Independent Party of West Virginia Will Not Seek Recognition as a Qualified Party

The Independent Party of West Virginia has decided not to sue the West Virginia Secretary of State to gain recognition as a qualified party. The definition of a qualified party in West Virginia is a group that got at least 1% for Governor. Gubernatorial elections are in presidential years. In 2020, the Independent Party nominated S. Marshall Wilson for Governor. At the time he was an independent state legislator. He petitioned to be on the ballot for Governor, but partly due to covid, his petition did not succeed.

Then he ran as a write-in candidate, and polled 15,120 votes, which was 1.93% of the total vote cast. The question arose, as to whether his write-in total should be used to recognize the Independent Party. The Secretary of State declined to recognize the party, because of the belief that there was no party organization in existence at the time of the election. The party was organized at that time, and accumulated evidence for a possible lawsuit to gain recognition. But now, a year after the election, the party has decided not to sue. Wilson himself is no longer in the legislature (he didn’t run for re-election, because he was running for Governor) and has lost interest in the Independent Party.


Comments

Independent Party of West Virginia Will Not Seek Recognition as a Qualified Party — 4 Comments

  1. I wouldn’t say that Marshall Wilson has “lost interest.” He’s just no longer serving on the party’s executive committee. He was chairman up until this past August. He’ll probably petition to run for delegate again since, due to redistricting, only 25 signatures are needed. And he’ll probably win since it’s the bottom half of his old district plus new territory to the east.

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