This article reveals that Washington state also has a presidential nominee certification deadline that is earlier than this year’s Democratic convention, as Alabama and Ohio do. However, the Washington Secretary of State, a Democrat, says the national party could satisfy the law by sending in a provision certification. The Alabama Secretary of State, according to the article, has said that idea wouldn’t work in Alabama.
Alabama Senator Merika Coleman (D-Birmingham) has introduced SB 318, to move the date for qualified parties to certify the names of their presidential nominees from 82 days before the election, to 74 days before. This would solve the problem that the existing deadline is earlier than this year’s Democratic national convention.
She has also introduced SB 324, which moves the certification deadline in the same way, and also moves the deadline for independent presidential candidate petitions to a later date. SB 324 has seven co-sponsors.
On March 24, Irv Sutley died at the age of 79. He had been active in the Peace & Freedom Party in Sonoma County, California, ever since 1972. He was a PFP nominee for either Congress or legislature in 1978, 1990, 1992, 1994, and 1998. He also ran for non-partisan office as a PFP member.
See this lengthy obituary in the Press Democrat, the daily newspaper for Santa Rosa.
On April 1, the Georgia legislature passed HB 1312, which postpones the statewide partisan election for Public Service Commission from November 2024 to a special election in 2025. This is a severe blow to the Georgia Libertarian Party, because without this bill, Public Service Commissioner and President would have been the only statewide offices on the November 2024 ballot. A party must poll a number of votes for any statewide race equal to 1% of the number of registered voters, every two years, in order to stay on the ballot for statewide offices.
If Governor Brian Kemp signs this bill, President will be the only statewide office on the November 2024 ballot, and unless the Libertarian presidential nominee does exceptionally well in Georgia, the party will lose its qualified status (which only exists for all the statewide offices, but not district offices). Only in 2016 did the Libertarian Party poll enough votes for president to meet the vote test.
Consumer groups are angered by the bill and are hoping to persuade the Governor to veto the bill.
Christianity Today has this story about the American Solidarity Party.