U.S. District Court Judge Says It is Probably Unconstitutional for Maine to Convert All Party Registered Members to Independents When Party Goes Off the Ballot

On June 11, U.S. District Court Judge Lance E. Walker, a Trump appointee, issued an order in Baines v Dunlap, 1:19cv-509. This Libertarian Party lawsuit had been filed in late 2019, to try to oveturn these Maine laws: (1) the law that says when a party goes off the ballot, all its members are converted to independents, regardless of the wishes of such voters; (2) the January deadline for a new party to qualify; (3) the number of signatures needed to get a member of a small party on his or her own party’s primary ballot; (4) the method by which a new party qualifies, to obtain 5,000 registered members.

The order denies injunctive relief, and therefore the Libertarian Party failed to become ballot-qualified again. However, the order says it is probably unconstitutional for the state to convert party members to independents when a party goes off the ballot. The order suggests that if the party had filed this lawsuit early in 2019, it could probably have won an injunction restoring all the party’s registered members. But it points out that the party waited until December 2019 to file the lawsuit, and by now the members have been registered outside the party for over a year, and may have since joined other parties.

The order does not discuss the January deadline for new parties to qualify, and says very little about the other two issues in the case. The lawsuit will be adjudicated later in the year, but in the meantime the party is not on the ballot, and will need to circulate the independent presidential petition in order to be on the 2020 ballot for president. That petition requires 4,000 signatures, due July 25.

Other states that convert registered members of parties to independents when the party goes off the ballot are Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island. In Oklahoma, when a party goes off the ballot, although it loses its registrants, it can then immediately request the they be allowed to re-register into the party.


Comments

U.S. District Court Judge Says It is Probably Unconstitutional for Maine to Convert All Party Registered Members to Independents When Party Goes Off the Ballot — 5 Comments

  1. ALL illegal stuff must be attacked immediately.

    Judge hacks get more stupid in longer times.

  2. Will this mean that the LP Presidential candidates will not be on the ballot in Maine in November, or do they have another avenue for making the ballot?

  3. The LP could still do the petition drive, which requires 4,000 valid signatures by August 3rd.

    The LP is really falling behind in ballot access right now. If the party does not get some relief through the courts, it may miss some states this year.

  4. I wonder if this ruling could be useful in NH to require the SOS to let voters register Libertarian, since we had ballot access in the 90’s and from 2016-2018?

  5. Darryl, the Maine decision isn’t final yet, and won’t be for some months. And even if it were, it couldn’t help influence policy in New Hampshire (at least judicially) unless the LP regains qualified party status and then goes off. At that point the NH LP could sue. The Maine decision wouldn’t be binding on New Hampshire but it would be very influential.

    Of course it is conceivable that if anyone shows today’s decision to New Hampshire legislators, they might be influenced to introduce a bill to fix the problem in New Hampshire.

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