March 2023 Ballot Access News Print Edition

Ballot Access News
March 2023 – Volume 38, Number 10

This issue was printed on white paper.


Table of Contents

  1. DELAWARE WILL NO LONGER DEFEND ITS BAN ON MINOR PARTY AND INDEPENDENT JUDGES
  2. MISSISSIPPI INITIATIVE MAY BE RESTORED
  3. BALLOT ACCESS BILLS
  4. STUNNING COURT WIN FOR INITIATIVES
  5. BOOK REVIEW: LABORATORIES AGAINST DEMOCRACY
  6. TOP MINOR PARTY LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES 1946-2022
  7. 2024 INDEPENDENT U.S. SENATE PETITION REQUIREMENTS
  8. CALIFORNIA TOP-TWO SYSTEM COULD DISTORT 2024 SENATE ELECTION
  9. GEORGIA SPECIAL ELECTION
  10. MISSISSIPPI LIBERTARIANS SET RECORD IN 2023 ELECTION
  11. NEW FEDERAL CAMPAIGN LIMITS
  12. SUBSCRIBING TO BAN WITH PAYPAL

DELAWARE WILL NO LONGER DEFEND ITS BAN ON MINOR PARTY AND INDEPENDENT JUDGES

On January 30, the government of Delaware agreed that its ban on minor party and independent voters from being appointed to most judicial positions is unconstitutional. Thus ends a six-year struggle to overturn that law in court. The state filed paperwork in U.S. District Court, agreeing to a consent judgment that the ban cannot stand. Adams v Carney, 1:20cv-1680.

There is no bill yet in the Delaware legislature to repeal the ban, because the legislature recessed on January 26. It returns on March 7, and presumably a bill will be introduced soon after.

The ban was passed in 1951. It says that the State Supreme Court will consist of five members, three of whom shall be members of one "major party", and the other two of the "other major party". The Delaware election code defines a major party as one with registration of at least five percent of the state total. Technically there could be more than two major parties, although no third party has ever come close to having 5% of the registration in Delaware. The biggest third party, the Independent Party, has 1.3% of the registration.

The Delaware Constitution is similarly restrictive for Superior Courts and Chancery Courts.

James R. Adams, a Delaware attorney who is a registered independent, filed his lawsuit against the ban in 2017. He won the case in U.S. District Court in 2018. The state appealed but Adams won again in the Third Circuit in 2019. The state asked for rehearing en banc but that was denied also, although four Third Circuit judges wanted to rehear the case.

Then the state appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in 2020 that Adams did not have standing because he hadn’t applied for judicial appointments. Carney v Adams, 19-309.

Adams had been thinking about standing, and while the case was pending in the U.S. Supreme Court, he had applied to be appointed to five judicial vacancies. He was wise to have done that, because that put him in a position to file an entirely new case, with his beefed-up standing. He filed his new case the very day after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against him on standing.

The forces against Adams were formidable. When his case was in the U.S. Supreme Court, amici briefs on the state’s side were filed by the Delaware Bar Association, a group of retired Delaware Supreme Court Chief Justices, the Delaware State and Local Government Association, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Republican National Committee, the Brennan Center, a group of former Delaware Governors, and the Campaign Legal Center.

The Conference of Chief Justices of the states even filed a brief that said it was in support of neither side, but which actually supported the state.

The only groups that filed amici briefs on Adams’ side were the CATO Institute, Public Citizen, and the Libertarian Party. The ACLU did not file anything.

The rationale for the ban was that partisan balance in the state courts was a very good thing, and that if minor party members or independents could be appointed, that would upset the partisan balance.

Various briefs on the side of the state argued that a Green Party judge would simply bolster the Democratic side, and that a Libertarian would bolster the Republican side. They argued that an independent might be ideologically in sync with one of the major parties. Adams himself was attacked because before he had been a registered independent, he had been a registered Democrat, so his critics argued that if he were on a court, he would be a "secret" Democratic vote.

This argument assumes that the positions of the Republican and Democratic Parties cover the whole range of ideology. This is a very shallow belief. The belief is also insulting to judges, because it assumes they let their party membership determine their decisions.


MISSISSIPPI INITIATIVE MAY BE RESTORED

In 2021, the Mississippi Supreme Court invalidated the state’s initiative process because the state Constitution said there should be signatures from all five U.S. House districts, but the state no longer had five districts. This was the first time any state with the initiative process had lost it.

On February 9, the Senate passed SCR 533, to restore the initiative. It would require signatures of 12% of the registered voters, which is much harder than the old requirement, which was 12% of the last gubernatorial vote. The old requirement was 106,190 signatures, but the new one is approximately 240,000 signatures. Also the old procedure could be used to amend the Constitution, but the bill only allows statute changes. Now the bill goes to the House.


BALLOT ACCESS BILLS

Arizona: on February 15, the House Municipal Oversight and Elections Committee passed HCR 2033. It is a proposed constitutional amendment that says that any qualified political party is permitted to have nominees and to place those nominees on the November ballot. If this passes, it would block any possible future statutory initiative to deprive parties of their ability to nominate candidates, such as proposals for a top-two or top-four primary.

Arkansas: on February 28, the Senate State Agencies and Governmental Affairs Committee heard SB 277. It lowers the number of signatures for a new party from 3% of the last gubernatorial vote (27,212) to exactly 10,000 signatures. It expands the petitioning period from three months to 15 months. It moves the petition deadline from the year before the election, to three weeks before the primary.

The bill received four "yes" votes and one "no" vote, but because other members of the Committee were absent, it didn’t pass, although it probably will be brought up again.

Colorado: on February 16, the Senate State, Veterans & Military Affairs Committee defeated SB23-101. It would have required qualified minor parties to submit a difficult petition for each one of its nominees. Currently qualified minor parties nominate by convention and no petitioning is needed. The vote was 4-1.

Connecticut: Representative Devin Carney (R-Old Saybrook) has introduced HB 5694, to provide for a top-two system. From the experience of California and Washington, we know that top-two systems keep all minor party candidates off the general election ballot in races when someone from both major parties runs for the same office.

Indiana: Representative Ryan Dvorak (D-South Bend) has introduced HB 1632, to ease petitions for independent candidates and the nominees of unqualified parties. The bill drops the petition from 2% of the last vote for Secretary of State, to 250 signatures or 2%, whichever is less.

Kansas: on February 23, the House passed HB 2086, an omnibus election law bill. It requires declared write-in candidates to pay a filing fee. Courts in California, Maryland, and West Virginia have held in the past that it is unconstitutional for states to require write-in candidates to pay filing fees, because the U.S. Supreme Court said in Lubin v Panish that candidate filing fees are unconstitutional unless they are needed to keep ballots from being too crowded, and of course write-in candidates’ names don’t appear on ballots.

Maryland: on March 7, the House Ways & Means Committee will hear HB 1112, which legalizes electronic signatures on ballot access petitions.

Minnesota: Senator Jim Carlson (D-Eagan), chair of the Senate Elections Committee, has introduced SF 1827. It changes the definition of a qualified party from a group that got 5% for a statewide race in either of the last two elections, to 10%. Already Minnesota’s definition of "party" is one of the most severe in the nation. For example, it is one of only six states in which the Libertarian Party has never been ballot-qualified (the others are New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia; and it has only been qualified in Connecticut for certain offices, and in Georgia only for statewide offices). Only two states now have 10% vote tests, New Jersey and Virginia.

New Hampshire: HB 116, which would have vastly increased candidate filing fees for U.S. Senator and Governor, was held in committee and cannot pass.

Missouri: State Senator Sandy Crawford (R-Buffalo) has introduced SB 102. It would require initiative circulators to be registered voters in the state. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1999 in Buckley v American Constitutional Law Foundation that states cannot require circulators to be registered voters.

Nevada: the Secretary of State has proposed SB 53, which moves the deadline for candidates to file a declaration of candidacy from March to February. The law even applies to parties that nominate by convention. Similar early deadlines for non-major party candidates to file declarations of candidacy have been struck down in Kentucky, South Carolina, and West Virginia.

New Mexico: on February 25, a Saturday, the Senate passed SB 180 by 23-13. It doubles the number of signatures needed by the non-presidential nominees of qualified minor parties, from 1% of the last gubernatorial vote, to 2%. That would be 14,246 signatures in 2024. New Mexico is the only state that requires the nominees of a qualified party to submit a petition. The law is not logical, because if the party has already submitted a petition to qualify itself, or passed the vote test, then its nominees should be deemed to have support. All the votes in favor were cast by Democrats; all the votes against by Republicans. The Green Party is trying to defeat the bill in the House.

New York: five Republican Assemblymembers have introduced A3312, which would reduce the statewide petition for independent candidates and the nominees of unqualified parties from 45,000 to 15,000. It would also ease the definition of a qualified party, from a group that polled 2% for the office at the top of the ticket (about 140,000 votes) to exactly 50,000.

There are now two bills in New York to improve ballot access.

New Mexico(2): HB 347, which would have lowered ballot access petitions for all types of candidates, was tabled in Committee on February 22.

North Dakota: on February 21, the Senate passed SCR 4013. It would require initative circulators to have lived in the state 120 days before the first signatures is collected. It would ban paying initiative circulators. That latter provision is unconstitutional; in 1988 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that states can’t ban paying circulators, in Meyer v Grant.

Oklahoma: Senator Julia Kirt (D-Oklahoma City) has introduced SB 288, to decrease the number of signatured needed for candidates who don’t or can’t pay the filing fee. The old law requires a petition of 2% of the electorate; the bill sets the statewide offices at 4,000 signatures and the U.S. House at 2,000.

Oklahoma(2): Senator Mary Boren (D-Norman) has introduced SB 568, to repeal the straight-ticket device.

Vermont: on February 22, the House Government Operations & Military Affairs Committee passed HB 97. It would move the petition deadline for independent candidates and the nominees of unqualified parties from August to May. It would also ban "sore losers". And it would double the number of write-in votes needed for a write-in candidate in a primary to obtain a party nomination. Finally, it would say that if a candidate is nominated by two parties, he or she could only choose one party label for the general election ballot. The Progressive Party is fighting this bill.

Wyoming: on January 31, HB 155 was killed in committee. It would have moved the independent candidate petition deadline from late August to early June, and required minor parties to have chosen their nominees in convention by 81 days before the primary.


STUNNING COURT WIN FOR INITIATIVES

On February 17, the Eighth Circuit issued an opinion in SD Voice and Heidelberger v Noem, 21-3195. It strikes down the petition deadline for statewide initiatives, which is one year before the election. The decision is by Judge L. Steven Grasz (a Trump appointee). It is also signed by Judges James B. Loken (a Bush Sr. appointee) and Raymond Gruender (a Bush Jr. appointee).

The opinion is unprecedented. Never before had a federal court struck down a petition deadline for initiatives. The panel relied on the First Amendment, and reasoned that because circulating an initiative is free speech, and because that deadline shut off opportunities for circulation, that the deadline is unconstitutional.

The opinion will be very useful if the legislatures of North Dakota and Missouri pass laws making it more difficult for initiatives to get on the ballot. Both states are in the Eighth Circuit.


BOOK REVIEW: LABORATORIES AGAINST DEMOCRACY

Laboratories Against Democracy, How National Parties Transformed State Politics, by Jacob M. Grumbach, 2022, Princeton University Press. 261 pages.

The author is a Political Science professor. The book argues that some of the fundamental praise for federalism is out-of-date. For a century, scholars and thinkers have praised federalism, because, they say, states can experiment with new ideas that hadn’t been tried out in any other state before, and may hit upon useful new policies. The problem is that in our era, the two major parties are nationalized. Both of them have clear national policy agendas, and they tend to apply in every state. State legislators follow their own party’s national agenda.

So, they won’t experiment, especially if some of the ideas appear to have originated with the opposing major party. Blue states don’t respect ideas from red states, and vice versa. Also, powerful national groups with loyalty to the ideas of one or the other major party have great influence in state legislatures.

The book also argues that many state governments that are controlled by the Republican Party have passed laws that make elecdtions in their states less democratic.

Unfortunately, the evidence that it is Republicans who are injuring voting rights is based on a very arbitrary "State Democracy Index". The author gathered data for each state on Gerrymandering, automatic voter registration, district compactness, early voting, felony disenfranchisement, rejection rate for postal ballots, no-fault absentee voting, turnout, restrictions on voter registration, voter ID, voter wait times on election day, youth pre-registration.

But he gathered no data on the ability of candidates and parties to get on the ballot. He gathered no evidence about whether a state allows initiatives, which is odd considering that the book praises Florida for having the initiative process, which enabled Florida voters to repeal the blanket ban on ex-felon voting. And he has no data about whether a state’s ballot format is clear, or confusing. If he had included those, he would have found that sometimes it is Democratic legislators who pass bills that inhibit voting.

Most blue states do not have the statewide initiative process, and most red states do. The states with the worst ballot format are blue states. And in the last few years, bills to restrict ballot access have mostly been sponsored by Democrats, not Republicans. This is true this year in Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, and Vermont.

The author did not respond to me to talk about these points.


TOP MINOR PARTY LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES 1946-2022

This chart has the minor party candidate for legislature who received the highest share of the vote, 1946-2000.

STATE

Year

Party

Candidate

Vote

Percentage

Alabama

1970

National Democratic

Thomas Reed

9,436

52.25%

Alaska

1980

Libertarian

Dick Randolph

11,163

55.01%

Arizona

1980

Libertarian

Jack Heald

3,113

37.08%

Arkansas

2012

Green

Fred Smith

2,905

100.00%

California

1999

Green

Audie Bock

14,674

50.55%

Colorado

2012

Libertarian

Tim Menger

13,951

40.96%

Connecticut

2015

Working Families

Ed Gomes

1,485

48.82%

Delaware

2014

Independent Party

Michael Tedesco

2,135

25.68%

Florida

2012

Independent Party

Nancy Argenziano

32,960

42.03%

Georgia

1994

Libertarian

Larry Bolin

2,503

31.91%

Hawaii

1994

Green

Toni Worst

3,571

40.73%

Idaho

1972

American

Werner Brammer

1,988

38.31%

Illinois

2012

Honesty & Integrity

James T. Meeks

22,434

40.05%

Indiana

2008

Libertarian

Rex Bell

8,374

33.49%

Iowa

2022

Libertarian

Sean Schriver

3,058

32.24%

Kansas

1948

Prohibition

J. W. Bathurst

1,309

35.97%

Kentucky

2020

Libertarian

Amanda Billings

8,157

21.58%

Louisiana

2019

Independent Party

Roy Daryl Adams

5,854

38.03%

Maine

2002

Green

John Eder

1,796

64.67%

Maryland

2002

Green

Linda Schade

10,101

40.86%

Massachusetts

2010

Green

Mark C. Miller

4,460

45.02%

Michigan

1996

Libertarian

Jon Coon

5,042

15.74%

Minnesota

2002

Independence

Sheila Kiscaden

12,388

41.62%

Mississippi

2015

Reform

Eli Jackson

1,784

13.18%

Missouri

1996

U.S. Taxpayers

Ray Rowland

18,582

36.91%

Montana

2006

Constitution

Rick Jore

2,045

55.45%

Nebraska

1988

New Alliance

Ernie Chambers

2,084

66.79%

Nevada

2000

Libertarian

James Dan

990

45.27%

New Hampshire

1994

Libertarian

Don Gorman

2,563

99.50%

New Jersey

1991

Populist

John L. Kucek

9,153

21.78%

New Mexico

1992

Green

Abraham Gutman

3,703

39.20%

New York

1986

Liberal

Albert Vann

8,511

63.59%

North Carolina

2016

Libertarian

William Meredith

24,672

25.57%

North Dakota

1976

American

Victor Krein

609

12.06%

Ohio

2014

Libertarian

Ryan McClain

9,143

28.03%

Oklahoma

1976

Libertarian

Porter Davis

2,867

36.35%

Oregon

2010

Independent Party

Jeff Caton

7,246

42.71%

Pennsylvania

2014

Libertarian

Betsy Summers

3,298

32.25%

Rhode Island

2020

Libertarian

William James Hunt

2,995

40.53%

South Carolina

2012

Libertarian

Jeremy C. Walters

5,243

47.06%

South Dakota

1982

Libertarian

Emmett Elrod

2,228

37.23%

Tennessee

1970

American

William J. Davis

12,659

58.27%

Texas

1992

La Raza Unida

Albert Pena

4,205

34.35%

Utah

2018

United Utah

Michele Weeks

5,577

39.05%

Vermont

2022

Progressive

Brian Cina

1,858

100.00%

Virginia

2011

Libertarian

Michael Kane

5,509

31.54%

Washington

2014

Libertarian

David A. Steenson

12,838

33.05%

West Virginia

2022

Americans Coming Together

S. Marshall Wilson

1,666

39.70%

Wisconsin

2010

Green

Ben Manski

7,762

31.11%

Wyoming

2020

Libertarian

Marshall A. Burt

1,696

54.41%


2024 INDEPENDENT U.S. SENATE PETITION REQUIREMENTS

The chart below shows the petition requirements for independent candidates for U.S. Senate in each state in 2024. The motivation for carrying this chart was a recent NBC story about U.S. Senator Kyrsten Sinema, who has said she will run for re-election in 2024 as an independent. The story, by Ben Kamisar, a Political Unit staff writer, said that Sinema is fortunate that the Arizona petition requirement for independents "is a relatively low threshold as ballot access goes."

Actually, in 2024 only three states require more signatures than Arizona (Texas, North Carolina, and Georgia). The NBC story is very inaccurate; Arizona is tougher on independent candidates that almost any other state. The reporter was informed of this but he did not respond to my message.

States with easier requirements for a new party than for a US Senate independent candidate are Arizona, Delaware, Hawaii, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico, North Carolina, and Vermont. The percentage is the number of signatures divided by that state’s 2020 presidential vote cast.

State
# of Sigs.
Percent
Code Reference
Formula

La.

0

.00%

Title 18, sec. 465C

pay filing fee

Alaska

0

.00%

15.25.010,15.25.030

pay fee, then place in top 4 in primary

Okla.

0

.00%

Title 26, 10-101

pay filing fee

Fla.

0

.00%

97.021

pay filing fee

Wash.

0

.00%

29A.24.091

pay fee, then place in top 2 in primary

Tenn.

25

.00+%

2-5-101

number stated in law

Hi.

25

.00+%

Title 2, sec. 12-6

number stated in law

Cal.

65

.00+%

Election code 8062

must place in top 2 in primary

N.J.

800

.02%

19:13-5

number stated in law

Nev.

250

.02%

Title 24, 293.200

number stated in law

Minn.

2,000

.06%

204B.08

number stated in law

Wis.

2,000

.06%

Title 2, sec. 8.20(4)

number stated in law

Pa.

5,000

.07%

Consti. Pty of Pa v Cortes

number in court settlement

Utah

1,000

.07%

20-3-38

number stated in law

Miss.

1,000

.08%

23-15-359

number stated in law

Ohio

5,000

.08%

3513.257

number stated in law

Idaho

1,000

.12%

34-708A

number stated in law

Vt.

500

.14%

Title 17, sec. 2402(b)

number stated in law

R.I.

1,000

.14%

17-4-7

number stated in law

Iowa

3,500

.21%

Title 4, sec. 45.1

number stated in law

Mich.

12,000

.22%

Graveline v Johnson

number from 2018 court order

Ky.

5,000

.23%

Title 10, sec. 118.315(2)

number stated in law

Colo.

8,000

.25%

1-4-802

1,000 signatures each US House dist.

Va.

10,000

.25%

24.2-543

number stated in law

Mass.

10,000

.28%

Chapter 53, sec. 6

number stated in law

No. D.

1,000

.28%

16.1-12-02

number stated in law

Md.

10,000

.33%

elec. law 5-703(e)

number stated in law

Mo.

10,000

.33%

Title 9, sec. 115.321

number stated in law

Ks.

5,000

.36%

25-303

number stated in law

N.H.

3,000

.37%

Title 4, sec. 655:42

number stated in law

S.C.

10,000

.40%

7-9-10

number stated in law

Ill.

25,000

.41%

10 ILCS 5/10-2

number stated in law

Ct.

7,500

.41%

9-453(d)

number stated in law

Neb.

4,000

.42%

32-620

number stated in law

Me.

4,000

.49%

Title 21, sec. 494.5

number stated in law

N.Y.

45,000

..52%

Chap. 17, sec. 6-142

number stated in law

Tx.

80,778

.71%

Elec. code 181.005

1% of 2022 gub. vote

Ark.

10,000

.82%

7-302(5)(B)

number stated in law

S.D.

3,502

.83%

12-7-1

1% of 2022 gub. vote

W.V.

7,790

.98%

3-5-23

1% of 2020 Senate vote

Ore.

23,744

1.00%

249.735

1% of 2020 pres. vote

Ind.

36,944

1.22%

3-8-6-3

2% of 2022 Sec. of State vote

Ariz.

(est.) 45,000

1.33%

16-341.E

3% of no. of registered indps.

Wyo.

3,879

1.40%

22-4-402(d)

2% of 2022 US House vote

Ga.

70,083

1.40%

21-2-170

1% of reg. voters as of Nov. 2022

No.C.

82,542

1.49%

163-122

1.5% of 2020 gub. vote

Del.

(est.) 7,550

1.50%

Title 15, sec. 3001

1% of reg voters as of Dec 2023

N.M.

14,246

1.54%

1-8-51

2% of 2022 gub. vote

Ala.

42,459

1.83%

17-9-3(a)(3)

3% of 2022 gub. vote

Mt.

16,659

2.76%

13-10-601

5% of winner’s vote Senate 2020


CALIFORNIA TOP-TWO SYSTEM COULD DISTORT 2024 SENATE ELECTION

Starting in 2011, California has used a top-two system, in which every candidate runs in the primary, and the general election can only include the two candidates who received the two highest votes in the primary. No write-in space exists.

For the first time since top-two started, there is a competitive race in the Democratic Party for U.S. Senate. Incumbent Dianne Feinstein is not running for re-election. This will be California’s first U.S. Senate election without an incumbent running since before top-two started. Three Democratic members of the U.S. House have already declared for the 2024 primary: Adam Schiff, Barbara Lee, and Katie Porter. A fourth, Ro Khanna, may also run.

If there are four strong Democratic candidates, it is conceivable that they would split up the Democratic vote so much that two Republicans might place first or second in the primary. Possible strong Republican candidates are Brian Dahle and Mark Meuser, although neither has declared. Dahle is a State Senator and the Republican who ran for Governor in the 2022 general election. Meuser is an attorney who was the Republican who ran for U.S. Senate in the 2022 general election.


GEORGIA SPECIAL ELECTION

Georgia held a special election on January 31, to fill the vacancy in the State Senate, 11th district. Percentages are: Republican 76.04%; Democratic 22.95%; Libertarian 1.02%. When this seat had last been up, in 2022, only a Republican had run.

The Libertarian, John Monds, was permitted to be on the ballot with no petition. Georgia requires petitions of 5% of the number of registered voters for minor party and independent candidates for the legislature in regular elections, but does not require anyone to submit a petition in special elections. Monds was the first minor party candidate on the ballot for Georgia State Senate since 2002.


MISSISSIPPI LIBERTARIANS SET RECORD IN 2023 ELECTION

Mississippi elects all its state officers in the odd year before presidential election years. The 2023 election has 17 Libertarian candidates for state legislature. That is the highest number any third party has run for Mississippi legislature since at least 1923, when the Socialist Party probably had a larger number.

The Libertarian Party had never before had more than four candidates for the Mississippi legislature in any one year. One factor that keeps the number of minor party candidates down is that Mississippi requires all qualified parties to nominate by primary (although no primary ballot is actually printed up if there are no primary contests), and the filing deadline for candidates to run in a party primary in these state elections is February 1, which is peculiar, because the primary is not until August.


NEW FEDERAL CAMPAIGN LIMITS

The federal campaign law will allow individuals to give $3,300 to a federal candidate in 2024. The limit rises with inflation.


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Comments

March 2023 Ballot Access News Print Edition — 16 Comments

  1. In Laboratories Against Democracy, the author argues that federalism is out-of-date because states are too partisan to be laboratories of democratic ideas any more. Even if that is so, which it isn’t completely, that isn’t the only reason for states to retain sovereignty.

    In fact, one of the key reasons for federalism is to leave matters to the states that are too divisive for the federal government to try to resolve on its own. This is already happening. For instance, the Supreme Court has returned the abortion issue to the states, where it should be.

  2. Property owners rights and Christian duty to civilize savages and bring them the good news about Jesus.

  3. @ Jim:

    False equivalence.

    Slavery was a denial of rights.

    Abortion is a conflict of rights.

  4. You are applying a moral standard which was far from agreed upon. It’s also not in any way empirically self-evident.

  5. Walter Ziobro – There is no conflict of rights. A fetus doesn’t have them.

    A fetus feeds off of its host and causes changes to her body. That is a violation of the mother’s rights. It is a violation that she can choose to tolerate, or not. Because the fetus is violating the mother’s rights by feeding off of her, the fetus does not get the full rights of a human until it has separated from the mother. The mother can choose to separate herself from the fetus any time she wishes. The only pro-life libertarian position is that the fetus should not be harmed more than necessary during the process of separation. Government prohibition on that separation is a violation of the woman’s rights.

  6. That kind of twisted logic is one of many reasons I am not a libertarian, although I do want much smaller government. Some of you are so twisted that you want to coddle the most heinous of violent criminals, mob bosses, drug lords, terrorists and the worst criminally insane miscreants for the rest of their natural lives, if not free them altogether on some technicality…yet have no hesitation about brutally murdering millions of innocent children in the womb. Those are just two of many weak points of libertarian absolutism.

  7. Well, as far as I can tell, the only way for you to get a fetus to have “rights” is either through making up who and what has them and who and what doesn’t based entirely on your feelings, or you determine who has rights through an immortal sky wizard. And those just don’t do it for me.

    Also, no libertarian wants violent criminals and terrorists walking around free. No idea where you’re getting that.

  8. There is a minor mistake with the “TOP MINOR PARTY LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES 1946-2022” list. James Paulk was the incumbent Democratic nominee while Thomas Reed was the National Democratic Party candidate. Reed won with 8,759 votes for 52.20% of the vote.

  9. Thank you, Dalton. You are right. The mistake occurred because the manuscript Alabama election returns for 1970 omitted party labels. Way back in 1971 or so when I obtained those returns from the Secretary of State, I concluded that Paulk must be the NDPA nominee because otherwise that meant the NDPA actually elected a state legislator, and I didn’t think NDPA had done that. But I found a newspaper clipping tonight that shows you are right. So the chart should have showed the NDPA nominee, Thomas Reed, won the election with 52.25% of the vote. 9,436 votes.

    It’s very difficult to correct the newsletter once it is up on the internet, but I will ask my webmaster if he can fix it.

  10. It is very interesting though and I actually started work on Wikipedia pages for James Paulk and Thomas Reed because of this page. I might send you information about it if they elected any other state legislators.

  11. Jim is nuts. I sure hope he never ends up in a lifeboat survival scenario or out in the woods where he has to be rescued or anything. What part of unique human DNA, heart beat and brain waves is hard to understand? Being a petulant child about divine authority is not the same thing as being scientific or logical. Logic and faith both have their own separate place but both point to human rights for unborn babies. Especially in the vast majority of cases where the slut could have just kept her legs closed if she did not want to be a baby factory. But even if she did get raped by her father at age 5 it’s still not the baby’s fault. I think there is a lot of truth to the old saying that a human life begins when a man says hey baby do you want a drink or just clubs the ho over the head and drags her to his man cave to play some foosball and rape her repeatedly until she does her duty to God and becomes pregnant.

    And just like some sluts don’t realize they want to become pregnant, lenient on crime libtards may not know they want terrorists and violent criminals walking around, but they keep spreading their own legs and everyone else’s for them and all but facilitating their escape from jail and helping harbor them from justice.

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