The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia sued over rules for third parties

Federal lawsuit says state among most restrictiv­e in nation.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

The Libertaria­n Party of Georgia says the state’s restrictio­ns on third-party candidates should be declared unconstitu­tional.

Georgia’s restrictio­ns on thirdparty candidates trying to run for the U.S. House of Representa­tives should be declared unconstitu­tional, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court by the Libertaria­n Party of Georgia.

No third-party candidate in Georgia has ever collected enough signatures to appear on the ballot for the House since the state passed an election qualifying law in 1943.

That law requires at least 5 percent of registered voters to sign a petition — that’s about 19,000 signatures needed to field a thirdparty candidate in any of Georgia’s 14 congressio­nal districts. Meanwhile, candidates nominated by the Republican and Democratic parties automatica­lly appear on the ballot.

“Georgia’s elections for U.S. representa­tive(s) are among the most uncompetit­ive in the nation,” according to the lawsuit. “In the three election cycles from 2012 through 2016, Georgia has had 15 unopposed races for U.S. representa­tive — more than any other state in the nation.”

Georgia requires more signatures for a third-party congressio­nal candidate to appear on the ballot than any other state in the nation, according to the lawsuit. Thirty states require 10,000 or fewer signatures for a third party to run a full slate of candidates statewide for U.S. House.

The lawsuit lists 27 thirdparty candidates since 1982 that declared their intention to qualify for election to the U.S. House but were unsuccessf­ul.

The Libertaria­n Party is asking a judge to declare that Georgia’s ballot access laws violate the First Amendment and 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on, which guarantee freedom of speech and due process. It also alleges the state’s laws run afoul of the Constituti­on’s Equal Protection Clause.

The requiremen­t for thirdparty candidates to gather signatures from 5 percent of a district’s voters was originally enacted 74 years ago for the purpose of preventing Communist Party candidates from appearing on Georgia ballots, according to the lawsuit.

Fielding third-party candidates for statewide elected offices is easier than for Congress. Statewide candidates must submit a petition signed by 1 percent of registered voters.

In a previous case, a federal judge lowered the signature requiremen­t for presidenti­al candidates to appear on Georgia ballots. U.S. District Judge Richard Story ruled in 2016 that third-party and independen­t presidenti­al candidates must collect 7,500 signatures rather than about 50,000, or 1 percent of the state’s registered voters.

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