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Oregon Supreme Court denies Nader ballot access
By Hector Cordon
29 September 2004
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In a unanimous decision the Oregon Supreme Court voted September
22 to require a lower court to remove Ralph Nader from the Oregon
ballot.
Rejecting the lower court ruling that the Democratic Secretary
of State, Bill Bradbury, had exceeded his authority in using unwritten
rules to disqualify whole sheets of voters signatures, the
court stated the review procedures were not, as the trial
courts comments appear to suggest, yet another layer of
unannounced legal barriers. They were, instead, the methodology
by which the Secretary of State enforced existing legal standards.
Naders campaign announced that it would immediately appeal
the ruling to the US Supreme Court.
In the 2000 election, Nader, then running as the candidate
for the Pacific Green Party, obtained 5 percent of the 1.5 million
votes cast in Oregon. Democrat Al Gore won Oregon by a narrow
6,765 votes in that contest. A recent Zogby International poll
shows Kerry maintaining a large lead in Oregon with 53 percent
of voters to Bushs 43 percent.
The Nader campaign had twice attempted to obtain ballot status
for 2004 through holding a convention with 1,000 electors (registered
voters) in one meeting willing to sign a petition. Both times
the Democratic Party in Oregon sabotaged the effort by packing
the hall with its supporters, who then refused to sign. In the
second effort the Nader campaign failed by 50 signatures.
In the recent see-saw battle for ballot listing, Nader had
initially been disqualified September 2 by the Secretary of State
for having failed to obtain sufficient signatures.
Naders campaign had originally submitted over 28,000
signatures to the various county election offices, almost double
the required 15,306, in order to guarantee enough valid signatures.
Of these, 18,186 signatures were verified as valid by the Oregon
County Board of Elections.
Instead of accepting the verification of the Election Board
and placing Nader on the candidate list, however, the Secretary
of State initiated a review within his office of the 18,186 signatures.
Citing irregularities in the numbering of petition sheets and
in the signatures of petition gatherers, the Election Division
excluded over 3,000 names, with whole pages of otherwise valid
signatures tossed out. Naders supporters were notified on
September 2 that they were 218 signatures short.
The Nader campaign filed a lawsuit in Marion County Circuit
Court challenging the secretary of states refusal to count
the excluded signatures. Contesting the legality of Bradburys
action, they stated that there was nothing in the said internal
directives that authorized the Secretary of State to remove the
3,000 signatures in question after the counties had all already
completed their work. The lawsuit also contested that the
directives on the Nader campaign sent out by Bradbury to the county
clerks were unwritten or not supported by the written administrative
rules as set forth in the Manual.
Addressing two narrow technical violations and ignoring the
wider democratic issues involved, Circuit Court Judge Paul Lipscomb
ruled on September 9 that the secretary of states disqualification
of petition sheets did not have statutory or administrative
rule authority for that novel action and ordered that Nader
be placed on the ballot.
The secretary of state subsequently sought a court order, known
as a writ of mandamus, from the Oregon Supreme Court to require
that the Circuit Court reverse its decision. According the Statesman
Journal of September 10, the states request bypasses
the Court of Appeals, and the high court rarely grants such requests.
In upholding the secretary of states writ, the Supreme
Courts decision makes a mockery of the defense of basic
democratic rights. Nothing in its 35-page decision could be construed
to indicate that the subject of its determinations involved the
fundamental right to vote.
The ruling contains language such as: It is true that
the review procedures that [election director] Lindback described
were not themselves written, but that does not render them unlawful.
Commenting on the secretary of states directives singling
out the Nader campaign by name, the justices wrote: We assume
that the written instructions are applicable generally to all
the elections procedures to which the Secretary of State has addressed
them, not just to a single candidate or campaign.
The Oregon Supreme Courts ruling is in sharp contrast
to the recent Florida Supreme Court decision that placed Ralph
Nader on the ballot in that state. In that case, the justices
ruled that it follows that when the State imposes a burden
upon 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.
Regressive ballot laws, court action, unlawful disenfranchisement
and bullying have been employed wholesale against opponents of
the two-party system in the current elections. Many of these tactics
have been directed at the Socialist Equality Party where it has
sought ballot status for its candidates. The Oregon Supreme Court
decision is in line with the efforts of the political establishment
to exclude parties and candidates that in any way oppose the policies
of the Democrats and Republicans.
See Also:
Nader at the University of Michigan:
independent candidate courts the Democratic Party
[25 September 2004]
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