South Carolina Lawsuit on Who Pays for Republican Presidential Primary Advances

The South Carolina Supreme Court will soon construe the state’s election law to determine if the Republican Party must pay for all of the administrative costs of the January 21, 2012 Republican presidential primary. The Court issued a briefing schedule, and all briefs will have been filed by November 7. The case is Beaufort County v South Carolina Election Commission.

Missouri Will Retain February 7 Presidential Primary

On October 24, the Missouri legislature adjourned its special session without having taken any action to cancel the February 7 presidential primary. Thereofore, it will go ahead, for the Democratic, Republican, Libertarian, and Constitution Parties. The Libertarian Party has used its Missouri presidential primary before, but 2012 will be the first time Missouri has held a presidential primary for the Constitution Party. Thanks to Frontloading HQ for this news.

Ballotpedia Study Shows 42.6% of State Legislative Races in 2011 Have Only One Major Party Member Running

Ballotpedia has this very useful analysis of the regularly-scheduled state legislative elections. The study finds that in 42.6% of the races, only one major party candidate is running in the general election. This is even worse than the norm in even-numbered election years, when many more states hold regularly-scheduled legislative elections. Generally, in even-numbered years, between 32% and 37% of the races have only one major party person running.

Because there are relatively few minor party and independent candidates, this means that most voters this year have only one choice on general election ballots for state legislature. Legislatures dominated by Republicans and Democrats pass laws that make it very easy for members of those two parties to run for office, and (in many cases) very difficult for anyone else to run. Then, the two major parties, having achieved near-monopoly status for themselves, do not even use their guaranteed spots on the ballot to recruit and run nominees much of the time. And yet courts continually uphold restrictive ballot access laws under the theory that without those laws, the ballots will be too crowded.