On June 11, a Kansas state trial court said that the lawsuit Miller v Schwab, Shawnee County District Court 5N2026cv-510, was filed prematurly. The judge said the lawsuit should have been filed after the Kansas Board of Objections had ruled on the issue. The Board of Objections will decide on Friday, June 12.
The issue is whether the Secretary of State was empowered to declare that the 2024 officers of the No Labels Party, rather than the 2026 officers, have the authority to make decisions for the party. The 2024 officers want to dissolve the party. The 2026 officers, who were chosen at a party meeting earlier this year, want it to carry on and run candidates for office this year. See this story.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/politics/articles/alaska-election-official-threatens-disqualify-004352377.html
Alaska election official threatens to disqualify Republican who shares name with Sen. Dan Sullivan
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BALLOT ACCESS = A WAR TYPE EVENT — VICTORY OR DOOM
https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2026/06/12/court-suspended-detroit-judge-can-be-on-ballot-even-if-she-cant-take-bench/90511973007/
Suspended Detroit judge can be on ballot, even if she can’t serve, court rules

Kara Berg
The Detroit News
June 12, 2026, 11:09 a.m. ET
A Detroit judge suspended until 2029 is allowed to have her name on the November ballot, despite not being able to take the bench for another three years, a Michigan Court of Claims judge has ruled.
The ruling on Thursday comes after former Detroit 36th District Court Judge Kahlilia Davis, who was suspended for six years in 2023 for misconduct on the bench, filed a lawsuit asking the Court of Claims to allow her name to be on the ballot, even though she cannot take the bench until 2029.