FEC Releases 2010 Election Returns Book

The Federal Election Commission always publishes a book of official election returns, after any regularly-scheduled congressional election. The book is always called “Federal Elections (followed by the year).” The FEC has just posted its on-line version of the 2010 book. See this link. A chart in the book shows that 5.45% of the November 2010 U.S. House vote went to “other”; the other 94.55% went to the two major parties. The printed book is not yet available, but it will be in a few weeks. The FEC does not charge for copies of the book. Thanks to Thomas Jones for the link.

“Scotusblog” Chooses New Hampshire Libertarian Party Case as “Petition of the Day”

Scotusblog is the best-known and most prestigious blog for neutral, objective information about activities of the U.S. Supreme Court. The authors of the blog regularly examine all the cert petitions and report on those which seem to have some reasonable chance of getting the attention of the Court. The August 19 “petition of the day” is the New Hampshire Libertarian Party case, 11-119. The issue is whether the Constitution protects a party’s name, when party names are printed on a ballot.

In 2008 the New Hampshire Secretary of State listed two presidential candidates on the November ballot with the label “Libertarian”, one of whom was the party’s nominee and one of whom was not. The party sued, but the lower courts ruled that the U.S. Constitution’s freedom of association clause contains no protection for party names on the ballot. By contrast, the 10th circuit had ruled in 1984 that parties do have an ability to protect their names from being printed on the ballot next to the names of candidates who were not nominated by that party. Thanks to Thomas Jones for this news.

U.S. District Court Judge Declines to Put Carl Lewis on November 2011 Ballot for State Senate

On August 19, a U.S. District Court refused to order New Jersey to put Carl Lewis on the November 2011 ballot as the Democratic nominee for State Senate, 8th district. See this story. However, the judge seemed to say that she might change her mind in a few weeks. The case is Lewis v Guadagno, 11-cv-2381.

New Jersey state courts have already determined that Lewis does not meet the 4-year residency requirement, which is in the State Constitution. Lewis’ only hope had been to persuade a federal court that the residency requirements violates the U.S. Constitution.

Ohio Democratic Referendum Petition Might Indirectly Restore Minor Party Ballot Access for 2012

Earlier this year, the Ohio legislature passed a huge omnibus election law bill which contained provisions that Democrats and Democratic allies strongly oppose. The bill, HB 194, will be suspended until after 2012 if Democrats and their allies successfully collect 231,147 valid signatures on a referendum petition by September 29, 2011. See this story. The second-to-last paragraph says the referendum petition would repeal the contents of the entire bill.

Originally the Democratic referendum petition only proposed to repeal parts of HB 194. However, the referendum organizers have started over because their original proposal was flawed. For simplicity, the revised referendum petition repeals the entire bill. That means the parts of the bill that are responsible for eliminating the Constitution, Green, Libertarian and Socialist Parties would also be suspended if the petition succeeds.

Libertarian Party D.C. Write-In Case May be Settled by Mediation

On August 19, the U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. circuit, issued an order postponing the briefing schedule in Libertarian Party v D.C. Board of Elections, 11-7029, to see if the case might be settled by mediation. This is the lawsuit over whether the District of Columbia Board of Elections should count write-ins for declared write-in presidential candidates. If mediation does not resolve the dispute, the opening brief will be due October 28, 2011.