Maryland Court Hearing on How Petition Signatures Should be Validated

On Friday, November 13, the Howard County, Maryland, Circuit Court will hear Norman v Howard County, 13C-09-76855. The issue is whether petition signatures in Maryland are invalid if the signature doesn’t match exactly the name of the voter in voter registration records.

Back on December 19, 2008, the highest state court in Maryland, the State Court of Appeals, had seemed to rule in Doe v Montgomery County Board of Elections, no. 61, Sep. 2008, that petition signatures in Maryland are invalid if the name on the petition doesn’t exactly match the name of the voter in the voter registration records. This means, for example, that if a signer signs his first name “Wm.” instead of “William”, the signature is no good. It means that if the signer used a middle initial when he or she registered to vote, that middle initial must appear on the petition. However, there is some question as to whether the holding in that case is binding, or is merely dicta. The vote had been 4-3. The dissenters didn’t discuss the issue of whether signatures must be an exact match. The main holding in the Doe case was to invalidate a referendum in Montgomery County, and because the court also invalidated the petition on the grounds that it didn’t have enough signatures because the true requirement was 27,615 signatures, not 25,001 signatures, there was no need for the court to have decided the “exact match” issue.

The new case in Howard County is whether a Howard County referendum on zoning has enough valid signatures. The Howard County Board of Elections had already validated the referendum once, but once the Board became aware of the Doe decision, it rechecked the signatures and eliminated two-thirds of the signatures that had already been validated.

The 2009 legislative session considered SB 1067, by Senator Edward Kasemeyer, which would have amended the law on petitions to say, “If the Election Authority reasonably can confirm the identity of the individual (who signed the petition), the Election Authority may not invalidate a signature.” Unfortunately, the bill, introduced late in the session, failed to make any headway.

A federal lawsuit is also pending against any interpretation that Maryland petition signatures must be exact matches. It is Kendall v Howard County, JFM-09-cv-0660. On October 19, 2009, U.S. District Court Judge J. Frederick Motz ruled that because there is no federal constitutional right for voters to have the referendum process, it doesn’t matter how strictly Maryland eliminates signatures on referendum petitions. That decision is being appealed to the 4th circuit. Judge Motz, a Reagan appointee, had upheld Maryland’s filing fee for declared write-in candidates back in 1988, but the 4th circuit had overturned his decision in 1989.

Another North Carolina Newspaper Editorializes for Easier Ballot Access

The November 9 issue of the Gaston Gazette has this editorial, criticizing North Carolina’s ballot access laws for new and previously unqualified political parties. This is at least the third daily newspaper in North Carolina that has editorialized favorably about the issue, since last month’s 2-1 ruling by the State Court of Appeals upholding the ballot access laws.

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Article on Pennsylvania Supreme Court

The November 8 issue of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review has this article about the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The focus of the article is Orie Melvin, the new justice who was elected by the voters last week. The article suggests that she is a different breed of judge than the other members of that Court, and refers back to some of the reasons that neutral observers have a low opinion of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

The article doesn’t mention the treatment that that Court has given to minor party and independent candidates ever since 2004, nor does it mention that in 2008, the Pennsylvania League of Women Voters had filed a federal lawsuit alleging that the justices made a corrupt deal with the legislature. Nor does the article mention that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had turned a blind eye to the scandal in Wilkes-Barre when local state judges accepted bribes from the owner of a juvenile detention home in return for exorbitantly long sentences for juveniles (this is featured in Michael Moore’s movie “Capitalism: A Love Story”). Thanks to Howard Bashman’s How Appealing blog for the link.

Sacramento Bee Covers Lawsuit Over California Public Funding Ballot Question

In June 2010, California voters will be voting on a proposal, passed by the Legislature, that would create public funding for candidate for Secretary of State in 2014 and 2018. A state court in Sacramento will hear arguments on November 20, 2009, in Institute of Government Advocates v Bowen, 2009-80000305, in which the plaintiffs are trying to have the measure removed from the ballot.

The bill provides that funds for public funding would be obtained from fees levied on individuals and groups who are paid to lobby legislators. The lawsuit was filed by lobbyist groups who argue that this method of raising money violates the First Amendment. See this story in the Sacramento Bee about the lawsuit.