every two years, their nominees would automatically be at the “TOP-OF-THE-TICKET.
And it would remain this way until the Legislature changes the current statutes regarding the placement of political parties on the ballot.
Are you listening Constitution(al) Party of Alabama?