Baldwin Likely to be on Virginia Ballot as Independent Green Nominee

The Independent Green Party of Virginia, which is not a qualified party, circulated a petition for president earlier this year naming Michael Bloomberg for president and Ron Paul for vice-president. Virginia permits substitution. Late in August, Ron Paul asked the party to remove his name, and on September 4, Michael Bloomberg also asked the party to remove his name. September 5 is the deadline for the party to tell the Virginia Board of Elections which candidates to list. It is likely that the party will choose Chuck Baldwin for president and Darrell Castle for vice-president. These are the Constitution Party national nominees.

Puerto Rico Decision on Bilingual Ballots Survives Appeal

On September 4, the 1st Circuit ruled that an appeal on the bilingual ballot issue fails, for procedural reasons. Therefore, the ruling of the U.S. District Court remains, and Puerto Rico must print this year’s ballots (and future ballots) in English as well as Spanish. After the U.S. District Court had ordered bilingual ballots (instead of ballots printed only in Spanish) one member of the Puerto Rico Election Commission had filed an appeal with the 1st Circuit. But, the 1st Circuit said that one member doesn’t have the authority to file an appeal all by himself. Thanks to Rosemary Rodriguez for this news. Diffenderfer v Cruz-Maldonado, 08-2107.

Independent Party of Delaware Wins Lawsuit Over its Nominating Procedures

On September 5, the Delaware Chancery Court in Sussex County ruled that the Independent Party of Delaware’s nominating convention this year was conducted properly. An activist of that party who was not happy about the party’s choice of a gubernatorial nominee had sued the party, arguing that its nominating procedures this year were unlawful. Allen v Independent Party of Delaware, 3951-cc.

The court ruled that a qualified minor party in Delaware is free to have bylaws that let the party’s board choose the party nominees. If the case had gone the other way, Ralph Nader’s ballot position in Delaware would have been jeopardized, since the same procedure used by the Independent Party of Delaware to nominate its candidate for Governor had been used to nominate Nader for president. Thanks to David Finger for this news.

Pennsylvania Court Asks 2004 Nader Challengers to Respond to Recent Indictments

As most regular readers are aware, on July 10, the Pennsylvania Attorney General indicted a dozen state employees for doing partisan political work on government time, with government computers and other resources. Some of that partisan political work was participating in the challenge to Ralph Nader’s 2004 Pennsylvania petition, and also the challenge to the Green Party’s 2006 petition.

Nader then asked the Pennsylvania Commonwealth to re-open the matter of whether they should each be required to pay approximately $80,000 to the people who challenged their petitions. The justification for the re-opening was that the challengers had acted corruptly. On August 29, Judge Bonnie Leadbetter issued an order, requiring the challengers to Nader’s petition to respond to Nader’s request for a reopening.

The reason Nader has still not paid the $80,000 is that his bank is in the District of Columbia, and the D.C. Superior Court has never agreed to let the 2004 challengers seize Nader’s bank account. The D.C. court hasn’t denied the request either; it simply hasn’t acted. On August 22, Nader’s attorneys notified the D.C. Superior Court of the new activity in the Pennsylvania court.

The Green Party has not asked the Commonwealth Court to re-open the matter of its $80,000 problem for 2006. Instead the Green Party went to the State Supreme Court. There is no response to that request so far.

Louisiana Asked to Print Ron Paul on Ballot as Presidential Candidate

On September 4, a slate of presidential electors was filed at the Louisiana Secretary of State’s office, in person. The electors are pledged to Ron Paul for president, and former Congressman Barry Goldwater, Jr., for vice-president. The partisan label for this slate is “Louisiana Taxpayers Party.” The filing, and the $500 was accepted, but the Secretary of State did not commit to printing the slate on the ballot. However, there is no law that says presidential candidates at the November election must sign any declaration of candidacy.

Louisiana is one of the few states that still prints the names of presidential elector candidates on the ballot. Thus, Louisiana elections officials have a heightened awareness that the true candidates in November elections are the presidential elector candidates, and that presidential candidates’ names on the ballot are only there as labels, describing the intentions of those elector candidates.

It has been difficult to get information from the Louisiana Secretary of State’s office this week, because Baton Rouge electricity has been disrupted. The Secretary’s web page has been down for several days, and no receptionist has been answering the phone in that office. Thanks to IndependentPoliticalReport for breaking the story.