The West Virginia Independent Party will hold a state convention on April 10. See the party’s website here. The Independent Party of West Virginia is the only state party in the nation in which there is still no resolution as to whether it is ballot-qualified or not. The Secretary of State still hasn’t said whether the party is recognized. It did poll over 1% of the gubernatorial vote in November 2020, so it should be qualified. However the votes were write-in votes. Thanks to Jeff Becker for this news.
On March 22, the Georgia House Special Committee on Election Integrity passed SB 202. It provides that in primary and general elections for partisan office, overseas absentee ballots would use ranked choice voting. This makes it possible to hold earlier run-offs. If no one gets 50% and a runoff is needed, the bill provides that a runoff would be held four weeks after the general election, instead of nine weeks.
If this bill had been in effect in 2020, the two U.S. Senate runoffs would have been held on December 1, 2020, not January 5, 2021.
Other states in which overseas voters use ranked choice voting are Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina.
The bill also transforms Georgia special elections, so that parties would have nominees. Currently, Georgia special general elections lack party nominees. This is why the 2020 special election for U.S. Senate in Georgia had 20 candidates on the November ballot.
The House Committee amended other provisions of the bill, so that now it expands early voting hours. The Senate version shrink early voting hours.
On March 17, the Hawaii House Judiciary Committee passed SB 560. It provides that in special elections, ranked choice voting will be used. The bill had already passed the State Senate. However, the bill was amended in the House Committee, so assuming the house passes it, it will need to return to the State Senate.
Hawaii only has special elections for U.S. House and county council. Vacancies in the state legislature are filled by gubernatorial appointment.
On March 16, Utah Governor Spencer Cox signed HB 75. It requires county election officials to administer ranked choice voting for any city that wants to use that system to elect its own officers. So far, this is the first 2021 bill signed into law that advances ranked choice voting.
Last year, the New York definition of party was changed. The old definition was a group that had polled 50,000 votes for Governor. The new definition is a group that polled 2% for the office at the top of the ticket (president in presidential years; governor in midterm years).
If this law had been in effect in 1900, the Socialist Party would not have gained qualified status in 1900. Eugene Debs did not poll much as 1% in New York that year, much less 2%. In reality, the party did win qualified status that year; it polled the necessary 10,000 votes for Governor (back then, New York elected a Governor every two years). Also, in 1936, Norman Thomas did not poll as much as 2% for president in New York, and the party would have lost its qualified status that year. In reality it did retain its status in 1936.
The Law Preservation Party would have lost its qualified status in 1932 because it did not run a presidential candidate. Although the Law Preservation Party has largely been forgotten, it had substantial support in 1930 and 1932. It was the vehicle for voters who wanted to keep prohibiton of beverage alcohol.
The Communist Party was qualified in New York 1932 through 1936, but under the new law, it would never have been a qualified party. It never polled as much as 2% for either president or governor. It was a surprisingly strong party in New York, however. It elected members to the New York city council in partisan elections in 1941, 1943, and 1945.
The Right to Life Party, which had qualified status 1978 through 2002, never polled as much as 2% for president, and would have lost its status in 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, and 2000. Nor did it receive 2% for Governor in 1982, 1994, and 1998.
The Conservative Party, which gained qualified status in 1962, would have gone off the ballot in 1964 because it didn’t have a presidential nominee that year.