Pennsylvania Expects to Know Petition Requirement on Friday, December 16

The number of signatures needed for statewide minor party and independent candidates in Pennsylvania in 2012 will be known on Friday, December 16. The number of signatures will be 2% of the total vote cast for David Wecht, a candidate for Superior Court Justice in the November 8, 2011 election. As of December 14, the state elections office is finally in possession of official election returns from all of the 67 counties, and expects to add the numbers up over the next two days.

The number of signatures will probably be between 21,000 and 22,500.

Americans Elect Petition in California Appears Very Likely to Succeed

Americans Elect submitted over 1,630,000 signatures earlier this year, to meet a requirement of 1,030,080 valid signatures. The California Secretary of State’s web page has this chart, showing which counties have finished checking the signatures. Los Angeles and San Diego, two of the most three populous counties, have now finished checking the petition. Only fifteen counties still haven’t finished. So far the petition-checking process shows a validity rate of 67.75%, and Americans Elect only needs to have 63.2% valid in order to succeed.

Ohio Legislative Committee Hears Testimony on Moving 2012 Primary to May 22

On December 14, the Ohio House Government & Elections Committee held a hearing on HB 391, a bill introduced on December 13, 2011, to hold the presidential primary, and the primary for all other office, on May 22, 2012. The bill is sponsored by Representative Matt Huffman, the Republican Floor Leader. Under current law, Ohio has a March primary for some partisan offices and a June primary for other partisan offices. HB 391 also provides that petitions to get on the primary ballot would be due 75 days before the primary, instead of the normal 90 day deadline.

The bill would save the taxpayers a great deal of money, and seems likely to pass. Thanks to Frontloading HQ for the news about the bill.

It is interesting that three of the most populous states in the United States, Texas, Ohio, and New York, still don’t know when they will be holding their 2012 congressional primaries. And even the presidential primary date is unsettled for Texas and Ohio.

Twenty-eight Texas Members of U.S. House Ask Court to Hold Just One Primary

Late on December 13, twenty-eight U.S. House members from Texas filed a document with the 3-judge U.S. District Court in San Antonio that is hearing one of the Texas redistricting cases. The letter asks the judges to set a unified primary election for all office in 2012. The letter says, “We believe that a unified primary is a common sense approach to the United States Supreme Court’s stay of Congressional and Legislative plans. A single primary election would reduce voter confusion, reduce the cost to taxpayers of two primaries, and minimize voter fatigue due to multiple elections in a small period of time. We therefore ask this honorable Court to enter orders adopting a single primary date for 2012 at the earliest practicable date.”

The letter appears to have been initiated by the Republican members of the U.S. House from Texas. The first two pages contain the signatures of all 23 Republican members of the U.S. House from Texas, except for Ron Paul. Chances are that Paul would have signed it also, but he is probably away from Congress, campaigning. On the third page are the signatures of six of the nine Democratic members from Texas. The only Democrats who didn’t sign the letter are Silvestre Reyes, Charles Gonzalez, and Lloyd Doggett.

The Republican members of Congress from Texas appear to be in defiance of the Texas Republican Party, which favors keeping the presidential primary in March. See this story about the wishes of the Republican Party.

Assuming the court agrees with the 28 members of Congress who signed the letter, that primary will almost certainly be in April or May, not March. That would automatically extend petitioning deadlines for minor parties and for non-presidential independents, and would almost certainly result in a later deadline for independent presidential petitions as well, although that would take a tweak in the law.

While Texas Waits to Learn Primary Date, Candidate Filing Extended for Four Days, to December 19

On December 13, the Texas primary filing deadline was moved from December 15 to December 19. No one yet knows when the primary will be, and in the case of the U.S. House and state legislative races, no one knows what the district boundaries will be. Anyone who files will be permitted to withdraw later and obtain a refund of the filing fee. See this story.