David Larson, opinion editor of Carolina Journal, has this column criticizing the Democratic members of the North Carolina State Board of Elections for their obviously partisan bias when they make decisions about ballot access.
The Alaska Division of Elections will soon determine whether the initiative to repeal the top-four system has enough valid signatures. There are enough valid signatures statewide, but Alaska also requires a minimum number of signatures in three-fourths of the legislative districts, and the initiative may not have complied with the distribution requirement. See this story.
On July 19 a state court judge ruled that about 3,000 signatures are not valid, because the voters who signed them did so when no circulator was present. The petition blanks had been left on various bulletin boards and other places where no one was watching voters sign.
The Detroit News has this interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. He says that the Democratic Party made a mistake when it blocked primary season debates in its presidential selection process.
On July 19, the Nebraska Democratic Party urged the Secretary of State to rule that he can’t be an independent candidate in Nebraska, because he is a minor party nominee in certain other states. See this story.
The Democratic Party letter ignores the fundamental point that the true candidates in a presidential election in November are the candidates for presidential elector. Technically, there is no “presidential election” in the United States. Instead, in November, there are 51 separate elections for slates of presidential elector candidates. The elections are separate. It is of no importance that Kennedy has elector candidates in some states that are independents, while in other states they are members of a one-state party.
Every minor party or independent presidential candidate of any consequence in U.S. history has used a mix of methods to get on the ballot. This is true for Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, Robert La Follette in 1924, Congressman Thomas Lemke in 1936, Henry Wallace in 1948, Strom Thurmond in 1948, George Wallace in 1968, Congressman John Schmitz in 1972, John Anderson in 1980, Ross Perot in both 1992 and 1996, and every Libertarian and Green presidential nominee 1976 through the present.
On July 19, the Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. campaign submitted 37,000 signatures to get on the ballot as an independent candidate in Oregon. The requirement is 23,737.
The statutory deadline is August 27, but the Oregon Secretary of State recently promulgated a rule that the “real” deadline is a month earlier. The Kennedy campaign will be submitting more signatures soon, and will contest any action by the Secretary of State to refuse them. The Federal Election Commission website says the Oregon independent petition deadline is August 27. See here.