Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Wisconsin Senate Passes April Presidential Primary Bill
Unanimous Late Night Senate Vote Sends April Primary Bill to Connecticut Governor
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Republican National Committeeman for Texas Warns of Penalties for March/Winner-Take-All Primary
Under our present law, the Texas presidential primary must be held on the first Tuesday in March, which in 2012 will be March 6. The Rules of the Republican Party (the national party rules) provide that delegates to the 2012 Republican National Convention from a state which has a March primary, if bound by the results of that primary, must be allocated among the primary candidates in accordance with the results of the primary election "on a proportional basis." [Rule 15(b)]
The Rules of the RPT require national convention delegates from Texas to vote in accordance with the results of the Texas primary, and require allocation of delegates among the candidates on a basis which may not be considered proportional. Our delegates from a congressional district are allocated on a winner-take-all basis to the candidate who obtains more than 50% of the primary votes in that congressional district. Our at-large delegates are allocated on a winner-take-all basis to the candidate who obtains more than 50% of the primary vote in the state.
April Presidential Primary Bill Advances Out of Wisconsin Senate Committee
Utah Republicans Opt to Link 2012 Presidential Primary to Late June State & Local Primaries
[Utah Republican Party Chairman Thomas] Wright said since Republicans hold closed primaries, with only registered party members voting, it would be a technical nightmare in the caucus meetings to try to determine who was legally a GOP registered voter – and thus able to cast a ballot in the presidential race.It’s possible some registered Republicans would be turned away – making them really mad – while some Democrats or independents would be allowed to vote, violating GOP rules.
So, GOP Utah leaders decided it would just be better all around to hold their presidential primary on the regular primary election date – the last Tuesday in June.
Since both Democrats and Republicans will be holding any statewide or local primary elections on that June day, it won’t cost the state or counties any more money to hold a statewide presidential primary vote that day, said Wright.
Friday, June 3, 2011
The 2012 Candidates (6/3/11)
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Missouri State Rep Raises Specter of Gubernatorial Veto on Presidential Primary Bill
Although Nixon hasn’t publicly announced his intentions on [sic] HB 282, governors typically don’t give up power voluntarily, and another provision of the bill would take away the gubernatorial authority to appoint replacements to vacancies in the offices of U.S. senator, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, state treasurer, state auditor and attorney general. Such vacancies are uncommon but are seen as golden opportunities for a governor to shape the political landscape when they do occur. [sic] HB 282 would require that such vacancies be filled by special election.
New Jersey State Senate Committee Votes in Favor of June Presidential Primary Bills
The Big Advantage New Hampshire Has Over Florida on Primary Scheduling
Indian River Elections Supervisor Leslie Swan has qualms about the elections reform Gov. Rick Scott signed into law last month – specifically, the provision that creates a new commission and gives its members until October to set the date for the state’s presidential primary.Swan said in a press release Wednesday that the timing might not give county election supervisors enough time to train poll workers and choose voting locations.“The uncertainty of the exact date for the Presidential Preference Primary Election really leaves our office in a difficult position as far as scheduling training for our poll workers and securing polling locations,” Swan said.“We are hoping for a decision prior to the October 1, 2011 deadline in order to prepare for this election.”