Kentucky Legislature Passes Bill Letting Individuals Give as Much to a Minor Party as to a Major Party

On February 5, the Kentucky legislature passed HB 157. The vote was unanimous in both chambers. It lets individuals give $5,000 to a minor party. The old law said individuals could give that much to a major party, but not to any other party. That policy was struck down last year in U.S. District Court in Shickel v Dilger. The state did not appeal.


Comments

Kentucky Legislature Passes Bill Letting Individuals Give as Much to a Minor Party as to a Major Party — 2 Comments

  1. How Google Got Its Name

    The United Coalition had been striving for attention to the cause of pure proportional representation for five years in Usenet starting in Santa Cruz, California in 1992 when a programmer capitalized on our success.

    Here is the story about how the United Coalition was imitated by a program in 1997 but the psychopath programmer does’t want the truth to be known that he joined the conversation of the United Coalition to get his ideas.

    http://usparliament.org/how-google-got-its-name.php

    The first Green Party candidate to access the ballot in California was my best friend Kevin Clark in the 1993 special election for CA CD 17.

    Clark and I were also part of the 1992 United Coalition; a Green, Peace and Freedom, Democratic and Environmentalist team, four candidates for Santa Cruz City Council.

    Green Party bosses Cameron Spritzer, Mike Feinstein and others fought tooth and nail to deem the United Coalition which is elected under the pure proportional representation voting system as not acceptable to the Green Party.

    The reality is that pure proportional representation is the only legitimate voting system and the United Coalition has been correct for more than twenty-three consecutive years.

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Your email address will not be published.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.