Federal Election Commission Updates Chart Showing Primary Dates and Filing Deadlines

On April 25, the Federal Election Commission updated its useful chart of 2022 congressional primary dates, and filing deadlines. See it here.

Ironically, the new version is already out-of-date; the New York primary for U.S. House was shifted to August 23, since the chart was published. Thanks to Thomas Jones for the link.

New York Primary for U.S. House and State Senate Will be August 23

On April 28, a New York state court issued an order setting the primaries for U.S. House and State Senate for August 23. The original primary date was June 28, but the primaries for those two offices had to be postponed because there are no valid district boundaries for those two offices yet.

The order says the legislature is free to move the June 28 primary for other offices to August 23.

The order also says a further order will set forth new rules for ballot access. See this story.

Samoa Citizenship Case Reaches U.S. Supreme Court

On April 27, some voters born in America Samoa asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear their citizenship case. The question is whether persons born in the territory should be considered citizens automatically, or whether they need to go through the naturalization process. Fitisemanu v U.S., 21-1394. American Samoa is the only U.S. possession in which persons born there are not citizens; instead they are U.S. “nationals.” Here is the cert petition. Thanks to ElectionLawNews for this news.

Ten Republicans Submit Petitions to be on Michigan Gubernatorial Primary Ballot

The Michigan petition deadline for primary candidates was April 19. Ten Republicans submitted petitions to be on the ballot for Governor. They each needed 15,000 signatures. Any registered voter may sign. The primary is August 2.

Three of the leading candidates’ petitions have been challenged. See this story. Thanks to Thomas Jones for the link. The three challenged candidates are James Craig, Tudor Dixon, and Perry Johnson. The Michigan Democratic Party filed the challenges.

No Consensus in New York for a 2022 Primary Date, or Whether State Will Hold Two Primaries

New York state legislators and other influential actors have reached no consensus on whether to move the entire primary from June to August, or whether to have one primary in June for statewide, assembly and local offices, and a later primary for U.S. House and State Senate. The districts aren’t set yet for those last two offices. See this story.