Arizona Governor Signs Bill Forcing Tucson to Use Non-Partisan Elections

On July 13, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer signed SB 1123, which requires all cities in Arizona to use non-partisan elections for their own city officers. See this story. Tucson is the only city in Arizona that uses partisan elections. One Tucson city councilmember is already talking about suing the state, on the grounds that under the State Constitution, each city has a right to decide how it will hold its own elections. UPDATE: here is an editorial from Tucson’s daily newspaper of July 15, attacking the bill.

Federal Court in Ohio Approves Limited Voting for Euclid School Board Elections

On July 13, U.S. District Court Judge Kathleen O’Malley ruled that the city of Euclid, Ohio, should use Limited Voting in its school board elections. The decision, USA v Euclid City School Board, is here.

Euclid has a 5-member School Board, and the city has long used at-large elections for the School Board. Voters elect 3 members in years after presidential elections, and 2 members in years before presidential elections. Euclid’s population is 44.6% African-American, yet no African-American has ever been elected to the School Board. The U.S. Department of Justice had sued Euclid under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and had asked the judge to order single-member districts. The city argued for either Limited Voting or Cumulative Voting. The judge ruled in favor of Limited Voting.

Limited voting means that each voter can only vote for one candidate, even though either two or three candidates are being elected. Thanks to ElectionLawBlog for the link to the decision.

Libertarian Polls 5.2% in Special U.S. House Race in California

On July 14, California held a special election to fill the vacant U.S. House seat, 32nd district. The results: Democrat Judy Chu 61.67%; Republican Betty Chu 33.12%; Libertarian Christopher Agrella 5.21%.

This is the first time this district has had a contest between a Democrat and a Republican since 2002. In 2002, the vote had been: Democratic 68.79%, Republican 27.46%, Libertarian 3.74%. The district is centered in the Los Angeles County towns of El Monte and Covina.