Nevada Special U.S. House Election Results

The Nevada Secretary of State’s web page shows these results for today’s special U.S. House election, 2nd district: Republican Mark Amodei 57.09%, Democrat Kate Marshall 37.11%, independent candidate Helmuth Lehmann 4.12%, Independent American Party nominee Tim Fasano, 1.69%.

New York also has a special U.S. House election today, but New York State Board of Elections never reports any votes until the official tally is determined. The Republican nominee won, according to unofficial press reports.

Opponents of Carl Lewis Will Appeal Ruling that put him on Ballot

According to this story, today’s 3rd circuit order putting Carl Lewis on the ballot will be appealed. The appeal will either be to the U.S. Supreme Court, or to the entire 3rd circuit. Although it would be somewhat inaccurate to expect judges to vote according to their own partisan leanings, it is interesting that the 3rd circuit has 13 full-time judges, including seven appointed by Democratic presidents, and six by Republican presidents.

Arizona Supreme Court Upholds Validity of Recall Petition

On September 13, the Arizona Supreme Court issued a three-sentence order, agreeing with the lower court that the petition to force a recall of Senate President Russell Pearce is valid. The Court said it would issue a full opinion later. Pearce had tried to invalidate the petition. He did not contest the finding that the petition had been signed by enough registered voters. But he argued that the circulators did not complete the certification blank on many of the sheets. The case is Ross v Bennett, cv11-0264-T-AP.

Ohio Bill to Move Primary from March to May

On September 12, a bill was introduced in the Ohio legislature to move the primary in presidential election years from March to May (in non-presidential years, the Ohio primary is already in May). The bill is SB 217, and it has an urgency clause, so that it can go into effect immediately after it is signed into law.

If this bill passes, it will have no effect on petition deadlines for newly-qualifying parties, because of the court decision earlier this month that the Ohio statutory deadline for new party petitions is too early, whether the primary is in May or March. Under the statutory law, petitions for newly-qualifying parties are due 90 days before the primary.

Another Ohio bill, HB 194, already passed this year, moving the primary in presidential election years from March to May. That is the same omnibus election law bill that is the subject of a referendum petition, so it won’t go into effect in 2012 if the referendum gets enough valid signatures. Because no one can predict what will happen to HB 194, the separate bill to just move the primary was introduced. Thanks to Frontloading HQ for the news.

3rd Circuit Orders Carl Lewis Onto Ballot; Uses Compelling Interest Test

On September 13, the Third Circuit issued a short order, telling New Jersey’s Secretary of State to list Carl Lewis on the ballot as the Democratic nominee for State Senate, 8th district. He had been kept off the ballot because the state Constitution says no one can run for State Senate who has not lived in New Jersey for four years. The Third Circuit said it will issue a full opinion later. The vote was 2-1.

The order says, “The judgment of the District Court, entered September 7, 2011, is hereby reversed. The District Court incorrectly applied a rational basis standard of review of this as-applied challenge, rather than the stricter compelling state interest standard. See Wellford v Battaglia, 343 F.Supp. 143 (D.Del. 1972), affirmed, 485 F.2d 1151 (3rd Cir. 1973). The State has failed to demonstrate a compelling state interest in the application of this durational residency requirement to this particular candidate. Accordingly, it is hereby ordered that the ballots at issue in this appeal include the name of Appellant. Opinion of the Court to follow.”

Wellford v Battaglia, the precedent the panel depends on, struck down a provision in the city charter of Wilmington, Delaware, which said no one could run for Mayor without having lived in Wilmington for five years. Generally that precedent is considered implicitly overruled by the U.S. Supreme Court’s summary affirmance in Sununu v Stark, in 1975. In Sununu v Stark, the lower 3-judge court had upheld New Hampshire’s 7-year residency requirement in the state to run for State Senate, and the U.S. Supreme Court summarily affirmed it. Also, in 1982, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a full opinion in Clements v Fashing, 457 U.S. 957, said that the right to be a candidate is not fundamental. However, that was a decision with no majority opinion, so it has less influence.

This order is from Judge Thomas Ambro, a Clinton appointee, and Thomas Vanaskie, an Obama appointee. Judge Anthony Scirica, a Reagan appointee, dissented, but did not write anything. Thanks to Rick Hasen for this news.