Alabama Asked to Approve Presidential Substitution

On January 25, the Alabama Libertarian Party asked the Alabama Secretary of State to approve presidential substitution on petitions. That means, the party would like to circulate an independent presidential petition now, but since it doesn’t know who the presidential candidate will be, the party wants to use a stand-in. He or she would then withdraw and the actual nominee could be substituted.

Alabama previously let John B. Anderson use a stand-in vice-presidential candidate on his 1980 independent petition. He listed Milton Eisenhower for vice-president, but Eisenhower was a stand-in. Alabama, and almost all other states, let Anderson substitute the actual v-p candidate, Patrick Lucey, after Anderson chose him on August 27, 1980.

Many other states approved presidential substitution during the 1990’s. Those favorable rulings made it possible for the Libertarian Party to move its presidential convention from Labor Day of the odd year before the election, to the summer or spring of the election year itself. The issue hadn’t arisen in Alabama before because the Libertarian Party was a ballot-qualified party in Alabama in 1996 and 2000.

New Hampshire Legislative Hearing on National Popular Vote Plan Bill

The New Hampshire House holds a committee hearing on HB 1454 on January 29. This is the National Popular Vote Plan bill for presidential elections. The bill was introduced on December 10, 2007.

The National Popular Vote Plan bill has been introduced at least one in every state legislature in the nation, except Delaware, Idaho, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Ohio.

Good Ballot Access Bills in West Virginia

On January 9, West Virginia State Senator Clark Barnes introduced SB 49. It improves the definition of “political party”. Currently, a qualified party is one that polled 1% for its candidate for Governor in the last election.

The bill expands that to a group that polled 1% for any of its statewide state office candidates. It is always easier for a minor party to poll a relatively large vote for a less important statewide office, than an office like President, Governor, or U.S. Senator.

The bill also says a qualified party is any group that persuades 1% of all the registered voters to register into it. Senator Barnes is the Republican whip in the State Senate.

Also on January 9, Delegate Barbara Fleischauer and seven other Delegates introduced HB 3144. It lowers the petition for previously unqualified parties and independent candidates from 2% of the last vote, to 1%. It also deletes various obsolete provisions from the law that have already been declared unconstitutional. The West Virginia petition for statewide office was only 1,000 signatures until 1932. Then it was raised to 1% of the last vote cast, and in 1999 it was raised again, to 2%.