On June 13, an attorney for the No Labels Party of Maine asked the Secretary of State to reveal the evidence that No Labels workers had tricked any voter into registering into No Labels.
Last month, the Secretary of State sent a letter to all 6,456 registrants in No Labels, asserting that workers for No Labels had tricked some people into registering with the party, and asking the recipient if he or she wants to re-register out of No Labels. In Maine, a party becomes ballot-qualified by persuading 5,000 people to register into the party.
Here is the letter, which says that what the Secretary of State did is unprecedented. To see the whole letter, click on the box in the upper right corner.
Actually there is a precedent. In 1979 in California, as the Libertarian Party was finishing up its registration drive for party status, election officials also asserted some voters had been tricked, and prepared to send a letter similar to the Maine letter to all the Libertarian registrants in certain counties. The California Libertarian Party sued in Superior Court to stop the letter from being sent out. The case was settled when the officials agreed not to send the letter until after the party had qualified. In California, when a party got enough registered members to qualify as of a particular date, it remained on the ballot even if its registration later declined below the required number. So postponing the issuance of that letter did not affect the Libertarian Party’s qualified status. The case was Libertarian Party of California v Eu, Orange County Superior Court, case 32-50-01, settled on December 19, 1979.