Wyoming House Passes Bill Making Ballot Access Much More Difficult

On January 30, the Wyoming House passed HB 173. It makes ballot access much worse for independent candidates. Currently they need a petition of 2% of the last U.S. House vote, which in 2026 would be 5,201 signatures. The bill would increase that to 13,003 signatures. Already Wyoming has the nation’s highest percentage for petitions for presidential candidates, if the easier method in each state is used. Wyoming has the nation’s smallest population.

The bill also moves the petition deadline for independent candidates to 81 days before the primary. The 2026 primary is August 18, so that would mean a deadline of May 29, 2026. Existing law says the independent petition is due 70 days before the general election, which is August 25.

The bill also tells qualified minor parties, which nominate by convention, that they must complete their nominations by 81 days before the primary.

The bill would be unconstitutional for several reasons. It violates Anderson v Celebrezze, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that said independent presidential candidates must be given a chance to run later than the spring. Wyoming is in the Tenth circuit, and in 1984 the Tenth Circuit said in Populist Party v Herschler, 746 F 2d 656, that even a June 1 deadline is probably too early. On page 661 it said, “The June 1 deadline (which was the deadline for petitions for new parties) appears to run counter to the views in Anderson and Blomquist which would permit independent parties to organize after the conventions of the major parties.”

The bill would also be unconstitutional for denying equal protection to the qualified minor parties, given that the major parties would still be permitted to choose their nominees as late as August.

All of the bill’s sponsors are Republicans. The bill has 22 House sponsors and four Senate sponsors.

Quinnipiac Poll Shows Both Major Parties Have Net Negative Ratings

On January 29, a Quinnipiac Poll was released that showed 57% of the voters have an unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party, and only 31% have a favorable view. As to the Republican Party, 45% have an unfavorable view and 43% have a favorable view. See it here. Scroll down to the heading “Democratic and Republican Parties.”

Two Montana Legislators Plan to Introduce Bills to Change Primaries from Open to Closed

Two Montana legislators have asked legislative staff to draft bills to change Montana from an open primary state to a closed primary state. They are Senator Theresa Manzella (R-Hamilton) and Representative Shannon Maness (R-Dillon). The bills aren’t introduced yet. The Montana legislature’s website not only shows introduced bills, but also bills that are being drafted.

Montana has always had open primaries.

January 2025 Ballot Access News Print Edition

NEW JERSEY THREATENS TO MAKE BALLOT ACCESS MORE DIFFICULT

On December 9, bills were introduced in both houses of the New Jersey legislature to increase the number of signatures for independent candidates and the nominees of unqualified parties.  The Assembly bill, AB 5117, cleared the State and Local Government Committee only three days later.  It cleared the Appropriations Committee four days after that.  Then, it passed the Assembly on December 19, by a vote of 46-27.

The Assembly vote was a party line vote.  All “yes” votes were cast by Democrats; all “no” votes were cast by Republicans.  Seven Assembly members did not vote, including six Democrats and one Republican.

The identical Senate bill, SB 3994, passed the Senate State Government Committee on December 19.  It hasn’t had a vote on the Senate floor yet.  The Senate is in recess and returns on Tuesday, January 14.  Opponents of the bill are making strenuous efforts to defeat it on the Senate floor.

Continue reading

West Virginia Republican Party Closes its Primaries

On January 25, the West Virginia Republican Party voted to close its primaries, starting in 2026.  There are local partisan elections in 2025 and the change does not affect the 2025 elections.  See this story.  The Republican Party of West Virginia has been letting independents vote in its primaries starting in 1986, but unless the party changes its mind, that policy has now changed.