Kentucky Says Four Presidential Petitions are Valid

The Kentucky Secretary of State has posted the candidate list. Four petitions for presidential candidates succeeded. See the list here. Note that the candidates lower on the list are declared write-in candidates. Thanks to Tony Roza for the link.

In Kentucky, only the Republican and Democratic Parties are ballot-qualified.


Comments

Kentucky Says Four Presidential Petitions are Valid — 30 Comments

  1. Pretty cool that Dr. Stein is running under the “Kentucky Party”. Lol at the fake VP though

  2. The communist-fascist Demonrats don’t have a ballot monopoly in any state, but they’re working hard on it.

  3. I don’t think it’s the same Samson, this one is a Green Party member from Florida

    But I can confirm the doctor from Michigan popped up in my search too

  4. The Retard Party nominated a dead guy. The Democrats were going to nominate a near corpse earlier this year.

  5. The “Kentucky Party”, huh? Searching that just brings up the Republican Party of Kentucky.

    I don’t think they picked a catchy enough name.

  6. The Green VP candidate from Florida is Samson L. K… The doctor from AZland is Samson K. K…

  7. Not too unusual for a father and son to have different middle names. A number of people I know do that, including family members.

  8. As Progressive Leftist and Jim Riley have pointed out, I don’t think they are the same person.

    The late Michigan doctor was called Samson Kossivi Kpadenou, while Ballotpedia has an article for a member of the Florida Green Party called Samson LeBeau Kpadenou.

    I assume the latter is the same person listed here as Jill Stein’s running mate. But I’m not even certain of that.

    They might be father and son, but then wouldn’t it be customary for Sr and Jr suffixes to be used, especially when the middle name or initial is not included?

    @Andy
    No, the doctor was supposedly born in Lomé, Togo.

    Anyway, I didn’t mean to derail and hung-up on Dr Samson Kpadenou. I was merely using information about him to try and figure out the correct pronunciation of the surname Kpadenou, as a matter of curiosity.

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