Two New Amici Briefs Filed in U.S. Supreme Court on Side of Utah Republican Party

On November 8 and 9, two interesting amicus briefs were filed in the U.S. Supreme Court in Utah Republican Party v Cox, 18-450. Here is the amicus of CATO Institute, the Pacific Legal Foundation, and Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce.

Here is the brief of Private Citizen.

So far the state of Utah has not waived its right to file a response. The issue is whether the First Amendment’s Freedom of Association clause protects the right of a political party to decide for itself how it nominates candidates. The Utah Republican Party is willing to nominate by primary, but it wants to limit individuals on its primary ballot to those who have shown substantial support at a party meeting.


Comments

Two New Amici Briefs Filed in U.S. Supreme Court on Side of Utah Republican Party — 2 Comments

  1. Each FACTION/fraction of the PUBLIC Electors/Voters in a State are NOT independent dictator empires regarding ANY thing in a State

    — esp. the PUBLIC nomination of candidates for PUBLIC offices getting their names on PUBLIC official ballots.

    Too many absolute TOTAL ZERO IQ morons to count since 1968 – esp the SCOTUS HACK super-MORONS —
    ie the MORON 2000 CA Dems case.

    See earlier 2 Texas White Primary cases 1928-1932.

    Will the SCOTUS MORONS produce Civil WAR II —

    like they did with the 1857 Dred Scott MORON op. producing Civil WAR I in 1860-1861.

    Too many constitutional law and legal history MORONS to count —

    due to the totally rotted to the core publik skoools for centuries.

  2. Please let me know if you’re looking for a author for your
    site. You have some really good posts and I think I would be a good asset.
    If you ever want to take some of the load off, I’d absolutely love to write some
    material for your blog in exchange for a link back to mine.
    Please blast me an email if interested. Thanks!

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Your email address will not be published.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.