None of Maine’s Four Qualified Parties Has Yet Filed Notice of Wanting to Let Independent Voters Sign Primary Petitions

Earlier this year, the Maine legislature passed a bill that says if a party wants to let independent voters sign petitions to get candidates on that party’s primary ballot, the party must notify the state by December 31. As of December 18, none of Maine’s four qualified parties have filed the form.

It is especially important that the Green and Libertarian Parties file this paperwork. The number of signatures to get a candidate on a primary ballot is severe. The requirement is the same number of signatures for each party, regardless of how many registered voters that party has. For example, for statewide office, 2,000 signatures are required, which is impossibly difficult for a party like the Libertarian Party, which has fewer than 7,000 registered voters.

The primary petitions are so difficult for the Green Party that no Green has ever been able to get on a Green primary ballot for either house of Congress, and that is true for the Libertarian Party as well.


Comments

None of Maine’s Four Qualified Parties Has Yet Filed Notice of Wanting to Let Independent Voters Sign Primary Petitions — 2 Comments

  1. If a political party in Maine allows registered non-partisan voters to sign their candidate primary ballot access petitions does this mean that they have to allow,registered non-partisan voters to be able to vote in their primaries?

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