On May 21, proponents of Ohio initiatives filed this reply brief in Thompson v DeWine, the case over whether petitioning relief should have been granted for Ohio initiatives during 2020. Although the proponents of initiatives had failed to gain injunctive relif last year, they here argue for declaratory relief. They point to the fact that there were 73 attempts to get local initiatives on the Ohio ballot during 2020, and only 4 of them succeeded. Also, of course, no statewide initiatives qualified. The case is in U.S. District Court.
On May 20, the California Assembly Appropriations Committee passed AB 446 by 13-3. It reduces the number of signatures for a new party from 10% of the last gubernatorial vote, to 3%. This sounds like a big improvement, but the petition method for qualifying a new party in California is almost never used. Almost every group instead uses the registration procedure, which requires that the group obtain registered members equal to .33% of the number of registered voters. Therefore the practical impact will probably be limited. Even 3% is almost 400,000 signatures.
The bill also makes it easier for a group to register itself to have its registrants tallied. Currently, the Secretary of State won’t let a group use a party name with new officers; the Secretary of State somewhat unreasonably insists that only the old officers can continue in power. The bill says that if an old political body doesn’t bother to reapply, then a new group, with new officers, can use the name, after waiting two years.
The three “no” votes were cast by these three Republicans: Frank Bigelow, Megan Dahle, and Laurie Davies.
On May 20, the California Senate Appropriations Committee passed SB 660. It makes it illegal to pay initiative circulators on a per-signature basis. Now the bill goes to the Senate floor.
Each of the last three California Governors vetoed a bill like this bill (Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jerry Brown, and Gavin Newsom).
On May 21, the Maine Joint Veterans & Legal Affairs Committee passed SB 231. It lets independent voters choose a primary ballot without having to join the party whose ballot they choose. Thanks to John Opdycke for this news. The sponsor is Senator Chloe Maxmin (D-Nobleboro).
On May 20, the Socialist Workers Party nominee for New Jersey Governor, Joanne Kuniansky, submitted her petition to be on the New Jersey ballot in November 2021 for Governor. She is the first petitioning candidate to file. The deadline is June 8 and the requirement is 800 signatures.
This is the first time the SWP has petitioned for Governor of New Jersey since 2005.