Constitution, Green, Libertarian Ballot Access Now, Compared to 4 Years Ago

The United States currently has only three minor parties that regularly appear on ballots in states containing a majority of electoral votes, in presidential elections. Those three are the Constitution, Green and Libertarian Parties. Interestingly, the three parties are in virtually exactly the same position today as they were exactly four years ago, relative to ballot status.

For years ago, Libertarians were on in 26 states, Greens were on in 20 states, and the Constitution Party was on in 10 states. Currently, Libertarians are again on in 26 states, Greens are again on in 20 states, and the Constitution Party is now on in 14 states, an improvement.

None of the three parties has completed any petition drives in an entire year. However, Libertarians are over halfway done in Arkansas, Nebraska, North Carolina and Utah. Greens are over halfway done in Arkansas. The Constitution Party is mostly done in Missouri and South Dakota.

Tommy Thompson Gave Good Response to Debates, Before He Dropped Out of Presidential Race

RocktheDebates has been asking each leading Democratic and Republican presidential candidate if he or she would participate in an inclusive general election debate, were he or she the nominee. Tommy Thompson dropped out of the Republican race on August 12. However, for the record, he gave a good response to the question on August 9. He said, “I’ll debate anybody. My brother ran as a Libertarian (for Governor of Wisconsin in 2002). I tried to talk him out of it…but he did…and he needed a chance to debate, but he didn’t get a chance to debate. He had a lot of ideas…I don’t think the framers of the Constitution wanted that (debate exclusion) to happen.” Thanks to Larry Reinsch and Belinda Lawler for this news.

California Term Limits Revision Initiative Barely Qualifies for February 2008 Ballot

On September 6, California elections officials announced that an initiative to revise legislative term limits had qualified for the February 2008 ballot. The margin was extraordinarily close. The initiative requires 763,790 signatures, and the random sample showed that it has 764,747 valid signatures. The initiative, if it passes, will allow many incumbent state legislators to file for re-election in the June non-presidential primary.

UPDATE: the actual legal requirement is 694,354 valid signatures. The post above is misleading. The number 763,790 is actually the number needed to avoid checking all the signatures, instead of depending on the random sample. If the random sample shows a petition has 110% of the legal requirement, then elections officials can deem it to be OK, and don’t need to check all the signatures. If California elections officials had needed to check all the signatures, the initiative would not have been on the February 2008 ballot. Instead, it would have been on the June 2008 ballot, too late to help the incumbent legislators who are term-limited out and desire to run for new terms, which they can do if the initiative passes in February.

Florida Governor Will Veto Any Bill Moving Presidential Primary to February

On September 4, Florida Governor Charlie Crist said if the special session of the legislature passes any bill to move the Florida presidential primary from January to February, he will veto it. It wasn’t likely in any event that such a bill would pass. Crist’s statement guarantees that the controversy between the major party national committees and their state affiliates in Florida will not be resolved quickly or easily.