On October 17, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear Fitisemanu v U.S., 21-1394, the case over the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment’s citizenship clause and the status of persons born in American Samoa.
On October 16, the Atlanta Press Club held a debate for the three candidates for U.S. Senate. However, the Republican nominee did not attend, so the debate was between the Democratic and Libertarian nominees. See this story. Thanks to Thomas Jones for the link.
On October 5, U.S. District Court Judge Leigh Martin May issued an order in Cowen v Raffensperger, 1:17cv-4660. This is the case over Georgia’s ballot access requirements for U.S. House, for independent and minor party candidates. The order says both sides will submit a proposed scheduling order by October 19.
The reason the case is still alive is that the courts still haven’t ruled on whether the petition requirement violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Originally the U.S. District Court had found that the law violates the First Amendment, and did not consider the Fourteenth Amendment issue. Then the Eleventh Circuit had reversed the U.S. District Court on the First Amendment, and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear that part of the case.
The Federal Election Commission has compiled a list of all congressional candidates who are running in the November 2022 election, including declared write-in candidates. See it here. Thanks to Thomas Jones for the link.
An Illinois gubernatorial election poll released on October 14 shows these results: Democratic 49%, Republican 34%, undecided 9%, Libertarian 8%. See this story.