On April 30, a lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court against the Oklahoma law that makes it a felony for a non-resident of Oklahoma to circulate an initiative petition. The case is Johnson v Henry, civ-07-500, western district. The case was assigned to Judge Tim Leonard, a Bush Sr. appointee. Most states that prohibit out-of-state circulators merely say that signatures collected by such circulators are void. But Oklahoma provides that such circulators may be sentenced for two years to prison.
The Simi Valley, California Republican presidential debate scheduled for 8 p.m. eastern time (5 p.m. Pacific time) includes 10 candidates, not 9. Tom Tancredo is also participating. It is being broadcast on MSNBC.
Wayne Allyn Root will formally announce his candidacy for the Libertarian presidential nomination on May 4 at 10 a.m. eastern time (7 a.m. Pacific time). At that time he is also expected to talk more about his upcoming book and his upcoming reality TV show, which will feature his adventures seeking the nomination.
On May 3, the Florida House unanimously passed HB 537, which moves the presidential primary from March, to one week after the New Hampshire primary. Since the New Hampshire primary is expected to be January 22, that would mean a January 29 date for Florida. However, New Hampshire maintains the capacity to move its primary date on very short notice.
HB 213 also eliminates vote-counting machines with no paper trail.
Pennsylvania holds partisan local elections this year, and holds primaries for those elections on May 15. Lackawanna County Commissioner Robert Cordaro, a Republican, was recently removed from the primary ballot for failing to file a complete financial interest statement. He is running as a write-in. Since Republican voters are permitted to nominate two candidates for that post, and since only one Republican is on the ballot, Cordaro is likely to re-nominated by write-in votes. There is another write-in candidate in the race as well. One of Cordaro’s political opponents has filed a new lawsuit, arguing that even if the voters to re-nominate him, he cannot be the Republican nominee, although few neutral observers expect that lawsuit to accomplish anything.
Lackawanna County Elections officials have ordered 1,200 rolls of sales receipt-like paper. When a voter casts a write-in, the machine prints 4 copies. Each roll is 86 feet long, so the combined total of paper is almost 20 miles.
Pennsylvania is one of the very few states in which all write-ins are valid. Pennsylvania has no requirement that a write-in candidate file a declaration of candidacy. Pennsylvania elections officials in some counties routinely break the law and don’t tally write-ins.