On July 30, New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu vetoed HB 98, which would have moved the independent candidate petition deadline from August to July, and moved the deadline for their declarations of candidacy from June to May. See this story. The bill also moved the non-presidential primary from September to August.
U.S. District Court Judge Jill Otake will hear Reeves v Nago, 1:20cv-433 (U.S. District Court in Hawaii), on August 13 at 9 a.m. This is the case over voting rights for U.S. citizens who move to Guam or the U.S. Virgin Islands. Under federal law, they can’t vote, yet if they had moved to a foreign country, they could have continued to vote absentee in the states in which they had lived before they moved abroad.
On July 29, an Alaska state trial court upheld the top-four initiative passed by the voters in 2020. Kohlhaas v State, 3AN-20-9532. The 20-page decision did not even mention the strongest precedent against the system, Green Party of Alaska v State. In the Green Party case, the State Supreme Court ruled that the Alaska constitution gives more protection for freedom of association for political parties than the U.S. Constitution does. The Green Party decision said that if the Green Party and the Republican Moderate Party wanted to jointly participate in a blanket primary, they may do that, even though the legislature had abolished the blanket primary.
In the top-four case, the Alaskan Independence Party had said that it doesn’t want to participate in the top-four system, but the judge ruled that it must.
Ballot Access News
July 2021 – Volume 37, Number 2
| This issue was printed on white paper. |
Table of Contents
- CONGRESSMAN DONALD BEYER INTRODUCES PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION BILL
- MAINE MAKES IT EASIER FOR A PARTY TO REMAIN QUALIFIED
- ILLINOIS EASES PETITION DEADLINE FOR 2022
- CALIFORNIA BALLOT ACCESS IMPROVEMENT BILL MOVES AHEAD
- NEVADA GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL MAKING BALLOT ACCESS WORSE
- ARIZONA SUPREME COURT ISSUES KANYE WEST OPINION
- CALIFORNIA BILL ON PAYING CIRCULATORS MOVES AHEAD
- NEW HAMPSHIRE BILL FOR EARLIER DEADLINES
- LEGISLATIVE NEWS
- BOOK REVIEW: RUN FOR SOMETHING
- U.S. HOUSE JUNE ACTIONS SHOWS THAT PRIMARY SYSTEMS DON’T MATTER
- 2024 PRESIDENTIAL PETITION REQUIREMENTS
- BALLOT FOR NEW YORK CITY JUNE 22 DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY
- NEW JERSEY 2021 ELECTION
- VIRGINIA 2021 ELECTION
- RUSSIA BARS REFORMERS FROM SEPTEMBER 2021 BALLOT
- PENNSYLVANIA RELEASES HOWIE HAWKINS WRITE-IN TOTAL
- NEW MEXICO U.S. HOUSE ELECTION
- BILL KING, PROMINENT HOUSTON FIGURE, JOINS SAM PARTY
- DSA MEMBER WINS DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION FOR BUFFALO MAYOR
- FORMER REFORM PARTY LEADER WINS REPUBLICAN PRIMARY FOR NEW YORK CITY MAYOR
- TWO MEN WHO SOUGHT A LIBERTARIAN PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION DIED IN JUNE
- SUBSCRIBING TO BAN WITH PAYPAL
On July 28, the Sixth Circuit ruled that the lawsuit Thompson v DeWine, 21-3514, is moot. This is the case over whether Ohio should have granted ballot access relief to initiatives due to the covid-19 crisis. The opinion says, “The Covid-19 pandemic is unlikely to pose a serious threat during the next election cycle.” Here is the eight-page opinion.