Texas Democrats Lose Court Fight with Texas Republicans Over Ballot Access

On April 16, a U.S. District Court Judge in Waco, Texas, ruled against the Texas Democratic Party, in a lawsuit with the name Texas Democratic Party v Republican Party of Texas, no. MO-08-CA-005 (western district). As a result, the Texas Democratic Party nominee for the Texas House, district 82, may have trouble getting on the November ballot.

The nominee, Bill Dingus, had not resigned his seat on the Midland City Council when he ran in the March 2008 primary for state legislature. The Texas Constitution requires candidates who already hold certain kinds of public office to resign before they can run for the legislature. This law was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1982. But Democrats thought they could get around that barrier, in the 2008 election matter in this one district, because back in 1996 a court order had been issued in a Voting Rights case that said Midland city councilmembers need not resign to run for another office. That 1996 case was a fight over whether Midland should have at-large city council elections or district elections, and was intended to preserve flexibility during the period when no one knew how Midland would be electing councilmembers.

But in the 2008 case, the judge said that Midland court order from 1996 doesn’t apply to the current situation. The Democratic candidate had still not been removed from the November ballot, but he probably will be removed. If the Secretary of State removes him, it is possible the party could then fill the vacancy created. Thanks to Ross Ramsey for the decision.

Pennsylvania Primary Offers Excellent Opportunity for Petitions

The Pennsylvania primary on April 22 is an excellent opportunity for petitioning parties to collect many signatures. The Constitution, Green, Libertarian Parties, and independent Ralph Nader, are all circulating a petition to get on the Pennsylvania ballot. Petitioning at the polls on primary day is one of the best techniques for petitioning, because virtually everyone standing in line to vote, or leaving the polling place, is a registered voter. Pennsylvania this year requires 24,666 valid signatures for statewide petitions. Members of the petitioning parties should consider taking some time off from work, or at least using some evening time after work, to petition next Tuesday.

Helpful Missouri Ballot Access Bill Moves Ahead

On April 16, the Missouri House Rules Committee passed SB797 and sent it to the House floor as a “Consent” bill. “Consent” bills have no known opposition. The bill fixes the typographical error in the procedure passed in 1993, by which a group becomes a qualified party. It deletes the requirement that the group’s petition list a candidate for president and for presidential electors.