Illinois Senate Bill 2306 would move the petition deadline for primary candidates from December of the year before the election, to November of the year before the election. The Illinois primary for all office is in March of election years. The bill is dead because it failed to move out of committee by March 31.
On March 31, the No Labels organization gave its “seal of approval” to Adam Frisch, who is a Democrat running for Congress next year in Colorado’s Third District. See this story.
Florida election law says an elected public official who files to run for an office, other than the one the officer already holds, must resign from his or her elected position. There is speculation that the legislature may amend this law, so that Governor Ron DeSantis can file for presidential primaries in 2024 without resigning the Governorship. See this story.
On March 30, the North Dakota legislature passed HB 1273. It bans approval voting and ranked choice voting. Fargo, the largest city in North Dakota, has been using Approval Voting for its own city elections for some time, but the bill will force the city to stop using it. See this story. It is possible the city will sue the state.
On March 30, the Texas Senate State Affairs Committee heard testimony on SB 2532, which doubles the number of signatures for independent candidates to get on the ballot, and also doubles the filing fees for all types of candidates for federal, state, and county office. The Committee hasn’t voted yet.
Eleven witnesses testified against the bill. No one testified in favor of the bill. The hearing lasted for 25 minutes. No Senator asked any question of any witness. The witnesses included six Libertarians, one officer of a group that assists independent voters, and four other witnesses representing themselves. One can watch at this link. Start at the 52-minute mark; the hearing ends at the one hour and seventeen minute mark.
Here is a copy of the bill.