Showing posts with label LP Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LP Georgia. Show all posts

Friday, June 5, 2020

11th Circuit gives GA LP new ballot access hearing

11th Circuit Vacates District Court Ruling, Says Georgia Must Revisit Third Parties’ Exclusion From Elections | AllOnGeorgia - Jessica Szilagyi:

June 4, 2020 - "The Libertarian Party of Georgia [LPG] has made a substantial gain in a matter against the Georgia Secretary of State. While the case was filed by the LPG, the potential for improved access will impact all third party candidates in Georgia. The 11th Circuit Court issued a ruling on Wednesday requiring a Georgia district court to consider whether candidates of the Libertarian Party of Georgia had been unconstitutionally excluded by Georgia’s ballot access laws.

"In the Peach state, any third party candidates (those outside Republicans and Democrats) must obtain thousands of signatures and submit those signatures to the Secretary of State, a partisan office, for approval. These measures are not measures required of the two main parties, which merely pay a qualifying fee and complete paperwork. Surprisingly, even if no candidate from one of the two major parties runs for a particular office, a third party candidate must still clear the hurdles of signature collection and submission before even being considered for the ballot....

"In a separate matter, the LPG made a request for injunctive relief once social distancing guidelines were implemented in the state, claiming mandates requiring signature collection via door-to-door interactions and other public appearances would be next to impossible, therefore barring third party candidates from the ballots all together. In a news release, the LPG called the signature requirements 'both illegal and immoral'....

"'Today’s ruling from the Court of Appeals means that the Secretary of State is going to have to justify a ballot-access scheme that has deprived Georgia voters of choice in congressional elections for more than 70 years,' said Bryan Sells, the attorney for the Libertarian Party and its co-plaintiffs in both suits. Sells has handled the case pro-bono, but the Georgia LP has raised $13,000 to cover expenses and court fees. You can  read the ruling here.

"The Party has tried more traditional means of affecting change, including seeking a change to the law itself. House Bill 191, sponsored by Representative Dar’Shun Kendrick, was filed in 2019 with bipartisan support to lower the number of petition signatures required for all third-party and independent candidates from 5% of votes cast in the previous election to 200. The Chairman of the House Governmental Affairs Committee ... blocked attempts to even give the bill a hearing for discussion."

Read more: https://allongeorgia.com/georgia-state-politics/libertarian-party-of-ga-claims-victory-after-ruling-in-ballot-access-case-against-sec-of-state/

Friday, February 7, 2020

Monds declares for Libertarian POTUS nomination

Former Georgia Gubernatorial Candidate Announces Presidential Campaign | Georgia Public Broadcasting- Sharon Rose:

February 4, 2020 - "John Monds, a 2010 Georgia gubernatorial candidate, has announced that he will seek the Libertarian nomination for president. Monds was also the first Libertarian candidate to receive more than 1 million votes at the state level during his 2008 campaign for Georgia public service commissioner.

“'John Monds has been an incredible voice for Libertarians in Georgia,' said Ryan Graham, chairman of the Libertarian Party of Georgia. 'I look forward to seeing him extend that influence to a national scale, energizing supporters of libertarian principles.'

"Monds said the decision was one he had weighed for the past several years. 'Just recently I've made up my mind that this is exactly what I want to do,' Monds said. 'This is the right time.'

"Monds said his focus right now is not about President Trump, but securing the nomination of the party.... The Libertarian Party nominates their candidate through registered delegates at their national convention, which will take place in Austin, Texas, in May. Monds said he’s open to reforming the Libertarian nomination process, but believes ballot access restrictions for third parties have been a factor in preventing that....

"He believes the biggest way the Libertarian Party can make its case in 2020 is in sticking to its core [principles]. 'I definitely believe ... we don't need to water down our message and we have to be very careful about that,' Monds said.

"The Libertarian’s 2016 presidential nominee, Gary Johnson, received 3.27% of the popular vote in the last election, but did not win any electoral votes."

Read more https://www.gpbnews.org/post/former-georgia-gubernatorial-candidate-announces-presidential-campaign
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Thursday, October 17, 2019

Georgia Libertarians appeal ballot access ruling

Georgia Libertarian Party appeals ballot restriction ruling | Georgia | thecentersquare.com - Nyamekye Daniel:

October 15, 2019 - "The Georgia Libertarian Party ... and other plaintiffs in a case against the state have appealed a federal judge’s ruling to uphold current election qualifying law for third-party candidates. The law requires U.S. House candidates who are not Democratic or Republican to file a petition with signatures from 5 percent of the voting population to appear on the ballot. U.S. District Judge Leigh May ruled in favor of the state being able to maintain the restrictions....

"'Georgia’s ballot barriers are so strict that no independent or third-party candidates have qualified for U.S. House general elections since their passage in 1943,' said Bryan Sells, an attorney for the plaintiffs. Georgia has the strictest ballot regulations in the nation, ballot access expert Richard Winger told Politifact.

"There are similar restrictions for countywide and statewide races. To get on the ballot for state government position, a third party candidate must collect signatures from 1 percent of the voting population. County seats also require 5 percent of signatures....

"About 40 percent of state lawmakers had challengers in the 2018 elections. Two independent candidates made it on the ballot for congressional seats during the primary election, but they didn’t make the cut for the final election. Half of the Congressional districts had write-in votes from the Libertarian Party and Independents....

"House Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick, D–Lithonia, attempted to change the law during the 2019 legislative session. Kendrick filed House Bill 19, which would have required candidates in any election to get 200 signatures to appear on the ballot. The bill stalled in the House after its second reading in February.

"The Supreme Court has found legal grounds to overturn similar restrictions in Illinois. The court ruled in 1979 that a law, which required candidates to obtain more signatures to run for a city seat than a statewide seat, violated equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. A second case in 1990 successfully challenged the same law."

Read more: https://www.thecentersquare.com/georgia/georgia-libertarian-party-appeals-ballot-restriction-ruling/article_1e2f04a6-ef6e-11e9-a411-dfc98f0bb6bc.html
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