Boston Tea Party Nominations

According to the website of the Boston Tea Party, the presidential candidate this year will be Charles Jay, and the vice-presidential candidate will be Thomas L. Knapp. The choice was made on the internet. 37 voters participated. The vote for president was Jay 28, Robert Milnes 5, “none of the above” 9. The total number of votes cast for president is higher than the number of voters, because a voter could vote for more than one candidate.

Charles Jay was the presidential candidate of the Personal Choice Party in 2004. He was only on the ballot in Utah, and he polled 946 votes.

South Carolina US Senate Recount, Democratic Primary

On June 16, South Carolina finished its recount of the Demcratic U.S. Senate race. Bob Conley received 74,185 votes; Michael Cone received 73,127. This is disappointing for the Working Families Party, since it had already nominated Cone. Under section 7-11-10, since Cone was defeated for the Democratic nomination, he can’t be the Working Families nominee either. so the WFP now has no nominee for U.S. Senate in South Carolina.

Peace & Freedom Nomination is Difficult to Predict

The ballot-qualified Peace and Freedom Party of California holds its state convention in Sacramento on August 2-3. The meeting will choose the party’s presidential nominee. Since it is so difficult for an independent to get on the California ballot, the PFP nomination is of great value. Ralph Nader, Gloria La Riva (Party for Socialism and Liberation nominee), and Brian Moore (Socialist Party nominee) would all be greatly advantaged if they could receive the PFP nomination.

The winning nominee must receive a majority of the vote at the convention. Delegates are the members of the state central committee. County central committee members are automatically members of the state central committee. They were elected at the June 3 primary. Not all the absentee or provisional ballots have been counted yet, and some counties haven’t counted write-in votes. Some of the contested races for PFP county central committee are still extremely close; sometimes one vote separates winners from losers.

Several California counties made election administration errors at the June 3 primary. The worst was in Alameda County, where some PFP members were told that they could only vote a non-partisan ballot. Also in Los Angeles County, in some districts the PFP primary ballot was two ballot cards, but some PFP voters were only given one of the two cards. Thanks to Bob Richard for that news. Here is an article from the Daily Planet of June 16 about the Alameda County problem.

Peace & Freedom Nomination is Difficult to Predict

The ballot-qualified Peace and Freedom Party of California holds its state convention in Sacramento on August 2-3. The meeting will choose the party’s presidential nominee. Since it is so difficult for an independent to get on the California ballot, the PFP nomination is of great value. Ralph Nader, Gloria La Riva (Party for Socialism and Liberation nominee), and Brian Moore (Socialist Party nominee) would all be greatly advantaged if they could receive the PFP nomination.

The winning nominee must receive a majority of the vote at the convention. Delegates are the members of the state central committee. County central committee members are automatically members of the state central committee. They were elected at the June 3 primary. Not all the absentee or provisional ballots have been counted yet, and some counties haven’t counted write-in votes. Some of the contested races for PFP county central committee are still extremely close; sometimes one vote separates winners from losers.

Several California counties made election administration errors at the June 3 primary. The worst was in Alameda County, where some PFP members were told that they could only vote a non-partisan ballot. Also in Los Angeles County, in some districts the PFP primary ballot was two ballot cards, but some PFP voters were only given one of the two cards. Thanks to Bob Richard for that news. Here is an article from the Daily Planet of June 16 about the Alameda County problem.

Oregon's Largest County Reports Almost 900 Individuals Got at Least One Write-in for Attorney General in Republican Primary

Oregon held its primaries on May 20, 2008. No one ran in the Republican primary for Attorney General. Under Oregon election law, when no one appears on the ballot in a partisan primary, elections officials must tally all write-ins (Oregon has no law requiring write-in candidates to file a write-in declaration of candidacy). Multnomah County, which includes Portland, has posted the list of write-ins on its web page. See it here. The list includes almost 900 individuals who got at least one write-in, and goes on for 18 pages. Thanks to ElectionUpdates for the link.