Jo Jorgensen Voluntarily Dismisses Maine Lawsuit

On August 10, Jo Jorgensen dismissed her Maine ballot access lawsuit, because she had enough valid signatures, so the case is moot. It was a case concerning the health crisis.


Comments

Jo Jorgensen Voluntarily Dismisses Maine Lawsuit — 9 Comments

  1. A hearty congratulations to women and to us men, who are finally seeing more hope and unity, when there is more competition of ideas and men unite under limited voting.

    CENSORED One 2020
    http://www.pprelectoralcollege.com

    The strength of the team is each individual member. The strength of each member is the team. —Phil Jackson

  2. Why didn’t Ogle file in Vermont, and/or spend $1000 to get on in Colorado? Sounds like a quitter to me.

  3. He’d need electors in any of those states. VT is only 3 but you still have to somehow get them.

  4. Ogle couldn’t find enough people from his fantasy parliament to be delegates?

  5. They were too busy filling out parliament voter registrations and voting in parliament elections.

  6. To clarify, I have appealed my case for the illegit voting in Los Angeles County L.P. convention and meetings, and California State L.P. bylaws with motions to adopt pure proportional representation.

    Both County and State L.P. Judicial and Bylaw appeals blocked.

    The final appeal to LNC will be in the mail this week and it involves everyone consider new rules 1,2 and 3 be affirmed and new “vote of confidence” for Prez, VP and all 538 Presidential Electors.

    We can also elect unlimited numbers of consecutively ranked names as back-up Presidential Electors for the PPR Electoral College.

    One change will be Black Panther Party on ballot at #12 spot since they switched from Humanitarian Party to Black Panther Party.

    http://usparliament.org/v-h-2020-paperballot.htm

  7. The l.p. National judicial committee is not a body that hears appeals from state party judicial committees. The state parties are sovereign. The only thing the national party can do about a state party that doesn’t please the national party is disaffiliate, and generally state parties control ballot access, not national.

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