Libertarian Connecticut Petition Woes

Connecticut elections officials say the Libertarian presidential petition lacks approximately 500 valid signatures. Libertarian activist Andy Rule will be reviewing these findings. The party submitted over 12,000 signatures to meet a requirement of exactly 7,500 signatures, but elections officials say only 54% of the signatures were valid.

The Constitution and Green Parties this year did not collect as many as 7,500 raw signatures, so if the Libertarian petition re-verification process does not succeed, Ralph Nader will be the only presidential candidate on the ballot other than Barack Obama and John McCain. Connecticut permits write-ins for declared presidential candidates.

North Carolina Senator Will Introduce Bill to Ease Independent Candidate Ballot Access in 2009

North Carolina State Senator Jim Jacumin (R-Connellys Springs) has told a constituent that he will introduce a bill to ease ballot access for independent candidates next year. North Carolina ballot access for independent candidates is so severe that no independent has ever qualified for U.S. House, U.S. Senate, or Governor, in the history of government-printed ballots in that state. Ross Perot in 1992 is the only person who ever qualified as an independent candidate. District independent candidates need a petition of 4% of the number of registered voters, which is as much as 20,000 signatures in some U.S. House districts. No independent candidate for U.S. House in U.S. history has ever overcome a petition hurdle as great as 14,000 signatures.

Montana Ballot Access Hearing Set for September 19

A U.S. District Court Judge in Montana will hear Kelly v Johnson on Friday, September 19. The issue is whether Montana’s new independent deadline for non-presidential candidates is constitutional or not. The deadline was moved last year from June to March. Another issue in the case is whether it is constitutional for Montana to require more than twice as many signatures for a single independent candidate, than for an entire new party.

Montana Verifies That Ron Paul Will Remain on Ballot

The Montana Secretary of State has told Ron Paul that his request to be removed from the ballot arrived too late, so he will definitely be on the November ballot as the Constitution Party nominee, along with Michael Peroutka for vice-president.

Paul’s letter, dated September 10, says, “It has come to my attention that I was nominated by the Constitution Party of Montana as its presidential nominee. While I certainly appreciate the Constitution Party of Montana’s nomination, and all the hard work of its members, I am writing to respectfully request that you remove my name from the ballot in Montana as I did not seek nor consent to this nomination.”

Barr Wins Pennsylvania Substitution Lawsuit

On September 15, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth ruled against the challenge to Bob Barr’s substitution paperwork. The challenge had been filed by a Republican Party official in Cumberland County, and he had been represented by several attorneys, including one who regularly handles legal business for the Republican Party of Pennsylvania. The decision is seven pages.

The decision says, “In nominating Etzel prior to the Libertarian National Convention and substituting Barr thereafter, the Party and LPPa merely complied with the Party’s election process as it has been established in Pennsylvania since 1996 when, nationally, the Party moved its convention from a date prior to the legal date for circulation of Pennsylvania nomination papers to a subsequent date. Since then, given the time constraints, the Party and LPPa have deemed it necessary to circulate nomination papers prior to their national convention in order to take full and fair advantage of the time period allotted under Pennsylvania’s Election Code to secure the necessary signatures in support of their candidate…the Party simply took reasonable action to abide by the Election Code while furthering its legitimate interest.”