Source: Politics Alabama
Friday, January 15, 2010
HB145: On Write-In Candidates
By Matthew Givens
It's time to look at House Bill 145, which passed out of committee and has had its second reading in the House. It could be voted on as early as Tuesday. Let's look at the bill summary, shall we?
Under existing law, write-in votes are permitted only in non-municipal general elections. This bill would require that in order to have a write-in vote counted, the voter must write the name on the ballot and register the vote by a mark in the space designated for that particular office.
This bill would require that a write-in candidate be registered with the Secretary of State or the judge of probate as an official write-in candidate and comply with the provisions of the Fair Campaign Practices Act and the State Ethics Law in order to have his or her vote counted and would provide for a procedure for counting write-in votes.
This bill would require that a write-in candidate be registered with the Secretary of State or the judge of probate as an official write-in candidate and comply with the provisions of the Fair Campaign Practices Act and the State Ethics Law in order to have his or her vote counted and would provide for a procedure for counting write-in votes.
You may read the entire bill at the following link:
http://www.politicsalabama.org/files/Leg2010/HB145-int.pdf
Now let's analyze this.
Write-in votes are the electorate's last line of defense against ballot access laws that keep them off. Theoretically, a write-in candidate could win the election, though I don't believe that has ever happened.
This bill will REQUIRE a "write-in" candidate to register 90 days before the election
and fill out all the paperwork that real candidates do. And if you didn't? Then your votes will never be counted.
That's not a write-in candidacy, that's an attempt to make write-in candidacies go away altogether.
Alabama currently has the toughest ballot access and retention laws in the entire nation. In order to get on the ballot as a statewide independent or third-party candidate, you are required to collect more than 40,000 signatures. The time and money you spend doing that just gets you on the ballot, and is wasted as far as campaigning for office is concerned. As intended.
All this bill does is close the "write-in" loophole, and serves to cement the hold that the Democrats and the Republicans have on the electoral process. We could chop our ballot access requirements in half and STILL have the toughest in the nation.
Traditionally, ballot access laws are enacted to keep ballots from being crowded with so many names that voters get confused. But in Alabama we don't have crowded ballots, we have DESERTED ballots. Did you know that, during the 2006 election cycle, more than half of the newly elected legislators had no opponent in the general election?
It's true, more than half the legislators elected in 2006 were unopposed... the very definition of deserted ballots. You can find a complete list of these unelected legislators here:
http://politicsalabama.org/StateFactsLegislature.html
With this as a fact, why TIGHTEN ballot access laws to keep more people from running? This is not in the best interests of the citizens of this state.
I recommend that HB145 FAIL. ~ MG
Ever so slowly, but at an increasing rate, our liberties are disappearing.
ReplyDeleteFor you, it is the srite in ballot.
Up here in Washington, it is gay activists wanting to place all the names, addresses and signatures of those who signed a petition opposing same-sex marriage on a searchable public website, so they can "contact individuals to properly educate them."
State sanctioned intimidation is what it is.
Elections under dictatorships are a sham as they only allow you to vote for who they want you to.
Eleminating the write in is the same.
Wow! I didn't know that!
ReplyDeleteRef:Up here in Washington, it is gay activists wanting to place all the names, addresses and signatures of those who signed a petition opposing same-sex marriage on a searchable public website, so they can "contact individuals to properly educate them."
And just what DICTATOR is going to enforce this 'proper education'?
Things are looking pretty dismal...
Thanks Lew for keeping us informed...
Maybe things will be looking up after Scott Brown's victory in Massachusetts...A victory there can be a catalyst that propels the rest of the country...especially in the northeast and California.
Storm'n Norm'n, I see in your bio that you’re a well-traveled person who is in now residing in Alabama. I don’t see a way to contact you by email on your website, blog, or whatever it is. I’d like to know where in Alabama you’re living, and how to reach you by email if I should want to. Whether you want to post that information here is up to you, but I’d like to welcome you to the Yellowhammer state in any case.
ReplyDeleteBelieve it or not, Norm, our sorry-assed Republican Secretary of State and Attorney General are the ones fighting to make the names, addresses and signatures available.
ReplyDeleteThe AG plans on running for governor.
I think his chances are slim to none.