Bill Bozarth, Well-Known Atlanta Civic Leader, Will Run for Georgia Legislature as an Independent

Bill Bozarth will run for the Georgia House of Representatives in 2014 as an independent candidate. See this story. He was an IBM business executive leader until 1995, and since then has held other jobs in the IT industry. He was Executive Director of Georgia Common Cause 2002-2010. He is a member of the Atlanta Citizens Review Board and has lived in Atlanta since 1988.

The story has links to Bozarth’s campaign web page.

Andre Bauer, South Carolina’s Lieutenant Governor 2002-2010, May Run for Governor as an Independent

According to this story, Andre Bauer may be an independent candidate for Governor of South Carolina in 2014. He was elected Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina as a Republican in 2002 and re-elected in 2006. The Governor who was elected in 2002 and 2006 was Mark Sanford. In South Carolina, Governor and Lieutenant Governor are elected separately.

South Carolina has never had an independent candidate for Governor on a government-printed ballot. South Carolina has only had government-printed ballots since 1950. Before 1950, ballots were privately prepared. South Carolina has a straight-ticket device, so if Bauer does run as an independent, he will be injured by the device. Independent candidates don’t have a straight-ticket device. Voters who use the straight-ticket device might vote without even seeing Bauer’s name on the ballot.

Conceivably Bauer could run as a minor party candidate. Americans Elect is still ballot-qualified in South Carolina, as is the Independence Party. Thanks to PoliticalWire for the link.

Constitution Party Wins Lawsuit Against New Mexico’s April Petition Deadline

On December 9, U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth J. Gonzales ruled that New Mexico’s April petition deadline for parties to submit petitions is unconstitutionally early. The case was filed by the Constitution Party in 2012, and is Constitution Party of New Mexico v Duran, 1:12cv-325. Here is the 18-page decision.

The decision notes that before 1995, the petition deadline was in July, and the state didn’t have any evidence or argument to show that the July deadline caused any election-administration problems.

This is a rare case in which a ballot access lawsuit was won, even though the plaintiff succeeded in getting on the ballot in the same year in which it filed the lawsuit. The Constitution Party succeeded in meeting the April 2012 deadline. However, it presented evidence that because the deadline was so early, it was forced to spend $15,000 on paid circulators, and that if the deadline had been later in the year, it could have avoided this expense by relying on volunteers, who typically take much longer to get the job done.

The decision discusses the U.S. District Court decisions earlier this year from Alabama (upholding a March petition deadline) and North Carolina (upholding May) but differentiates them.

LaRouche Organization Runs Kesha Rogers for U.S. Senate in Texas

Ever since 1979, the Lyndon LaRouche organization has been running candidates in Democratic primaries. One of its most successful candidates in recent years has been Kesha Rogers, who won the Democratic U.S. House nomination in the Texas 22nd district in both 2010 and 2012. She has filed to run in the Texas Democratic primary for U.S. Senate in 2014. See this Dallas News story. Thanks to Larry Ferenz for the link.

Rob Sarvis May Run for U.S. Senate in 2014

According to this story, Rob Sarvis, the Libertarian nominee for Governor of Virginia last month, says he may run as a Libertarian for U.S. Senate in 2014. The story also mentions the interesting detail that, after the election, Sarvis phoned Terry McAuliffe to congratulate McAuliffe on his victory, yet Ken Cuccinelli, the Republican nominee, never made such a phone call to McAuliffe.