As expected, New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine signed A4225 over the weekend. This is the National Popular Vote Plan bill, which is now law in both Maryland and New Jersey.
The Green Party presidential candidates debated each other in San Francisco on Sunday afternoon, January 13. The event attracted a paying audience of about 800 people. The presidential candidates were Jared Ball, Jesse Johnson, Cynthia McKinney, Kent Mesplay, and Cat Swift. Ball announced at the end of his closing statement that he would be devoting his energy toward helping Cynthia McKinney obtain the nomination, so one could say that at that point, he withdrew as a presidential candidate.
After the debate was over, Ralph Nader spoke briefly, and also took questions from the audience. He did not talk about the presidential election, and gave no indication that he will be declaring his candidacy for the Green Party nomination.
Here is the San Francisco Chronicle story about the event.
On January 10, the Virginia Independent Green Party affiliated itself with the Independence Party of America, the budding new national third party headed by Frank MacKay of New York state.
The Independent Green Party is not a ballot-qualified party. However, it has the organizational strength to place candidates on the ballot in Virginia, and does so repeatedly. It has never been an affiliate of the national Green Party. The Independent Green Party has never before participated in a presidential election, but it is currently circulating a presidential petition listing Michael Bloomberg as its presidential candidate.
On January 26, the Minnesota Independence Party (which is ballot-qualified) will probably also affiliate itself with the Independence Party of America.
On January 11, a federal lawsuit was filed in Nevada against the state Democratic Party. The lawsuit attacks the party for having set up “at-large” precincts for its presidential caucus on Saturday, January 19, inside large Las Vegas casino-hotels. The party by-laws were recently amended to provide for such caucus locations in any establishment that has “at least 4,000 employees in a contiguous area working on Saturday morning, January 19.”
Since the caucus is paid for and organized by the Democratic Party, rather than the state, this will be another interesting test of the extent to which political parties can regulate their own nominations procedure. The Nevada election code does regulate caucuses, and the code does not provide for such extra voting places. Normally lawsuits alleging that a party is violating state law are filed in state courts, but when there is a time emergency and constitutional rights are involved, federal courts also have jurisdiction.
The case is Chesnut v Democratic Party of Nevada, 2:08-cv-46. Another plaintiff is the Nevada State Education Association (or “the state teachers union”). The lawsuit appears to have a political context. The casino workers are part of the Culinary Workers Union, which has endorsed Barack Obama. The Nevada State Education Association has not endorsed any presidential candidate. Many casino workers won’t be able to attend the Saturday caucuses if the “at-large precincts” are disallowed. Teachers, on the other hand, generally have free time on Saturdays. The specific hotel-casinos (all in Las Vegas) are the Bellagio, Luxor, Mirage, Rio, Caesar’s Palace, Paris, Flamingo, Wynn Las Vegas, and New York New York. Thanks to Ed Still’s votelawblog for this news.
New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine is likely to sign A4225 on Saturday, January 12. This is the National Popular Vote Plan bill. This will make New Jersey the 2nd state to have passed the plan. It doesn’t take effect unless or until states comprising a majority of votes in the Electoral College have passed it. The first state to pass the plan was Maryland.