Law Professor Mark Brown Article Explains U.S. Constitutional Requirements that Only State Legislatures Can Write Ballot Access Laws

Law Professor Mark R. Brown of Capital University, Columbus, Ohio, has this article in Volume 7 of the Dartmouth Law Journal, on page 260. The title is “Structural Limitations on the Non-Legislative Regulation of Federal Elections.”

Generally, when the U.S. Constitution talks about state government, it uses the simple term “state”. But in the parts of the U.S. Constitution that talk about federal elections, it uses the term “legislature”, saying that only legislatures (not “states”) can write laws on selection of presidential electors, and election of members of Congress. This characteristic of the U.S. Constitution was not thought about very much, in recent times, until the 2000 election. Three justices of the U.S. Supreme Court said in their concurrences in Bush v Gore that the Florida Supreme Court was overstepping its authority by seeming to issue rules for counting the presidential vote that, arguably, the legislature had not approved. Professor Brown discusses the consequences for ballot access laws, in states in which state executive officers (such as the Secretary of State) have tried to fill in the gaps, or alter, ballot access laws passed by the legislature. Brown has represented either the Socialist Party or the Libertarian Party, or both of them, in ballot access lawsuits in Ohio, Louisiana, and Mississippi, and he is probably the leading thinker on this aspect of the U.S. Constitution and election law.

Arizona Senate Passes Bill to Remove Presidential Electors from November Ballot

On March 1, the Arizona Senate passed SB 1024 by a vote of 18-11. It removes presidential elector candidates from the November ballot. Currently, only six states still print their names on the ballot, and Arizona is the most populous of those six states. Because Arizona has ten presidential electors, and because Arizona had five presidential candidates on the ballot in 2008, that meant the ballot included 50 candidates for presidential elector.

No state still lets voters vote for individual candidates for presidential elector. The last such state was Vermont, which stopped after 1980.

Florida Governor Says he Won’t be an Independent Candidate for U.S. Senate

According to this story, Florida Governor Charlie Crist is still denying that he will be an independent candidate for U.S. Senate, even though many Florida political commentators think he would have an easier time being elected as an independent than in winning the Republican primary.

The story says no “independent” has ever been elected to statewide office in Florida. However, in 1916, the Prohibition Party nominee for Florida Governor was elected. He was Sidney J. Catts, who lost the Democratic gubernatorial primary that year but then ran in the general election as the Prohibitionist, and won.