Judge blocks law that would have banned newly slated candidates from
ballot
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[June 06, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
A Sangamon County judge on Wednesday blocked the Illinois State Board of
Elections from enforcing a new law that would have prevented certain
General Assembly candidates who didn’t run in the March primary from
getting on the November ballot.
The move doesn’t void the bill in its entirety, but rather blocks it
only for this year’s general election for the 14 named plaintiffs in the
case.
Democrats who control the legislature quickly moved the measure from
introduction to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk last month, claiming banning the
practice of post-primary “slating” – long used by both parties – was in
service of empowering voters. It applies in races where no candidate ran
for a seat in the party’s primary.
But Republicans cried foul, alleging the majority party passed the law
to protect its incumbents from GOP challengers. Four such candidates
sued last month, with 10 others joining them last week, and after Judge
Gail Noll’s order Wednesday, they will appear on the November ballot –
if they survive the normal process of challenges to their nominating
petitions.
“The General Assembly could make the revisions effective for the next
election, rather than in the midst of the current election,” Noll wrote
in her 12-page order. “Changing the rules relating to ballot access in
the midst of an election cycle removes certainty from the election
process and is not necessary to achieve the legislation's proffered
goal.”
Noll echoed the plaintiffs’ arguments from a Monday hearing, in which
their attorney stressed that they weren’t taking a position over the
constitutionality of the law eliminating the slating process for
candidates to the General Assembly.
Rather, Noll said, she sided with the candidates’ contention that the
law’s application during the current election cycle violated their
constitutional rights because it “impermissibly burdens their right to
vote and to have their names placed on the November ballot.”
The plaintiffs were represented by the Liberty Justice Center, a
libertarian outfit behind lawsuits intervening in state law and politics
– including one that ultimately resulted in the U.S. Supreme Court
striking down “fair share” union dues in 2018. In a statement Wednesday,
LJC attorney Jeffrey Schwab applauded Noll’s ruling.
“The General Assembly can change the rules for elections, but they can’t
do it in the middle of the game to keep challengers off the ballot,” he
said. “We are proud to stand up for these candidates and against yet
another scheme to suppress competition in Illinois elections.”
[to top of second column]
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A Sangamon County judge blocked a state law banning general election
“slating” of candidates by a party if no candidate ran for the
party’s nomination in the primary election. A highlight in the
illustration was added for emphasis. (Capitol News Illinois
illustration)
Neither the attorney general’s office nor attorneys for House Speaker
Emanuel "Chris" Welch, who intervened in the lawsuit in favor of the
law, immediately responded to a request for comment as to whether they
would appeal the ruling.
Though Wednesday’s ruling was aimed at the state Board of Elections, it
won’t change what the board was already doing, as elections officials
continued to collect nominating petitions from prospective candidates
despite Pritzker signing the law on May 3.
Monday’s hearing coincided with the June 3 deadline for slated
candidates to submit the requisite signatures to get on the ballot – 75
days after the March 19 primary as prescribed by state law. As of 5 p.m.
on Monday, 16 candidates, all Republicans, filed to run in the November
election via the slating process.
Objections to those petitions are due at the close of business on
Monday, June 10. As of Wednesday afternoon, however, no objections had
been filed.
Fourteen of the 16 candidates filed were plaintiffs in the suit,
including one who filed his nominating petitions to the board of
elections just minutes after the governor’s signature on the law last
month.
The only candidate who turned in signatures to get on the ballot before
May 3 was Jay Keeven of Edwardsville, who is challenging Democratic Rep.
Katie Stuart, also of Edwardsville. He was not party to the lawsuit.
Without naming him, Noll pointed out that the law would “arbitrarily
treat” Keeven differently than the other 15 candidates. Even if she
didn’t rule on the merits of the candidates’ voting rights being
violated, Noll wrote, the law’s application in the middle of the current
election cycle is still discriminatory because it “does not apply the
same rules to all potential candidates.”
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the
Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association.
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