The Oklahoman

Third-party U.S. presidenti­al hopefuls sue for access to Oklahoma’s ballot

- BY SEAN MURPHY Associated Press

Under current Oklahoma law, independen­t or thirdparty candidates must gather signatures from roughly 25,000 registered voters by July 15 in order to qualify for the ballot.

Two U.S. presidenti­al hopefuls are suing the state of Oklahoma, arguing its ballot-access laws unconstitu­tionally discrimina­te against thirdparty and independen­t candidates for president.

The lawsuit was filed last week in federal court on behalf of Green Party presidenti­al nominee Jill Stein, of Massachuse­tts, and independen­t presidenti­al candidate Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente, of Florida.

Three Oklahoma residents and Stein supporters also are listed as plaintiffs in the suit.

It seeks to prevent the Oklahoma Election Board from enforcing the state’s ballot-access laws.

Oklahoma’s ballot laws for U.S. presidenti­al candidates require “an unnecessar­ily early petition filing deadline, and unnecessar­ily high petition signature requiremen­t,” the lawsuit states.

The suit also maintains Oklahoma’s laws unconstitu­tionally discrimina­te in favor of independen­t candidates for nonpreside­ntial statewide federal offices, like U.S. House and Senate, because those candidates only need to pay a filing fee to appear on the ballot.

Oklahoma Election Board spokesman Bryan Dean said the agency wouldn’t comment on the lawsuit, which was first reported on Monday by The Journal Record newspaper.

Under current Oklahoma law, independen­t or third-party candidates must gather signatures from roughly 25,000 registered voters by July 15 in order to qualify for the ballot.

Oklahoma has not had a thirdparty candidate for president on the ballot since 2000, when Pat Buchanan ran as the Reform Party candidate and Harry Browne as the Libertaria­n Party candidate.

An independen­t presidenti­al candidate hasn’t appeared on the ballot since Ross Perot in 1992.

The Libertaria­n Party launched a successful signature drive this year to get its nominee, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, on the ballot in Oklahoma, but the Green Party was not able to secure enough signatures, said Rachel Jackson, a spokeswoma­n for the Green Party in Oklahoma and a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

“Because the requiremen­ts are so extraordin­arily difficult and, frankly, unconstitu­tional, many times we’re aware of the fact that we’re not going to get on the ballot, so we use the petition effort as a way to generate awareness about how our ballot access laws limit democracy here,” Jackson said.

While Oklahoma’s laws make it difficult to get independen­t or thirdparty presidenti­al candidates on the ballot, they have been changed to make it easier in recent years.

In 2015, lawmakers passed a bill to lower the signature requiremen­t to get a candidate on the ballot from 5 percent to 3 percent of the votes cast in the most recent presidenti­al election.

And earlier this year, the Legislatur­e made another change to lower the requiremen­t for third parties, like the Libertaria­n Party, to remain recognized in Oklahoma from 10 percent of the votes cast for president or governor to 2.5 percent.

Under that new law, the Libertaria­n Party will remain a recognized party if Johnson receives at least 2.5 percent of the vote in November.

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