Two bills have been introduced in the Indiana legislature to abolish the straight-ticket device. They are SB 200 and HB 1560. The Senate sponsors, Mike Gaskill and Eric Bassler, are both Republicans. The three House sponsors are one Republican (Edward Clere) and two Democrats (Wendy Dent Chesser and Carey Hamilton).
Two Republican Minnesota legislators have introduced SB 651, which moves the non-presidential primaries from August to the first Tuesday in March. If the bill were two pass, the presidential primary and the primary for other office would be on the same date. The sponsors are Senators Mark Koran and Jeff Howe.
On February 6, the Hawaii Senate Judiciary & Hawaiian Affairs Committee passed SB 114, which creates a presidential primary in Hawaii for all qualified parties.
On the evening of February 7, the leaders of each house of the New York legislature introduced identical bills changing the date of special elections. Senator Andrew Stewart-Cousins introduced S4588, and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie introduced A4881.
Current law says that when a vacancy occurs in the U.S. House, the Governor has ten days to call a special election, and the special election must be within 70 to 80 days after the date is set. The bill is difficult to understand, but seems to allow the Governor to postpone the special election until the November election date in that year. New York has partisan elections in November of all calendar years, even and odd.
Republican Comgressmember Elise Stefanik of New York is expected to be confirmed as Ambassador to the United Nations. Her district, the 21st, is strongly Republican, and it is extremely likely the special election will choose another Republican. Everyone seems to believe that the motivation for the bills is to keep the state vacant for additional time.
The bills’ preamble says, “The legislature finds that New York’s current system of filling federal and state elected office vacancies places undue financial and operational burdens on local boards of elections and exacerbates voter confusion and fatigue by asking voters to frequently participate in elections throughout the year, thus resulting in lower turnout and decreased participation in the electoral process.”
On February 10, U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Laplante, a Bush Jr. appointee, issued a preliminary injunction against President Trump’s birthright citizenship directive. New Hampshire Indonesian Community Support v Trump, 1:25cv-38. The order is only two pages.
Here is the Complaint, which had been filed on January 20, 2025.
This is the fourth U.S. District Court to have acted against the policy. The others are in Massachusetts, Washington, and Maryland.