Constitution Party Files Paperwork to be Listed on Alaska Voter Registration Forms

Alaska registration forms list not only the qualified parties, but also parties that have filed a request to be listed on the form so that they may possibly get enough registered members to become ballot-qualified.  The Constitution Party recently filed the paperwork to be listed on Alaska registration forms.

The only ballot-qualified parties in Alaska currently, besides the Democratic and Republican Parties, are the Libertarian and Alaskan Independence Parties.  Thanks to ThirdPartyDaily for this news.  Other unqualified parties now listed on the Alaska registration form are the Green, Veterans, and Republican Moderate Parties.  None of those last-named three parties seem to be active in Alaska anymore, and their registration numbers have been slowly declining for the last six years.

Hartford Newspaper Story About Decentralized Election Administration in Connecticut

The Hartford Courant has this story about Connecticut’s decentralized election system, in which the Secretary of State has no power over the administration of federal and state elections, relative to the town clerks.  As the story says, this is the standard method used throughout New England.  That is why New England states require candidates for statewide office to submit signatures collected in each town, directly to that town.  In most New England states the candidate or party must then collect those local signatures, after they have been checked, and transport them to the Secretary of State.  Ballot access in New England is considerably more difficult than it is in most parts of the nation, partly for this reason.

David F. Nolan, Libertarian Founder, Dies

David F. Nolan, who founded the Libertarian Party along with a group of others in Nolan’s living room, died on November 21 at the age of 66.  He had just completed a vigorous and relatively successful election campaign for the U.S. Senate this month, receiving 4.7% of the vote in a 4-person race against incumbent Senator John McCain.  Nolan was two days away from his next birthday.  He lived in Tucson.

Apparently he suffered a stroke while driving his automobile, on November 20.  On a personal note, this is very sad news.

United States Government Files Brief in U.S. Supreme Court in Lawsuit over Size of U.S. House

On November 17, the United States government filed this brief in opposition, in Clemons v U.S. Department of Commerce, 10-291.  This is the case that says that “one person, one vote” principles require that the size of the U.S. House of Representatives be increased.  As things stand, Montana and Wyoming each have one seat, but Montana has twice as many people as Wyoming.  Thanks to Michael Warnken for the brief.  UPDATE:  here is the reply brief, which responds to the government’s arguments.