Wyoming Secretary of State Wants to Charge Write-in Candidates for Canvassing their Votes

Under current Wyoming law, a write-in candidate at the general election can request that write-in votes for him or her be tallied. The request need not be made until two days after the general election. The Wyoming Secretary of State’s omnibus election law bill this year, S20, provides that the Secretary of State can charge a fee for this service. The bill calls it an “administrative fee” and does not set the amount of the fee. It says the amount will be set by rule and regulation.

Courts in three states have already ruled that the U.S. Constitution does not permit states to charge a filing fee for declared write-in candidates. The cases are from the California Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th circuit, and a U.S. District Court in West Virginia. The only permitted rationale for filing fees is to keep ballots from being too crowded. Write-in candidates’ names are never printed on ballot, by definition, so the logic of requiring a filing fee for them doesn’t exist. States are not permitted to charge fees, for either voters or for candidates, merely for the purpose of helping pay for election administration, according to several decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court. For example, in Tashjian v Republican Party of Connecticut, 479 U.S. 208, at page 218, the Court said, “Increases in the cost of administering the election system is not a sufficient basis here for infringing appellees’ First Amendment rights.” In Carrington v Rash, 380 U.S. 89, at 86, the Court said states may not injure voting rights “because of some remote administrative benefit to the state.”


Comments

Wyoming Secretary of State Wants to Charge Write-in Candidates for Canvassing their Votes — No Comments

  1. If I am reading this right, “canvassing” and “tallied” means counting the votes. Wyoming wants to charge write-in candidates to count their votes. I guess they’re mad at Taylor Haynes. I suggest he hire Jesse Jackson and help him play the race card against these communists.

  2. Counting the votes is done locally, on election night, generally, or sometimes later. The tally is done after the individual precincts report their data, and is done by a more central election administration office, either the county or the state.

  3. 14th Amdt, Sec. 2 (1868) with *RIGHT TO VOTE* is still in the nearly dead U.S.A. Const.

    Keep suing to bankrupt the EVIL party hack MORONS.

    Having elections is one of the very few things that the party hack regimes MUST DO on a regular schedule — to give the appearance that the regimes are *democratic*.

  4. If the scanning machines kick back the ballot because of the write in wouldn’t the local county Clerk and Recorder make a count on those ballots and not wait until two days after?

  5. # 4 Thus the now standard requirement for a LEGAL vote that the voter ALSO fill in the oval/box next to the write-in name so the scanner can detect the write-in vote.

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