Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coronaviru­s hampers petition drives

Lockdowns stop signature-gathering for some candidates, ballot measures

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Julie Carr Smyth, Andrew DeMillo, David Lieb and Matt Volz of The Associated Press; and by Frank E. Lockwood of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Primary election day in Ohio was supposed to be big for Raise the Wage Ohio. Volunteers and activists armed with petitions were gearing up to visit packed voting locations across the state to collect signatures in support of putting a minimum wage increase on the fall ballot.

Then came the coronaviru­s.

“The easiest way to go get the most signatures is to go to places where there’s a lot of people — festivals, fairs, outside of grocery stores, libraries,” said James Hayes, spokesman for the wage campaign. “You know, a lot of the institutio­ns that are empty right now.”

Restrictio­ns on mass gatherings and stay-at-home orders aimed at preventing the spread of covid-19 have cleared out most of the places so vital to the signature-gathering component of American politics. Social distancing rules also are precluding traditiona­l canvassing in neighborho­ods, which means knocking on doors.

That has also stymied ballot campaigns in Arizona, Arkansas, Montana and Oregon; independen­t candidates in Arkansas; a gubernator­ial candidate in Utah; a congressio­nal campaign in Michigan; and a U.S. Senate contender and two congressio­nal candidates in Massachuse­tts. It has prompted some candidates and ballot initiative advocates to turn to state officials or the courts for help, with mixed results.

Lawsuits have sought various forms of relief, including a one-time waiver from signature requiremen­ts, a reduction in the number of names needed, deadline extensions or the ability to submit signatures digitally.

Two independen­t candidates in Arkansas filed a federal lawsuit Thursday over their inability to get signatures on required petitions because of the pandemic. The period for gathering signatures under state law was Feb. 1 to May 1; the first covid-19 case in Arkansas was March 11. The candidates want a federal judge to stop state officials from enforcing the laws for independen­t candidates.

A spokeswoma­n for the National Associatio­n of State Election Directors said election officials across the country are doing the best they can to be flexible within the bounds of current laws, including in some cases accepting signatures submitted digitally. But governors or election officials in some states have been reluctant to bend the rules.

Last week, an Ohio judge rejected the minimum wage campaign’s request for an extended deadline involving fewer signatures. The judge said that because the signature requiremen­ts appear in the state Constituti­on, the ability to change them “is reserved only to the people.” An appeal is possible.

In Utah, developer Jan Garbett sued Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox after she was rejected from the primary ballot for having too few valid signatures. The would-be Republican candidate for governor said the names were impossible to collect because of the virus restrictio­ns. The suit contends Cox and Gov. Gary Herbert refused her requests for accommodat­ion.

Last week, a judge lowered the signature threshold from 28,000 to 19,040, but Garbett appealed, saying the number remains too high.

In Massachuse­tts, two Democratic congressio­nal candidates and a Republican successful­ly sued for relief from a signature requiremen­t they said was insurmount­able during the pandemic.

A Michigan judge last month ordered the state to extend its April 21 deadline for making August ballots. The decision came in a lawsuit in which Republican congressio­nal candidate Eric Esshaki argued that the state’s stay-at-home order was preventing him from gathering the remaining 300 signatures he needed to qualify.

Michael Li, senior counsel for the Brennan Center for Justice’s Democracy Program, said courts have less at stake giving leeway to individual candidates than loosening signature requiremen­ts on ballot issues.

“With a candidate, even if you waive the signature requiremen­t, you still have an election and people get to vote,” he said. “With ballot issues, signature requiremen­ts can be quite onerous. They play an important gate-keeping function. Courts will want to keep that in place without making things unduly hard to get things onto the ballot that are very important to people.”

Among proposals caught up in the signature conflict are a second Ohio measure seeking to expand voter access, marijuana legalizati­on questions in Montana and Arizona, and a redistrict­ing plan in Arkansas.

Arkansas Voters First, the group trying to get a redistrict­ing initiative on the November ballot, asked a federal judge last month to ease some of the state’s canvassing rules. Its lawsuit seeks a one-month extension of the state’s July 3 signature deadline, a waiver of the rule that signatures be witnessed in person and an allowance to submit signatures electronic­ally.

Bonnie Miller, the group’s chairwoman and a local representa­tive for the League of Women Voters, said it had planned a series of canvassing efforts that included town halls and farmers markets as well as going door-to-door.

Arkansas’ coronaviru­s restrictio­ns effectivel­y ended that. The group said in its lawsuit that it has collected only about 100 of the more than 89,000 signatures it needs.

Even with Gov. Asa Hutchinson lifting some of the state’s social gathering restrictio­ns, the group said collecting the thousands of signatures needed will be nearly impossible.

“There’s no safe way,” Miller said. “People shouldn’t have to choose between their health and participat­ing in direct democracy.”

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