The Texas Tribune here has a story mentioning that well-known independent U.S. Senate candidate Jonathan Jenkins didn’t submit signatures on the deadline, June 21.
Earlier this year, the Democratic Party filed a lawsuit against the Florida law that says the nominees of the party that won the last gubernatorial election should be listed first on the general election ballot. The case is Jacobson v Detzner, n.d., 4:18cv-262.
The Republican Governors Association and the National Republican Senatorial Committee have asked to intervene in the case. It seems odd that these bodies don’t trust Ken Detzner, the Secretary of State, to adequately defend his own state’s law, especially as he is a Republican.
Ohio held its primary on May 8. On June 21, the Secretary of State released data on how many voters chose each party’s primary ballot. The three parties that had primaries are the Republican, Democratic, and Green Parties. This data is important, because there is no question on the Ohio voter registration form asking the applicant to choose a party (or to choose independent status). Instead, the only party membership data in Ohio is the number of voters who choose each party’s primary ballot.
Here is the Secretary of State’s report. It shows that the Green Party now is considered to have 7,353 members. Before the primary, the state considered the party to have 4,200 members.
The Ohio Libertarian Party expects to be on the ballot in November, and will submit its party petition on July 2. Then it will nominate by convention. Each of its nominees then must submit his or her own petition at that point, consisting of 50 names for statewide office, and 5 for district office. But because it didn’t have a primary, the state considers the party not to have any members.
Geoffrey Skelley, media relations person for the University of Virginia Center for Politics, has this article listing past U.S. Senate candidates who ran in the general election even after losing a U.S. Senate primary the same year. The article begins as a report on Don Blankenship of West Virginia, who lost the May 2018 Republican primary but who is petitioning to be the Constitution Party nominee. That first portion of the article has little news that hasn’t already been reported. But the latter half of the article has the history of other candidates, and that half of the article is quite valuable as a reference.
On June 20, an Arizona trial court heard the challenge to the petition of Kevin McCormick, Libertarian Party candidate for Governor. All parties in Arizona must nominate by primary. Candidates in all parties need signatures to get on their own party’s primary ballots. Kevin McCormick was found not to have enough valid signatures to be on the Libertarian primary ballot. He needed 3,153 signatures, and only registered Libertarians and registered independents could sign.
McCormick had enough signatures of registered voters, but over 1,000 of his signers were registered Republicans or registered Democrats. The petition drive had been conducted entirely by volunteers, who carefully asked each potential signer about how the individual was registered. Hundreds of people said they were registered independents, and signed, but in reality they weren’t independents; they were major party members. See McCormick’s facebook video for more about this.
Arizona allows candidates to collect signatures on-line, but McCormick and his campaign believe that the on-line system does not work properly, and that thousands of people who tried to sign on-line were wrongfully rejected. He plans to file a freedom of information request to learn more about this problem.
In 2005, the Arizona legislature passed a law that is still in effect, that says anyone who tries and fails to get on a ballot cannot then run for the same office as a write-in in the general election.
The Libertarian Party is currently suing to overturn the law on how candidates get on the primary ballot. The case is in the 9th circuit. All the briefs have been filed, but the date for the oral argument has not been set.
A Libertarian candidate for U.S. Senate will be on the Arizona primary this year, because his petition was not challenged. Thanks to Andy Craig for the link to McCormick’s facebook video.