U.S. District Court Judge Keeps Arkansas Green Party Case Alive

On November 16, U.S. District Court Judge J. Leon Holmes ruled against the state of Arkansas, in the lawsuit over whether a state can remove a party from the ballot just because it did poorly in the presidential race, even though it did better in other races. Green Party of Arkansas v Daniels, 4:09-cv-695.

Attorneys for Arkansas had argued that ballot access precedents make it clear that the law is constitutional, and therefore the case should be dismissed without a trial. But the judge cleared the way for a trial. The case was filed earlier this year by the Arkansas Green Party. It polled 20.47% for U.S. Senate in 2008, and elected a state legislator, but only got .32% for President in 2008. The ruling is seven pages. The case now proceeds to the evidence-gathering stage.

The U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled on how tough state laws can be, when they write an election law to determine whether a party should remain on the ballot. Arkansas requires a party to poll 3% for President in a presidential election year; if it doesn’t, it goes off the ballot.

Idaho Republican Party Lawsuit on Primary Elections Moves Ahead

On November 30, a status conference was held in Idaho Republican Party v Ysursa, the federal case over whether the Constitution protects the Republican Party’s desire to have a primary in which only party members may vote. Currently, Idaho does not have registration by party. On primary day, any voter is free to vote in any party’s primary.

By January 15, the Republican Party will present a summary of the evidence it will be presenting at the upcoming trial. This will include a copy of the expert report by one of the party’s witnesses, Michael Munger, who is a professor of political science and an expert in political parties. Then, there will be another status conference on January 26 to set the details for the upcoming trial.

Ohio Will Keep Four Minor Parties on 2010 Ballot

Because Ohio has no valid law in place on how a group becomes a qualified party, and because no bill to create a valid law is close to passing, the Ohio Secretary of State will leave the Constitution, Green, Libertarian, and Socialist Parties on the ballot for the 2010 election. Those four parties were also on the ballot in Ohio in 2008.

However, because the Ohio Constitution requires all ballot-qualified parties to nominate by primary, these parties must choose their nominees in a primary in May 2010. Candidates running for public office in primaries need their own petitions. For qualified minor parties, statewide candidates need 500 signatures to get on their own party’s primary ballot. Candidates running for U.S. House or state legislature or partisan county office need 25 signatures. Those petitions are due on February 18, 2010. The requirement for a primary was waived in 2008 because the four parties put on the ballot did not get on the ballot (via court order) until after the March 2008 primary was over.

Although HB 260 has passed the House, it has made no headway in the Senate. That bill sets out petition requirements for parties to get on the ballot. If that bill had passed already, minor parties would need 10,057 signatures to get on the 2010 ballot. But, obviously, no one can expect any party to fulfill a requirement that doesn’t exist yet.

Political Scientist Analyzes Why Chris Daggett Received Fewer Votes than Polls Had Predicted

David P. Redlawsk, a Political Science professor at Rutgers, has this op-ed in the Newark Star-Ledger, analyzing why New Jersey independent gubernatorial candidate Chris Daggett only got 5.7% of the vote when polls close to the election had him at 20%. Redlawsk is also Director of the Rutgers-Eagleton Poll. He finds, in post-election polling, that 45% of the people who had thought they would vote for Daggett did not actually vote for him because they thought he couldn’t win.

Connecticut Post Calls on Legislature to Fix Public Funding Law

The Connecticut Post has this editorial, praising Governor Jodi Rell for asking the legislature to remove the discriminatory parts of the public funding law. The legislature is coming back on December 15, and the Governor has asked that the legislature amend the public funding law so that it no longer discriminates against any candidates.

The Connecticut Post is Bridgeport’s daily newspaper.