National Association of Secretaries of State Revises its Compilation of Ballot Access Laws for President

The National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) has a compilation of ballot access laws that affect presidential elections. It was revised recently. It shows the deadline for qualified parties to certify their presidential nominees in each state. The vast majority of such deadlines are in September.

However, a quick look at the NASS compilation reveals that it may not be entirely up-to-date. The entry for California says a new party needs registration of 1% of the last gubernatorial vote, and it must have it by 135 days before the primary. But in 2014, the law was changed, and now requires registration of .33% of the total number of registered voters. Also the deadline is in July, a much later deadline than the old law.

I only checked the NASS chart for three states, so there may be other bits of out-of-date information.

House Republicans Who Voted Against Aid for Ukraine Were Mostly from Open Primary States

On Saturday, April 20, the House voted in favor of providing financial assistance to Ukraine. All Democrats voted for the bill. Republicans were split, but most Republicans (112) voted against the bill. The bill was H.R. 8035.

States in which independent voters were able to vote in 2022 Republican primaries elected 84 of the Republicans who voted “no.” States in which independents couldn’t vote in 2022 Republican primaries elected only 28 of the Republicans who voted “no.”

Alabama Senate Unanimously Passes Bill for a Later Deadline for Party and Independent Presidential Candidates

On April 23, the Alabama Senate unanimously passed SB 324, which moves the deadline for qualified parties to certify the names of their presidential nominees from 82 to 74 days before the November election. It also moves the petition deadline for independent candidates to the same date, 74 days before the general election. The bill can be seen here. It seems to be a permanent improvement; it doesn’t say it only applies to the 2024 election.

Newspaper Story on Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Petition Drive in Texas

Here is a short news story about the Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. independent presidential petition drive in Amarillo, Texas. Now that No Labels has dropped out, Kennedy’s petition is apparently the only Texas statewide candidate petition circulating. As far as is known, no party is attempting the Texas party petition this year. The Libertarian and Green Parties are already on the ballot.