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Legal fight to place socialist candidates on November ballot
SEP challenges ballot access laws in Ohio Supreme Court
By Jerry White
14 October 2004
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The Socialist Equality Party filed a legal action October 12
with the Ohio Supreme Court to overturn Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwells decision to deny ballot access to its presidential
and vice-presidential candidates, Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence.
The SEP is seeking to overturn a series of anti-democratic provisions
used by the Republican and Democratic parties in Ohio to deny
the SEP candidates a place on the ballot in the November 2 election.
The legal action includes an appeal of the October 4 ruling
by the 10th District Court of Appeals of Ohio, which upheld Blackwells
exclusion of the SEP candidates, and a motion for a writ of mandamus
from the Ohio Supreme Court to place Van Auken and Lawrence on
the ballot immediately. The SEP has also joined a lawsuit before
the Ohio Supreme Court filed by independent presidential candidate
Ralph Nader, who was removed from the ballot by Blackwell last
month.
The SEPs case, which is being conducted by Cincinnati
civil rights attorney Robert B. Newman, argues that the secretary
of states action violates the SEP candidates constitutional
right to due process and their First Amendment right to ballot
access. It also argues that the exclusion of the SEP candidates
deprives Ohio voters of their constitutional right to vote for
a candidate of their choice.
On September 8, Blackwell ruled that 4,200 of the 8,000 signatures
submitted by the SEP on its nominating petitions were invalid
and the party had failed to reach the threshold of 5,000 signatures
required to place its candidates on the ballot. A preliminary
examination of the disqualified signatures by the SEP, however,
revealed that hundreds of legally registered voters signatures
were rejected by county electoral boards, which arbitrarily disqualified
them for the most minor technicalities, such as printing their
names, instead of using cursive writing. If these signatures were
added to those not challenged by the county boards, the SEP would
have 5,231 valid signatures, well above the required amount.
Despite assurances by the secretary of state that his office
would review these findings and determine the validity of the
local boards actions, to this day Blackwells office
has not issued a ruling. In defending this blatant violation of
the SEP candidates right to due process, Blackwell has relied
on the states restrictive election laws, which provide no
means for candidates who are disqualified by election officials
to challenge the ruling.
The SEP took its case to the Ohio Supreme Court after the US
District Court and Ohios 10th District Court of Appeals
refused to overturn Blackwells decision. [See: Ohio
appeals court upholds exclusion of SEP candidates] In
the state appeals court ruling, the judges acknowledged that the
SEP had demonstrated that Ohio election officials were guilty
of abuse of discretion in disqualifying hundreds of
valid signatures. They also conceded that many valid signatures
were rejected because county election boards maintained outdated
registration rolls.
Nevertheless, the court upheld the decision of the secretary
of state, claiming the SEP had failed to prove that it would have
reached the 5,000-signature requirement were it not for the blanket
disqualification of hundreds of signatures by election officials.
Of course, the failure of the election boards to maintain up-to-date
rolls made it impossible for the SEP to establish the validity
of many of the rejected signatures.
The SEP is continuing the legal fight to defend its right to
appear on the ballot and uphold the democratic rights of the 8,000
people in Ohio who signed SEP nominating petitions. The party
is demanding that the Ohio Supreme Court strike down the unconstitutional
election laws used by the major parties to exclude their political
opponents.
The complaint before the Ohio Supreme Court has two parts.
The first is a motion to intervene in the superior court case
filed by attorneys representing Nader, who was thrown off the
ballot after the secretary of state disqualified nearly 11,000
of the 14,473 signatures submitted by his supporters. The thrust
of Naders suit is that county electoral boards wrongly disqualified
thousands of signatures because officials failed to update their
registration rolls to include the flood of newly registered voters
who signed up over the summer months.
The lawsuit notes that in Hamilton County (Cincinnati), the
electoral board acknowledged it had a backlog of 10,000 unprocessed
applications even as it was checking Naders petitions. In
Lucas County (Toledo), the backlog was 12,000. The suit also notes
that local election boards disqualified hundreds of signatures
on the petitions circulated by at least five people who were erroneously
declared not registered because their registration
information had not been processed.
Naders lawsuit demands that the Ohio Supreme Court order
the county electoral boards to immediately update their registration
rolls and re-examine all of the disqualified signatures. The SEP
has intervened in the Nader case to make sure it is afforded the
same treatment if the court rules in Naders favor.
The attorneys representing the Nader campaign have welcomed
the SEP motion to intervene in their case. Naders running
mate, Peter Camejo, told the World Socialist Web Site October
6 he absolutely defended the right of the SEP to be
on the Ohio ballot, adding, Any group of citizens who want
to be on the ballot, and collects signatures and meets the requirement,
should be. First of all, the requirements are outrageous. This
is the first time in history that the Democratic Party has ever
conducted such an open campaign against an individualNadernot
to run.
The second element of the SEPs case before the Ohio Supreme
Court focuses on the constitutional issues raised by the effort
to exclude the SEP and other third party candidates from the ballot.
The legal brief filed by SEP attorney Newman argues that the lack
of any meaningful review of the disqualified signatures violates
the right to due process as guaranteed by the 14th Amendment to
the US Constitution.
Newman cites a 1980 Georgia appeals court ruling that placed
independent presidential candidate John Anderson on the ballot
after state authorities gave him only eight days to garner proof
that signatures had been erroneously invalidated. He notes that
Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell gave the SEP only six days,
and then failed to review the results of the partys review.
The lack of an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful
time and in a meaningful manner makes a mockery of justice,
the brief insists. It adds that it is implicit under Ohio law
that the secretary of state provide a review process in
order to carry out his obligation to see to it that local election
officials observe election laws. In this instance, the secretary
of state has afforded no process whatsoever.
Newman notes that the Florida Supreme Court, which recently
ordered Nader to be placed on the state ballot, ruled, it
follows that when the State imposes a burden upon the access to
the ballot, the burden must be clearly delineated. Thus, any doubt
as to the meaning of statutory terms should be resolved broadly
in favor of ballot access.
The Florida court further cited a 1956 ruling in the Ervin
v. Collins case, which said, Even if there were doubts
or ambiguities as to his eligibility, they should be resolved
in favor of a free expression of the people... It is the sovereign
right of the people to select their own officers and the rule
is against imposing disqualifications to run. The lexicon of democracy
condemns all attempts to restrict ones right to run for
office.
The brief further argues that the SEP has presented far more
signatures than required, yet the secretary of state has never
provided any evidence as to why thousands of signatures should
be disqualified. Citing a 2004 Pennsylvania case, the brief states,
The Court stated that there is a presumption that the signatures
on the nominating petitions are valid, and the burden is on the
objects to prove otherwise.
The brief then challenges the constitutionality of Ohios
requirement that a petition signature be counted only if the address
on the petition is the same as that which appears on registration
records. Given the mobility rate in the USparticularly of
low-income workers and college studentssuch a requirement
violates the First Amendment rights of as many as one-third of
the voters in Ohio. In some states, including Iowa and Minnesota,
there are no such restrictions, and all those eligible to vote
are allowed to sign. Moreover, the brief noted, the requirement
that the petition address match information on registration rolls
was recently struck down as unconstitutional by a Maryland appeals
court that ordered Nader to be placed on the state ballot.
The brief also cited a 2002 Pennsylvania case in which the
court declared it was unconstitutional to bar unregistered voters
from signing nominating petitions because millions of unregistered
Pennsylvanians are deprived of their right to associate with candidates.
The brief concludes by noting that Ohio law requires only that
petitions be signed by qualified electors, not registered
voters. Since any US citizen over 18 is a qualified elector, and
the electoral boards did not disqualify any petition signers on
the grounds that they were not qualified electors, the motion
argues that all 7,983 signatures [submitted by the SEP]
should be counted.
The legal battle in Ohio concerns the overt attack on voting
rights that is being carried out in the 2004 elections. The Democratic
Party has taken the lead in seeking to exclude candidates who
oppose the war in Iraq and the political monopoly of the two big
business parties. In their efforts to prevent the SEP candidates,
Nader and other third-party candidates from gaining ballot access,
the Democrats are using methods that recall those used by the
Republicans in Florida to suppress votes and steal the 2000 election.
At the same time, Republican officials, particularly in closely
contested states, have established election rules that could disenfranchise
hundreds of thousands of voters likely to cast ballots for Kerry.
Ohio Secretary of State Blackwell, co-chairman of Bushs
reelection campaign in the state, along with Republican secretaries
of state in Missouri, Florida, Michigan and Colorado, is flouting
a new federal law that requires states to give voters whose names
do not appear on the registration rolls a provisional ballot
that will count if it can be determined after election day that
the voter was properly registered. Blackwell and others have said
provisional ballots from eligible voters should be disqualified
if they were cast in the wrong precinct, a move that would discriminate
against low-income voters who tend to move more frequently.
In defending his actions, Blackwell spelled out his anti-democratic
views. What you have here is a clash of ideals, he
said. There are those that believe a person should be able
to register any time, on any form, and vote in any place. Then
you have another point of viewmy point of viewthat
says ours is a society of rule and law, and rules have to complied
with to turn a ballot into a vote.
Such arguments are thoroughly anti-democratic. They imply that
suffrage is a privilege, rather than a right, and that it is legitimate
to place the onus on the citizen to prove his fitness
to vote. This is, in principle, the same standpoint that was used
to justify the denial of voting rights to blacksusing such
devices as literacy testsin the American South during the
Jim Crow era.
See Also:
Ohio appeals court upholds exclusion
of SEP candidates
[6 October 2004]
SEP presents evidence of voter disenfranchisement
in Ohio ballot case
[4 October 2004]
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