Delaware Legislature Passes Bill, Restricting Whom Parties May Nominate

On May 10, the Delaware Senate passed HB 11, which tells parties that they cannot nominate non-members. The vote was 16-2. Delaware legislators seem to have little awareness that the U.S. Supreme Court said in 1986 in Tashjian v Republican Party of Connecticut that it would violate the First Amendment freedom of association clause for a state to tell a party that it can’t nominate a non-member. Also, on March 31, 2011, a U.S. District Court in New Mexico struck down New Mexico’s law that tells parties they can’t nominate non-members.

The two Senators who voted “No” are both Democrats. They are George Bunting and Robert Venables.


Comments

Delaware Legislature Passes Bill, Restricting Whom Parties May Nominate — 2 Comments

  1. It seems the only way to keep non-members out, would be to nominate by convention or caucus.

  2. More insane stuff.

    ALL or SOME electors doing PUBLIC nominations of PUBLIC candidates for PUBLIC offices.

    IF SOME electors in a group, then what is the reasoning for having non-group folks being nominated by the group ???

    Underlying MORONITY — the 1st Amdt has ZERO to do with elections — i.e. ballot access and voting — regardless of the many party hack MORON opinions by the party hack SCOTUS idiots.

    Election speech and press and assembly are separate matters — having to do with the Brit regime attacks on such things in 1761-1776 in the old Brit-Am colonies.

    The petition stuff was regarding petitions to legislative bodies — we want such and such law — NOT ballot access as such.

    See the book — Sources of Our Liberties (1959) — before the SCOTUS INSANITY in the 1960s got really going.

    P.R. and App.V — NO moron party hack extremist primaries, caucuses and conventions are needed or wanted.

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