Arizona Supreme Court Rules That No Labels Governor Candidate Can Remain on the Primary Ballot

Hugh Lytle, a Scottsdale businessman and former walk on quarterback at Arizona State University, put the address of a UPS store at which he had a private mailbox, on his candidate form, even though the form mandated a residential address. The Supreme Court of Arizona has ruled that he may remain on the No Labels Party Primary ballot for Governor in Arizona this year. The Arizona Primary Election date is July 21, 2026.

Here is a story from The Arizona Daily Star.

Here is the Opinion. Beckman v Lytle, cv-26-0124.


Comments

Arizona Supreme Court Rules That No Labels Governor Candidate Can Remain on the Primary Ballot — 8 Comments

  1. HOW MANY NEW AGE HURDLES FOR BALLOT ACCESS ???

    CNN DEBATE 7 OF THE HACKS FOR CA GUV 9 PM EDT ( 6 PM PDT) TONIGHT

    NOOO PRIMARIES

    NONPARTISAN EXECS/JUDICS – APPROVAL VOTING

  2. If Thomas W. Jones was still alive, he’d be more likely to be 86 years old. After all, he was suing people at least as far back as 55 years ago, so unless he was 12 years old then, he couldn’t be 67.

  3. ABOUT ZERO ABOUT THE TOP 2 PRIMARY AND MINORITY RULE GERRYMANDERS IN CA IN THE CNN GUV DEBATE —

    FATAL PAR FOR DOOMED STATE OF AFFAIRS COURSE.
    —-
    NO PRIMARIES
    PR
    APPV

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