Two Lawsuits are Pending in Missouri State Courts Over Political Party Ability to Reject Primary Candidates

BAN has already covered the pending Missouri state court lawsuit in which the Republican Party seeks to bar a gubernatorial candidate from its August 2024 primary ballot.  That case, Missouri Republican Party v Secretary of State, has a hearing May 9.

Another Missouri case, somewhat similar, was filed on March 19, 2024.  The Vernon County Republican Committee is suing the county elections office to prevent four candidates from appearing on the primary ballot.  They are running for county partisan office.  The party wants them off the primary ballot because they refuse to attend a vetting meeting.  Vernon County Republican Committee v Lee, circuit court, Vernon County, 24VE-cv-00185.

Recently the Missouri legislature passed a law letting voters indicate their political party on the voter registration form, but there are no consequences for whether a voter fills that out or not.  The state doesn’t even tabulate how many people have affiliated with a party.  That provision has no part in either of these lawsuits.


Comments

Two Lawsuits are Pending in Missouri State Courts Over Political Party Ability to Reject Primary Candidates — 2 Comments

  1. FACTIONS OF ALL PUBLIC ELECTORS ARE N-O-T INDEPENDENT EMPIRES IN ANY ELECTION STUFF.

    FAILURE OF SCOTUS TO CLARIFY PRINCIPLE IN VARIOUS CAUCUS / PRIMARY / CONVENTION CASES.

    1 AMDT PETITION IS RE ISSUE PETITIONS —-

    PERVERSION BY SCOTUS RE 1 AMDT CANDIDATE PETITIONS IN 1968 WILLIAMS V RHODES.

    EQUAL CANDIDTE PETITIONS VIA 14-1 EP CL.

  2. The State of Missouri recognizes the Missouri Republican Party as a “ballot-qualified party”.
    The State of Missouri pays for the Missouri Republican Party’s primary.
    Therefore, the ballot line of the Missouri Republican Party is public.
    Therefore, the Missouri Republican Party can’t restrict someone from vying for their ballot line.

    What the party leadership can do is influence voters, sue candidates over STATE laws, or influence their legislators to pass new laws that restrict ballot access for them. Alternatively, they can also influence their legislators to eliminate the concept of a ballot-qualified party.

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