One of the Two Virginia Lawsuits on Petitioner Residency Dismissed on Procedural Grounds

In 2010, two separate lawsuits were filed in federal court against a Virginia law that makes it illegal for anyone to circulate a petition outside of his or her home U.S. House district, if the petition is to place a candidate for U.S. House on the ballot. One of them, Lux v Judd, 10-1997, was argued in the 4th circuit on May 12, 2011, and the argument went well for the candidate who is challenging the restriction.

The other case, on the identical issue, is Libertarian Party of Virginia v Virginia State Board of Elections, 10-2175. However, it was dismissed by the 4th circuit on June 3, 2011, solely because of a technicality. The Libertarian case sued the Virginia State Board of Elections but failed to sue the officers of the State Board of Elections. The 11th amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires that federal lawsuits, alleging that a state law is unconstitutional, must sue particular individuals (such as a Secretary of State, or the Executive head of any State Board of Elections), not just the state or any agency of the state. The outcome in the Libertarian Party case will not have any adverse effect on the Lux case, so no real harm has been done.

New Hampshire Libertarian Fights in Court for Equal Ballot Placement

On June 3, Kenneth Blevens, Libertarian Party nominee for U.S. Senate in 2010, filed a motion in state court to require that in future elections, all candidates have a chance to be listed first on general election ballots. Blevens had filed his lawsuit in 2010, but it was too close to the election to ask for any relief in the 2010 election. The case is Blevens v New Hampshire Secretary of State, Merrimack County 217-2010-cv-0759.

In 2006 the New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled in Akins v Secretary of State that the state must treat each candidate equally, in the matter of placement on the ballot. As a result, New Hampshire now rotates party columns, so that in one-third of the state, the Democratic Party column is listed first; in one-third of the state the Republican Party column is listed first; and in the remaining third of the state, the column in which all minor party and independent candidates are placed is listed first. That last column is headed “Other Candidates.”

The problem is two-fold: (1) squeezing all minor party and independent candidates into the same column and denying them their own separate column heading is not equal; (2) aside from that, the November 2010 ballot did not rotate the names of the candidates within that “Other Column”, so that Blevens was always on the bottom within that column (although that column only had two U.S. Senate candidates within it).

New Hampshire is the only state that, as a matter of state policy, never gives a party column heading to an unqualified party. However, in New Jersey, where each county has its own ballot design, most New Jersey counties also won’t give a party column heading to unqualified parties. New York also has bad ballot format, but at least New York does give a party column to some of the unqualified parties.

Both Major Parties in Wisconsin Ponder Invading Each Other’s Primaries, in This Year’s Recall Elections

Wisconsin will soon be holding recall elections against 6 Republican State Senators, and 3 Democratic State Senators. In Wisconsin, the recall process is different than it is in most states. If a Wisconsin recall petition gets enough signatures, the recall election ballot does not ask the voters to either retain or oust that particular incumbent. Instead, a successful recall petition merely means that a new special election is held, and the incumbent is free to run in that special election.

If only one person files in each party’s primary in any of these particular special recall elections, then there is no primary for any party, and the general election for that particular seat will be in July. But if even one party has more than a single member running, then there is a primary (for whichever party has more than one person running) in July, for that particular district. In that case, the actual special recall election is postponed to August.

It appears from this article that both major parties are recruiting candidates to run in primaries in these special elections. For example, if a Republican State Senator is being recalled, Republicans may recruit a candidate to run in the Democratic primary in that district, so that the special recall election in that district is postponed to August. That gives the incumbent Senator more time to campaign. Also, it gives the incumbent Senator’s supporters a chance to campaign against the likely party-supported Democratic challenger, by forcing the mainstream Democratic challenger to win a Democratic primary.

The newspaper story refers to “fake” Democrats and “fake” Republicans. Wisconsin doesn’t have registration by party, and is an open primary state. Therefore, any individual, no matter what his or her convictions, is always free at any time to run in any party’s primary. This system makes it possible for Democrats (for example) to place someone in a Republican primary, even though that person is loyal to the Democratic Party and is only running to injure the bona fide Republican.

Straight-Ticket Devices Likely to Vanish in New Mexico, North Carolina, and Wisconsin

Straight-ticket devices have been repealed, or are likely to be eliminated, in three states this year. On May 25, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker signed AB 7, an omnibus election law bill that eliminates the device. On June 8, the North Carolina Senate passed SB 411 by a vote of 30-17; that bill repeals the device. And, the current New Mexico Secretary of State, Diana Duran, has let it be known that she will eliminate the device from the 2012 general election ballot. New Mexico’s eletion laws do not authorize the device, but past Secretaries of State have placed it on general election ballots anyway.

Straight-ticket devices injure independent candidates, and they also injure minor party candidates for lower-ticket offices such as state legislature and partisan county office. Ben Manski, Green Party nominee for the Wisconsin legislature last year, actually won his election when one only looks at ballots in which voters did not use the straight-ticket device. But when the ballots of voters who did use it are included, he lost.

Assuming the North Carolina bill is signed into law, in 2012 the only states that will still use straight-ticket devices are: Alabama, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah. States that have repealed the device in the last 15 years (in addition to the states already mentioned) include Illinois and Missouri. Bills to repeal the device have been introduced repeatedly in Oklahoma, Texas, and West Virginia, but they never pass.