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SEP congressional candidate launches lawsuit against early
filing date in Ohio
By Jerry White
16 June 2004
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Attorneys for David Lawrence, the Socialist Equality Party
candidate for US representative in Ohios First Congressional
District (Cincinnati), filed a lawsuit in federal court on June
14 challenging the states unfair filing deadline for independent
candidates for US Congress.
Citing the official deadline of March 1, 2004, the director
of the Hamilton County Board of Elections refused to accept nominating
petitions submitted by Lawrence and his supporters on June 4.
The petitions bore 2,632 signatures, well above the 1,695 required
for Lawrence to attain ballot status.
The lawsuit, filed in Cincinnati, claims that the filing deadlineeight
months before the November 2 general election and one of the earliest
in the USis a special impediment to independent candidates
and effectively keeps them off the ballot. The current deadline
requires independent candidates to circulate their nominating
petitions weeks before the March 2 primaries of the Democrats
and Republicans in Ohio, and months before the major parties have
officially selected their own presidential candidates at national
party conventions.
Lawrence, who is represented by Robert B. Newman and Stephen
Felson, two prominent civil liberties attorneys in Cincinnati,
is seeking an injunction from the US District Court for the Southern
District of Ohio to overturn the filing deadline on constitutional
grounds, and to compel the Board of Elections to accept his nominating
petitions and place his name on the ballot for the November election.
In their legal brief, the attorneys argue that the current
filing deadline violates Lawrences right of access to the
ballot and therefore contravenes the First and Fourteenth Amendments
to the US Constitution. They maintain, in particular, that the
prohibitively early filing deadline violates Lawrences right
of association under the First Amendment, which includes his right
to seek the support of voters for his political views.
The lawsuit also names as plaintiffs two Hamilton County voters
who wish to vote for a socialist candidate. These plaintiffs,
the brief argues, are being denied the right to vote for
a candidate of [their] choice and thus being denied their
rights under the First Amendment of the US Constitution. The voters
seek to have on the ballot a Socialist candidate to represent
political viewpoints that are not espoused by the majority party
candidates, and who will widen the political dialogue during the
course of the campaign. The brief goes on to say that excluding
Lawrence from the ballot limits voters ballot choices
and abilities to participate in wider political discourse.
According to the legal complaint, The most critical impact
of having the filing deadline a day before the primary election
for the major parties is that independent voters and voters who
may become independent voters do not know who the major party
candidates will be in the general election and are robbed of the
opportunity to oppose these candidates once they are identified.
Disaffected Republicans or disaffected Democrats will remain disaffected
or sit out the election or cast a write-in ballot.
The defendants in the case are Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell, the Board of Elections of Hamilton County, and the
individual members of the board. The case is expected to come
before a federal judge for a hearing within 30 days.
There are strong legal precedents in favor of overturning the
March 1 deadline. The state of Ohio was previously compelled to
change the deadline for independent presidential candidates to
August 19, after the US Supreme Court in the 1983 Anderson
vs. Celebrezze case ruled that the previous March 20 deadline
placed an unconstitutional burden on new or small
parties and their supporters.
This is the second time the early filing date for congressional
races has been the subject of a federal lawsuit in Cincinnati.
In 1984, US Senior District Judge David Porter declared Ohios
deadline of February 23 unconstitutional and in violation of an
independent candidates right to have free access to the
ballot. The case was argued by attorney Robert B. Newman on behalf
of a congressional candidate from the Socialist Workers Party,
who was then granted ballot status.
In blatant disregard of the spirit of the ruling, however,
the Ohio state legislature pushed the deadline back by a mere
six days. The action was designed to maintain the restrictions
against independent candidates and accommodate the Democrats and
Republicans, whose Ohio primaries were later moved to March 2.
The legislature, no doubt expecting another challenge to the
early filing date, rehashed the same arguments that had been explicitly
rejected in the rulings by the US Supreme Court and Judge Porter.
The main justification of the Democratic and Republican legislators
was that the early deadline encouraged political stability
and helped provide the electorate with an understandable
ballot. They also made the absurd claim that the deadline
enhanced voter education because an independent candidate
who qualified for the ballot at a later date would be unknown.
In an opinion written for the 5-4 majority in the 1983 Anderson
case, concerning independent presidential candidates, Supreme
Court Justice John Paul Stevens ridiculed this argument, saying
modern communications and widespread literacy made it unrealistic
to suggest that it takes more than seven months to inform the
electorate about the qualifications of a particular candidate
simply because he lacks a partisan label.
The Court acknowledged that over the course of several months
after March 1, domestic and international political developments
could sharply alter the political landscape and affect the popularity
of various candidates. The early deadline for independent candidates
prevented them from creating new political coalitions of
Ohio voters...at any time after mid-to-late March, the Court
ruled.
While the Supreme Court justices explicitly recognized the
legitimacy of restrictions that helped maintain the stability
of the two-party systema system that has long defended the
economic and political interests of the ruling elitethe
majority of justices nevertheless ruled that these restrictions
had to be weighed against the burdens they placed on constitutionally
protected liberties.
The Court also noted that because the interests of minor
parties and independent candidates are not well represented in
state legislatures, the risk that the First Amendment rights of
those groups will be ignored in legislative decision-making may
warrant more careful judicial scrutiny.
Citing the 1983 Anderson case, several federal courts
have rejected the claim that a filing deadline for independent
candidates coinciding with that of the major parties guarantees
equal treatment for independent candidates. The same
deadline, ruled a federal judge in New Jersey, is only superficial
equality, because independent candidates do not have the
same financial resources and organizational structures as the
major parties to overcome the burden imposed by the deadline.
Here again, the court declared, the two types
of candidates are unequal in a way which makes imposition upon
them of equal burdens no equality of treatment.
The lawsuit filed June 14 on behalf of the SEP candidate, which
cites these legal precedents, also notes that in the wake of the
Anderson ruling, the lower federal courts have routinely
struck down unreasonably early petition deadline statutes for
independent candidates, including in such states as Alabama, South
Carolina, Kentucky, Nevada and Utah.
Concluding their legal argument, the lawyers representing Lawrence
write: [T]he public interest will be served if this Court
grants a preliminary injunction, for it will ensure obedience
to the Constitution, and it will permit the residents of this
State to exercise their First Amendment right to vote for candidates
who represent their views or to run for office as an alternative
political party candidate.
See Also:
Party to challenge early filing deadline
Petition drive completed for SEP
congressional candidate in Ohio
[8 June 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 elections
[28 April 2004]
SEP campaign wins support
in Ohio
[15 April 2004]
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