Mississippi Committee to Review Election Laws Issues Report

The Mississippi Secretary of State’s office set up a Committee to Review the state’s election laws last year. On January 16, 2015, the committee issued this 18-page report. The committee has 50 members. On the issue of whether to provide for early voting (“no-excuse absentee voting”), the committee voted in favor 36-3, with 11 abstentions. On the issue of whether to provide for on-line voter registration, the committee favored that idea 32-6, with 12 abstentions.

On the issue of what kind of primary system the state should use, 23 voted in favor of a Louisiana-style system, and 20 voted in favor of keeping Mississippi’s open primary. Seven abstained. However, the members who voted in favor of keeping the open primary recommended consolidating the Democratic and Republican primaries into the same polling locations, to save money. Currently, Mississippi election officials must provide separate locations for the Republican primary and the Democratic primary. Mississippi has other qualified parties but they don’t actually have primaries because the state doesn’t print up primary ballots for any party unless at least two people from the same party file to run against each other, and that virtually never happens.

The Report refers to the Louisiana system as a top-two primary. The authors of the Report mention that California also has a top-two primary, but the Report on page 11 says “A top-two primary election system would appear to operate as a general election with a runoff, rather than a primary election which narrows the list of candidates of a political party for a general election.” This describes the Louisiana system. The Report mentions that the members of the Committee were visited by Louisiana election officials, who briefed them on the Louisiana system.


Comments

Mississippi Committee to Review Election Laws Issues Report — 2 Comments

  1. The top 2 primary EVIL BRAIN INFECTION continues to spread.

    NO primaries.
    P.R. and nonpartisan App.V.

  2. One feature the committee members particularly liked about the Top 2 Primary is that it permitted voters to support candidates of different parties for different offices.

    No one would consider banning a voter from contributing to candidates of different parties, displaying yard signs or bumper stickers, or personally advocating for their election. No one would advocate making it illegal to vote for candidates of “another” party in the general election.

    Yet some people continue to advocate for systems that deny the opportunity to support candidates of different parties in the most significant way, which is to vote for them.

    Early voting is not absentee voting. Most votes in Texas are cast in early voting. Texas does not have absentee voting.

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