Ninth Circuit Issues Useful Opinion on Standing in Election Law Cases

On August 13, the 9th circuit issued this 31-page opinion in Wolfson v Brammer, 09-15298.  It says that a judicial candidate in 2008 has standing to challenge Arizona’s ban on certain kinds of speech for judicial candidates, even though the plaintiff-candidate said he would not run again for judge in 2010.  The U.S. District Court had dismissed his case, saying he lacks standing.

But the 9th circuit says he does have standing, and told the U.S. District Court to hear the merits of the case.  This decision will be useful in ballot access cases.  For example, earlier this year, a U.S. District Court in Montana ruled that the plaintiff who is suing to overturn the March petition deadline for independent candidates doesn’t have standing.  He has already appealed to the 9th circuit on that issue.

First Circuit Sets Hearing Date in Massachusetts Ballot Access Case

The First Circuit will hear Barr v Galvin, 09-2426, on September 15, at 9:30 a.m.  This is the case on whether the Massachusetts Libertarian Party had a right to use a stand-in presidential nominee on its 2008 petition, and then the ability to substitute the actual nominee for the stand-in nominee.

The U.S. District Court had ruled in favor of the Libertarian Party before the election.  Massachusetts is trying to persuade the First Circuit to reverse the ruling.

Jurisdictions which permit unqualified parties to use stand-in presidential candidates on petitions, and then substitute the actual presidential nominee, are Connecticut, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, New York, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia.  States that don’t permit it are Alabama, Maine, and New Hampshire.  The issue doesn’t arise in most states, either because the party petition is just as easy (or easier) than the candidate petition, or else because the candidate petition is so easy and due so late in the process that even a minor party that doesn’t nominate its presidential candidate until August can use it.  A “party petition” is a petition to transform a group into a qualified party, and which doesn’t bear the names of any candidates.

All states permit qualified parties to substitute a new nominee when the original nominee withdraws from the presidential or vice-presidential race.  For instance, all states let the Democratic Party substitute for vice-president in 1972, to replace Thomas Eagleton.  Eagleton had been nominated at the July 1972 convention but he withdrew in August 1972 and the Democratic National Committee chose R. Sargent Shriver to replace him.

Candidate Off Ballot Because His Dog Ate His Petitions

According to this news story, Terry Thomas, a candidate for the School Board in Lady’s Island, South Carolina, had collected 200 signatures on petitions to be on the ballot.  The day before the petitions were due, Thomas’ puppy found the petitions at home and chewed them up to the point of destroying them.  Thanks to Eric Dondero for the link.

Toledo Blade Editorializes in Favor of Ballot Labels in Judicial Elections

Ohio has a peculiar system for choosing state judges, including members of the State Supreme Court.  They are nominated in partisan primaries.  Then they run in the general election but no party labels are on the November ballot.  The August 14 issue of the Toledo Blade has this editorial, saying if the state continues to nominate judicial candidates in partisan primaries, then party labels should be on the general election ballot.

However, the editorial also advocates that Ohio stop electing judges.  As the editorial notes, the Democratic Party and others have a pending federal lawsuit, arguing that because Ohio prints partisan labels on the November ballot for other partisan office, the state cannot withhold partisan labels for judicial nominees in the general election.

Court Date Set for Hearing in Case Against Implementation of California’s “Top-Two” System

A Superior Court in San Francisco will hear arguments in Field v Bowen on September 14, at 9:30 a.m.  This is the lawsuit that challenges two aspects of the California top-two system:  (1) the ban on counting any write-in votes in November for Congress and partisan state offfice; (2) the discriminatory policy that lets some, but not all, candidates list their party affiliation on the ballot.