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6 years agoon
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CalMattersThe way California holds its presidential primary violates the constitutional rights of political independents and misuses taxpayer dollars to “benefit wholly private political parties,” a nonpartisan election group will argue in a lawsuit it says it will file this week against the state.
The filing, slated for state superior court in San Bernardino County, argues the state’s current primary process violates the California constitution, which requires the state to hold an “open primary.” That term isn’t precisely defined in state law, but Peace argues that it means “open to voters without conditions.”
This may be the first time this argument will be presented in a California court, but federal judges have weighed in elsewhere — and they have not been convinced, said Christopher Elmendorf, a law professor at UC Davis.
“The federal courts have said that parties have the right to keep non-members from voting for their candidates, as a general rule,” he said. “This sounds like an effort to relitigate under the state constitution a type of claim that the federal courts have not simply just rejected, but have said itself is violative of the rights of the party.”
In its filing, the Independent Voter Project also argues:
Among the plaintiffs are both Democratic- and Republican-leaning voters who, the filing states, would like to vote for a presidential candidate running in the primaries of those two parties “without being forced to associate” with that party.
“Would you say to somebody, ‘Well, you have the freedom of religion, but you have to go to a Catholic Church in order to practice it?’” said Peace. “Then you also can’t say ‘you have freedom of political expression and the freedom of vote, but you have to go to the Democratic Party’s private nomination process in order to exercise it.’ It’s the same argument.”
The Independent Voter Project has advocated for a “public ballot” for nonpartisan voters, allowing them to pick from a list of all the major party candidates — though parties would not be obligated to count those votes.
The group has lobbied state legislators to create such a ballot in the past, unsuccessfully.
CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
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