Thursday, February 6, 2014

"Tennessee Bills Introduced to Eliminate Need for Minor Parties to Submit Massive Petitions"

Ballot Access News relays this interesting development in Tennessee:

Bills have been introduced in both houses of the Tennessee legislature to return Tennessee to its pre-1961 ballot access rules for new and minor parties. As was the case before 1961, parties could be recognized if they filed paperwork identifying their officers and bylaws, but no petition would be needed. Their individual nominees would each need 25 signatures.

 

Under current Tennessee law, independent candidates only need 25 signatures, and candidates can get on primary ballot with 25 signatures. But minor party candidates can’t run, with their party label, unless their party submits over 40,000 valid signatures.

 

The bill, if enacted, would be similar to the Mississippi law on new and minor parties. Mississippi has never required a petition for a party to be on the ballot; it must merely be organized. The bills are SB 2575 by Senator Jim Kyle (D-Memphis) and Representative Craig Fitzhugh (D-Ripley). 

CRL&P related posts:

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/civil_rights/2014/02/tennessee-bills-introduced-to-eliminate-need-for-minor-parties-to-submit-massive-petitions.html

Election Law | Permalink

Comments

Post a comment