Mississippi Bill to Restore the Statewide Initiative Process

Two Mississippi representatives have introduced HC 39, a proposed constitutional amendment to bring back the statewide initiative. Here is the text. The old constitutional provision for an initiative had been invalidated last year by the State Supreme Court because it was worded to require signatures from five U.S. House districts, yet for the last twenty years the state has only had four U.S. House districts.

The bill would delete any reference to the number of U.S. House districts, but it would still require signatures from all districts.

The authors are Fred Shanks (R-Brandon) and Philip Gunn (R-Jackson). Gunn is Speaker of the House. If the bill passes, then it will be on the November 2022 ballot to ask the voters if they wish to approve it.

Georgia Secretary of State Posts Petition Requirements for U.S. House Petitions

The Georgia Secretary of State’s website now has the petition requirements for independent candidates for U.S. House, and the nominees of parties that didn’t poll 20% of the vote for president or governor in the last election. The requirements range from 21,681 signatures to 27,703 signatures. See them here.

In the entire history of the United States, there are only six instances when any candidate completed a petition for U.S. House that required more than 10,000 signatures. The biggest hurdle ever overcome was in North Carolina in 2010, when a petition requirement of 16,292 was overcome, with the help of a very powerful union, the S.E.I.U. It had dozens of full-time petitioners who went door-to-door throughout the district.

Procedural Victory in Second Circuit in New York Ballot Access Cases

On January 27, Judge Beth Robinson, a judge of the Second Circuit and a Biden appointee, ordered that the New York minor party appeals already filed can be consolidated with the new similar appeal filed by the same parties. The state of New York had tried to persuade the Second Circuit not to allow the consolidation. The issue in cases 21-1464, 22-44, and 21-139, all concern the hostile ballot access changes made in April 2020. The number of signatures for the statewide petition was tripled, and the vote test increased from 50,000 to (currently) approximately 170,000 votes.

If the consolidation had not been permitted, the minor parties would have had to do a great deal of work re-submitting evidence that has already been submitted.

One set of documents concerned injunctive relief, and the other set concerns declaratory relief.

January 2022 Ballot Access News Print Edition

Ballot Access News
January 2022 – Volume 37, Number 8

This issue was printed on green paper.


Table of Contents

  1. GEORGIA BALLOT ACCESS HANGS IN THE BALANCE
  2. BALLOT ACCESS BILLS
  3. MINOR PARTY & INDP. CANDIDATES ON BALLOT, U.S. HOUSE, 1970-1994
  4. MINOR PARTY & INDP. CANDIDATES ON BALLOT, U.S. HOUSE, 1996-2020
  5. MINOR PARTY PARTISAN WINS, NOVEMBER 2021 ELECTION
  6. SUBSCRIBING TO BAN WITH PAYPAL