New York City Ballot in Special U.S. House Race of September 13

Thanks to a helpful commenter to an earlier blog post, here is a picture of the New York ballot for U.S. House, in the special election of September 13 in the 9th district. The image is very fuzzy, but it possible to see that the two major party nominees were in the top line on the ballot (each with multiple party lines). Then, all by himself in a lower part of the ballot is the third candidate in the race, Chris Hoeppner, nominee of the Socialist Workers Party. The design suggests that Hoeppner wasn’t necessarily a candidate in the same race. Of course an aware voter would understand that he was, but the ballot design gives an unclear impression about that.

Americans Elect Nomination Procedures Explained by John Avlon

John Avlon has this article on CNN, detailing how presidential candidates may qualify for the Americans Elect on-line presidential primary. The article says candidates nominated by the Americans Elect leadership need 10,000 “clicks” from the ranks of people who have signed up to be voters in the Americans Elect primary. Those not suggested by the leadership need 100,000 “clicks”. The story also says that currently, 110,000 people have signed up to be Americans Elect primary voters.

Arizona State Court Hears Testimony in “Sham Candidate” Lawsuit

On September 29, a lower state court in Arizona heard testimony in a lawsuit over whether Olivia Cortes should remain on the ballot in the upcoming recall election of State Senate President Russell Pearce. See this story. In Arizona, when a recall petition succeeds, the office-holder being recalled is on the ballot, along with any other candidates who have petitioned to run in the same recall election. The election is non-partisan. The person who gets the most votes wins.

Three candidates are on the ballot: Pearce, an opponent of Senator Pearce (who hopes to out-poll Pearce) and a third candidate, Olivia Cortes. Evidence suggests that Cortes only got on the ballot with the help of Pearce supporters, that she is a “sham” candidate, as the story makes clear. Pearce supporters know that Pearce is unpopular with most Hispanic voters, and presumably put Cortes on the ballot to split the anti-Pearce vote. However, there is no logical or legal principle that would eliminate someone from the ballot, based on her motivation or on who helped get her on the ballot. The pending case is somewhat similar to a case in Arizona in 2010, when the Green Party went to court to remove some of its nominees from the ballot on the grounds that they were “sham” candidates, recruited by Republican activists. Although some of the 2010 “sham” Greens voluntarily withdrew, the court ruled that there was no legal basis to remove candidates from the ballot, no matter what their motivation for running. A decision in the current case is expected on Monday, October 3.

Florida Republican Primary Shows Herman Cain in the Lead Among Voters Under Age 65

This SurveyUSA poll surveys Florida Republicans who are likely to vote in that state’s presidential primary next year. It shows that Mitt Romney has 27% support, and Herman Cain is second at 25%. But, it also shows that Republican voters under age 65 prefer Cain to Romney. It also shows that males of all age groups prefer Cain above all other contenders. Thanks to Political Wire for the link.