Constitutional Case Against Pennsylvania Costs Finally Reaches a Federal Judge

On July 20, the first substantive brief was filed by the plaintiffs in Constitution Party of Pennsylvania, et al, v Cortes, 09-cv-01691, eastern district. This is the case that argues that Pennsylvania’s fees system for candidates who are removed from the ballot violates the U.S. Constitution. Here is the 12-page brief. See especially pages 3-5. UPDATE: here is the Complaint, which was filed April 21, 2009.

Although the issue of the constitutionality of the fees has been before the Pennsylvania state courts ever since early 2005, those courts never seem to have seriously dealt with the constitutional issue. Past U.S. Supreme Court precedents on filing fees, and poll taxes, establish that voters and candidates cannot be charged to pay for the administrative costs of elections.

This early brief is not a full brief on these issues, and is mainly concerned with opposing a motion to dismiss the State Supreme Court justices from the federal case. The plaintiffs are neutral on that procedural issue, but want to preserve their options in case the federal court later decides that the State Supreme Court justices are necessary defendants.

As long-time readers will already know, the fees at issue are those imposed on Ralph Nader in 2004, to pay for the costs of determining that his petition didn’t have enough signatures. A similar issue was raised when the 2006 statewide Green Party was disqualified. Each set of petitioners were charged over $80,000, not as a fine or punishment, but simply because Pennsylvania had a policy of forcing petitioning groups to pay administrative costs, if their petitions lack enough valid signatures.

Oregon Governor Signs SB 326

On July 22, Oregon Governor Ted Kulongowski signed SB 326, the bill that eliminates the “primary screenout” for independent candidate petitions, and also legalizes fusion. This is not really news, because the Governor said on July 9 that he would sign the bill. Still, it prompted this news story. UPDATE: actually the bill was signed on the afternoon of July 23, not July 22.

Some Election Bills in U.S. House Continue Gaining Co-Sponsors

During the last nine days, several election law bills of interest have added new co-sponsors.

HR1826, public funding for congressional candidates, added 7 co-sponsors and now has 64.

HR3025, to require states to use bipartisan commissions to draw U.S. House district boundaries, added 6 co-sponsors and now has 20.

HR2894, to require states to use only vote-counting machines with a paper trail, added one co-sponsor and now has 82.

HR2499, for a popular vote on Puerto Rico’s political status, added 5 co-sponsors and now has 161.

New Jersey Newsroom Carries Op-Ed by New Jersey Independent Gubernatorial Candidate

The July 21 issue of New Jersey Newsroom has this op-ed by Chris Daggett, a former state official of New Jersey who is an independent candidate for Governor this year. Daggett makes the case for his own candidacy, including the idea that major party nominees invariably serve their own party’s interest instead of the public interest. Thanks to The Hankster for the link. UPDATE: Daggett qualified for public funding earlier this month. See this story.

New Jersey Newsroom was founded earlier this year by 40 leading journalists, most of whom had been working for the Newark Star-Ledger. New Jersey Newsroom is strictly an on-line newspaper.

Arizona Court Permits Trial to Go Ahead on Vote-Counting Machine Accuracy

On July 21, the Arizona State Court of Appeals ruled that a trial should be held in Chavez v Brewer, 1 CA-cv-06-0575. The issue is whether the state’s electronic vote-counting machines produce accurate results. The lower court had refused to permit evidence-gathering. Thanks to ElectionLawBlog for this news. The 29-page decision is here.