Final Set of Briefs Filed in US Supreme Court in Washington State “Top-Two” Case

The last set of briefs has now been filed in the U.S. Supreme Court, in the case known as State of Washington v Washington State Republican Party. These briefs are the rebuttal briefs filed by the state of Washington and its ally, the Grange. The state’s brief is here and the Grange’s brief is here. The issue in the case is whether a state may print party labels on the ballot, when it uses a system in which every candidate runs on a single initial ballot, and then the top two vote-getters compete in a run-off.

The lower federal courts had invalidated the system, since they believed that printing party labels on such a run-off ballot implies that the label means that the named party nominated that candidate.

The Republican and Libertarian Party briefs filed earlier said that the system is unconstitutional, in part, because the ballot access threshold to get on the November (i.e., run-off) ballot is too difficult. In effect, it becomes a 30% barrier. The Grange rebuttal brief did not even discuss this point. The state’s brief did, but it asserted that there is no constitutional right to a spot on a November ballot, if there is easy access to the first round. This assertion is not true. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1968 that George Wallace had a constitutional right to a spot on the November ballot as a third party presidential candidate, even though he could easily have got on the Ohio Democratic presidential primary ballot in 1968. He would only have needed 1,000 signatures; any voter could have signed. If Washington state’s theory were correct, all ballot access protection for independent and new and minor parties would be wiped out.

D.C.-Utah Bill Likely to Get US Senate Vote on September 18

The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on September 18, on the bill to give the District of Columbia its own voting member of the U.S. House, plus an additional seat for Utah. The bills are S1257 and HR 1906.

The House will probably vote on HR 811 next week as well. HR 811 is Congressman Rush Holt’s bill to require vote-counting the states to use vote-counting machines with a paper trail, when they conduct federal elections.

Unity08 Begins Posting Membership Numbers

Unity08 has begun telling how many members it has on its web page, unity08.org. On August 30 that web page reported 102,879 members. On September 12 that figure was adjusted to 103,947 members. Approximately 22,000 Unity08 members responded to a recent Unity08 survey. The results show that Unity08 members consider terrorism to be the nation’s most pressing problem, followed closely by problems with the integrity and accountability of public officials.

Prohibition Party National Convention

The faction of the Prohibition Party that does not recognize Earl Dodge as national chair is holding its presidential convention in Indianapolis, September 13-14. One of the delegates is blogging from the convention; see the link below. The blog reports that Sarah Ward, immediate past president of the national Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, and current president of the World WCTU, stopped by to give greetings to the Prohibition Party convention. The WCTU is holding its own national gathering in the same hotel in Indianapolis.