Washington Legislative Hearing on Ballot Access Reform Bill

The Washington State House Government Committee holds a hearing on HB 1534 on February 7, at 6 p.m. This is the bill to improve ballot access for minor parties and independent candidates. It would permit an unqualified party to petition for a place on the ballot (with 1,000 signatures) before it has chosen its nominees. Once on the ballot, it would then nominate by convention.

It would also ease petition requirements for independent candidates, and let independent candidates choose a partisan label (that could not mimic the name of a qualified party) which would be printed on the November ballot.

One minor party activist, who is with the Progressive Party, is not satisfied with these improvements, and is threatening to testify against the bill. Since the committee members had previously said that they will not pass this bill unless all minor party witnesses are in favor of it, the bill is in danger unless this person is mollified. The dissatisfied Progressive Party activist wants the bill to allow for qualification of parties on a district-by-district basis. There is little practical advantage to making that change, since the bill’s draft would allow a party that doesn’t wish to qualify statewide to still appear on the November ballot, under the procedures for partisan labels for independent candidates.

Two Minor Parties Together Receive Over 30% in California Special Legislative Election

On February 5, California held a special election to fill the vacant 55th Assembly district. Only three candidates were on the ballot, a Democrat, a member of the Constitution (American Independent) Party, and a Libertarian. The results:

Warren Furutani, Democrat, 41,518, 69.84%
Charlotte Gibson, American Independent, 9,153, 15.40%
Herb Peters, Libertarian, 8,775, 14.76%

The district’s registration is 52.9% Democratic, 24.0% Republican, American Independent 1.9%, Peace & Freedom .6%, Libertarian .4%, Green .4%, independent and other 19.7%. Thanks to ThirdPartyWatch and Glenn Brown.

Louisiana Two Special U.S. House Elections

Louisiana will hold two special U.S. House elections, to fill vacancies, either on April 5 or May 3. Filing has closed.

The First District seat is vacant because the former Congressman, Bobby Jindal, was elected Governor last year. That race will feature a Republican, a Democrat, an independent (R. A. “Skip” Galan), and Anthony Gentile, who is state chair of the Independent American Party. The two major party nominees will be chosen in March in a semi-closed primary.

The Sixth District seat is vacant because the former Congressman, Richard Baker, resigned to take a job in the hedge fund industry. It will feature a Republican, a Democrat, a Constitution Party member, and two independents. The Constitution Party member is Randall T. Hayes. The two independents are Peter Aranyosi and Ashley Casey.

Although Louisiana recognizes the Green, Libertarian and Reform Parties, and holds primaries for them, no one from those parties filed. Since the Constitution Party is not ballot-qualified, Hayes may not have “Constitution Party” on the ballot next to his name; instead he will be labeled an “other” candidate. Similarly, for the First District race, Anthony Gentile may not have “Independent American Party” next to his name since his party is not ballot-qualified either.

Mississippi Supreme Court Reverses Lower Court, Says No Special Election for US Senate Until November

On February 6, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled that the special election to fill Trent Lott’s US Senate seat should not be held until November. The lower court had ruled that it should be in March. The case is State ex rel Hood v Barbour, and involved how to interpret an unclear Mississippi election law relating to special elections for US Senate. Thanks to Steve Rankin for this news.