Utah Supreme Court Hears Electronic Signature Case on June 2

The Utah Supreme Court will hear Farley Anderson’s lawsuit over whether electronic signatures are valid, on June 2, at 11 a.m. Anderson is an independent candidate for Governor this year. Utah requires 1,000 signatures. Anderson submitted 960 valid paper signatures and 130 electronic signatures. The counties accepted the electronic signatures as valid, but the state elections office rejected them.

The ACLU will represent Anderson. See this story. Also see here for BAN’s prior coverage of this case, including a link to the web page that was used by voters who wanted to sign the Anderson petition electronically. Utah doesn’t normally have gubernatorial elections in midterm years, but this year’s gubernatorial election is a special election because the Governor elected in 2008 resigned without finishing his term.

Minor Parties Again Demonstrate in Front of Schwarzenegger Fund-Raising Event Concerning Proposition 14

On May 24, twelve minor party and independent activists demonstrated in front a Sacramento restaurant. Inside, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared. Guests paid $5,000 each to be at the event, and the money went toward the campaign for Proposition 14, the top-two measure on the June 8 ballot.

The event seemed to attract approximately twenty guests. About half of them accepted an anti-Proposition 14 flyer before entering the restaurant. Two of the guests added that they have no idea what Proposition 14 does. One guest acknowledged that the measure is unfair to minor party members.

The Governor himself seems to have entered the restaurant from a side door that opens into an alley, so he avoided seeing any of the protestors, the signs, and the fliers. Channel 10 TV filmed interviews with some of the protesters.

Bayou Buzz, Louisiana Politics Blog, Discusses Practical Implications of Different Primary Systems This Year

Louisiana’s legislature will probably pass HB 292 this year. It eliminates party nominees for Congressional elections. It says that all candidates for Congress would run in November on a single ballot, and all voters would use that ballot. If anyone gets 50% in November, that person is elected. Otherwise, there would be a run-off in December.

It’s not clear that the legislature will make the change effective this year. Bayou Buzz, a Louisiana politics blog, discusses the consequences for particular members of Congress if the bill takes effect this year. The existing system in Louisiana for congressional elections is a semi-closed primary system. When the semi-closed primary system was used in 2008 for the first time, two incumbent members of Congress were defeated for re-election.

Bayou Buzz also discusses the possibility that the U.S. Justice Department, Voting Rights Section, might not approve HB 292, or might not approve as applied to this year’s election.

Judge in Arkansas Green Party Ballot Access Case Sets a June 16 Hearing

U.S. District Court Judge Price Marshall, Jr., has set a June 16 hearing in Green Party of Arkansas v Daniels, for oral argument on motions for summary judgment. The hearing is at 9 a.m., in room B155 in the federal courthouse in Little Rock.

The issue is whether a state may eliminate a party’s qualified status after a presidential election, if that party fails to poll as much as 3% for President.

Texas Greens Submit 90,000 Signatures to Meet a Requirement of 43,991

The Texas petition deadline for new parties is May 24. Only one party submitted a petition, the Green Party. The party submitted 90,000 signatures to meet a requirement of 43,991. See this story.

This is only the second time that the Texas Green Party has submitted enough signatures to qualify for the ballot. The first time was in 2000, and the party polled enough votes in 2000 so that it was automatically on the ballot as well in 2002. Parties in Texas must poll either 5% for any statewide race, or 2% for Governor. Parties that get 2% for Governor enjoy qualified status for the next four years, but parties that get 5% for any statewide race only gets qualified status for the next two years.