Maine Secretary of State Appeals State Court Decision Barring Removal of Trump Until US Supreme Court Rules in the Colorado Case

Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows has appealed to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court the Kennebec County Superior Court decision that stays her decision to remove Donald Trump from the Maine presidential ballot until the US Supreme Court rules whether the State of Colorado can remove him from its ballot.

Here is the story.

Louisiana House Passes Bill to Restore Party Nominees; Bill Makes Ballot Access More Difficult

On January 17, the Louisiana House passed HB 17, which restores the ability of parties to have nominees.  It would take effect in 2024 for congressional elections (although Louisiana has no U.S. Senate race in 2024).  For 2024, the partisan primary would be in August, but in future years partisan primaries would be in March.

The bill raises the presidential general election filing fee from $500 to $1,000.

For non-presidential offices, candidates who are not members of a qualified party would need a petition to get on the general election ballot.  Non-presidential statewide petitions would require 5,000 signatures.  The worst aspect is that only voters who are not registered as members of a qualified party could sign.  The only states that ever had such a provision were Louisiana approximately 100 years ago, and Arizona from 1993 to 1999.  In 1999, the restriction on which voters can sign independent candidate petitions was declared unconstitutional in Campbell v Hull, 73 F.Supp.2d 1081.

HB 17 passed the Senate committee on January 18 and the Senate is expected to vote on it on January 19.  The Senate Committee amended the bill, but it is not known what the amendments are.

Partisan primaries would be only for parties that had a presidential nominee, or a member running for other statewide office, who got 5% in the last election.  The qualified parties that would not have a primary would be the Libertarian, Green, and Independent Parties.  The bill does not explain how they would nominate candidates.  Presumably, it would be by convention, with their own party bylaws setting forth the rules.

Parties with primaries would decide for themselves whether to let independent voters vote in their primaries.  Thanks to Jim Riley for this news.