Illinois Independent Mayoral Candidate’s Ballot Position Challenged Because He Had Started to Run in Primary

Alton, Illinois, holds a partisan city election on April 4, 2017. An independent candidate for Mayor, Danny Rauschkolb, filed a petition but that petition has been challenged. No one alleges he lacks enough valid signatures. But the challengers say he can’t run as an independent because he filed a petition to run in the Democratic primary for the same office earlier. That petition was rejected because he didn’t include a receipt showing he had filed a statement of economic interests.

This article explains the details. Illinois voter registration forms do not ask applicants for a choice of party, or whether the applicant is an independent. Therefore the challengers’ reliance on the U.S. Supreme Court opinion Storer v Brown is not fully relevant. Storer v Brown upheld a California law that required independent candidates not to have been registered members of a qualified party, but California had partisan registration.


Comments

Illinois Independent Mayoral Candidate’s Ballot Position Challenged Because He Had Started to Run in Primary — 3 Comments

  1. ALL elections for executive and judicial officers should be nonpartisan.

    i.e. have all legislators on all sides blast such officers when they mess up — i.e. when they are LAWLESS.

  2. Demo Rep… name a single modern democracy that has non-partisan elections for executive offices…

  3. Most city regimes in the USA have nonpartisan executive officers and manage to survive

    — an election reform from the *progressive era — circa 1890-1917 (before REACTIONARY stuff happened due to World War I and Great Depression I).

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