Illinois Lieutenant Governor Nomination Still Causing Problems for Illinois Democratic Party

Illinois held its 2010 primary in February, and the Democratic Party primary for Lieutenant Governor was won by Scott Lee Cohen. Party leaders did not like Cohen and after the primary was over, they successfully persuaded him to resign from the ticket. The party then chose Sheila Simon as its replacement Lieutenant Governor nominee.

Now, two independent gubernatorial candidates are aiming to qualify for the November ballot. One is Cohen himself, who now appears to regret that he resigned the Lieutenant Governor’s nomination. The other is William “Dock” Walls, who had tried to appear on the Democratic primary ballot as a gubernatorial candidate, but party officials didn’t like his candidacy and threatened to challenge his primary petition, causing him to withdraw. Walls is gaining support from black voters, because many black political activists had expected the party to choose a black to replace Cohen as the party’s Lieutenant Governor candidate, but the party did not do so. See this story about the Cohen independent race.

Union-Backed Party in North Carolina Has 20,000 Signatures

North Carolina First, a new party that exists only in North Carolina, has 20,000 signatures in its drive to get on the November 2010, according to news reports. The party’s web page, http://ncfirstparty.org, is here.

The party needs 85,379 signature by May 14. It is possible the party could win a lawsuit against the relatively early deadline. New parties in North Carolina nominate by convention, so there seems to be little state interest in requiring the petitions to be completed so early.

Congressional Redistricting Bill Gains 35 Co-Sponsors in Last Week

HR 4918, the bill in the U.S. House of Representatives to require the states to draw the boundaries of U.S. House districts entirely in public hearings, with mandatory input from the public, and to put all proposals on a state internet site, has gained 35 co-sponsors in the last week. The bill now has 36 co-sponsors.

Other election law bills that have gained co-sponsors in the last week are HR 1826, which gained 3 (so that now it has 147); and HR 3335, which gained 2 (so that now it has 32). HR 1826 is public funding for candidates for Congress. HR 3335 requires the states to let ex-felons vote in federal elections.

Big California Newspapers Endorse Proposition 14

On April 25, the San Francisco Chronicle and the Sacramento Bee both endorsed Proposition 14, the California “top-two” ballot measure. However, both of these newspapers had also endorsed Proposition 62 in 2004. Proposition 62 was an earlier version of the “top-two” measure, and it was defeated by the voters.

The Los Angeles Times, which had earlier endorsed Proposition 14, carried a letter to the editor on April 23 by Ted Brown that opposes Proposition 14. This is the first content that the Los Angeles Times has printed that criticizes the measure, since it carried an op-ed over a year ago by Steve Hill.

The Sacramento Bee editorial is here. It says that if “top-two” were in force, Greens in San Francisco would be likely to place first or second in the June primary, and thus be able to place a candidate on the November ballot. The Bee editorial board knew that the election returns from the California blanket primary returns rebut this assertion. In 1998 the Green candidate for Governor, Dan Hamburg, placed fifth inside San Francisco. There was no U.S. Senate race in 1998. In 2000, Ralph Nader placed fifth in the blanket presidential primary within San Francisco. Also in 2000, Green U.S. Senate candidate Medea Benjamin placed third inside San Francisco. In 2003, in the special gubernatorial election in which all candidates appeared on the same ballot, Peter Camejo placed third in San Francisco. All the data rebuts the idea that Greens would place first or second within San Francisco, and the Bee had that data, but the Bee ignored the data and instead promulgated its unsupported speculation.

There were no Green Party candidates on the ballot in the blanket primary years in San Francisco for U.S. House or for state legislature.