Indianapolis Star Deputy Opinion Editor Says “It’s Too Easy to Start a Political Party in Indiana”

The July 9 Indianapolis Star has an op-ed, “It’s too easy to start a new political party in Indiana” by Jacob Stewart, a Deputy Opinion Editor. He does not seem to have done much research into the topic.

Indiana is one of only two states in which it is impossible to create a new ballot-qualified party in a presidential election year (the other is New Jersey). Indiana is one of only eleven states in which it is impossible to create a ballot-qualified party in advance of any election (the others are Connecticut, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia).

Indiana is one of ten states in which Ross Perot’s Reform Party was never a ballot-qualified party (the others were Alabama, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, West Virginia, and Wyoming).

Indiana is one of only three states in which the Green Party has never placed its presidential nominee on the ballot (the others are Oklahoma and South Dakota). Indiana is one of four states in which the Constitution Party has never been able to place its presidential nominee on the ballot (the others are Arizona, Georgia, and Oklahoma). Indiana is one of three states in which the Natural Law Party never placed its presidential nominee on the ballot (the others are Georgia and Oklahoma).

The op-ed says in Florida, a major party is one in which 5% of the voters are members. But he does not tell his readers that in Florida, a minor party can be on the ballot for all office, merely by filing a list of its officers and a copy of its bylaws. He suggests that perhaps the law should be amended to not recognize a party until it has received a contribution of $1 from as many as 37,000 people, but that principle seems to conflict with the U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down poll taxes of as little as $3. It suggests that the law might require a party to have members in every county, but that would conflict with the U.S. Supreme Court decision Moore v Ogilvie, which struck down an Illinois law that forced minor party and independent statewide petitions to have 200 signatures from each of fifty counties (Illinois has 102 counties).


Comments

Indianapolis Star Deputy Opinion Editor Says “It’s Too Easy to Start a Political Party in Indiana” — 2 Comments

  1. Kangaroo tyrants in black dresses exceed their powers regulatoRY , effectively legislating and rewriting constitutions from the bench. It’s been going on far too long, and it’s past time to put a stop to it.

    President Andrew Jackson had a good solution to that. How many of you know it?

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