Voters who are interested in some of the techniques Democrats have
been using to keep non-Kerry/Bushes off the ballots may find this
story of value.

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Today the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled to place Nader and Camejo on
the state's ballot, but the US Supreme Court denied our stay of the
Oregon Supreme Court's decision taking us off the ballot. We plan to
file a petition for cert, with a request for expedited review of the
Oregon decision, which is explained in our public interest lawyer's
article. (Below)

The Unwritten Rules of the Duopoly
How Democrats Kicked Nader Off the Oregon Ballot
By DAN MEEK
Published September 28th at www.counterpunch.org

In a recent editorial the Oregonian celebrated the decision by
Secretary of State Bill Bradbury, upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court,
to keep Ralph Nader off the Oregon ballot, citing grave concerns for
"fraud" and "circulator irregularities."

But the Oregonian has never described the absurd excuses Bradbury
actually used to disqualify Nader. In fact, Nader submitted far more
county-verified voter signatures than the 15,306 needed on sheets in
full compliance with all statutes and all written rules.

After conducting a trial, the Presiding Judge of the Marion County
Circuit Court concluded that Bradbury had booted Nader by using
"unwritten rules" that were "not supported by the written
administrative rules as set forth in the [State Candidate's] Manual."
He also found the "unwritten rules" to be "inconsistent with ORS
247.005, as well as with the prior policy of the Elections Division"
and "not applied either uniformly or consistently in actual practice."

These "unwritten rules" disqualified over 700 valid voter signatures,
all of which had already been verified by county elections officers,
who themselves signed and dated every sheet with an affidavit of
authenticity (often with a county seal as well). This subtraction
left Nader 218 short of the 15,306 needed.

The Oregon Supreme Court concluded that Bradbury had the legal
authority to use his "unwritten rules," a conclusion that now
requires all petitioners to comply with any requirements he dreams up
but fails to publish, before or even after the signatures have been
collected and filed.

One "unwritten rule" Bradbury used to toss away over 400
county-verified voter signatures was that circulator signatures could
not "appear to be initials." This appears in no statute and no rule
on nominating petitions. When the rejected circulators came forward
with affidavits, showing their same signatures on important documents
(including drivers licenses, social security cards, and past tax
filings), Bradbury refused to consider the documents.

Another "unwritten rule" was that every circulator signature be
"legible," even though the circulator's printed name is right below
her signature on every sheet. Many people have signatures that are
not "legible," such as Norm Frink, a Multnomah County Deputy District
Attorney, whose signature did not seem to spell out "Norm Frink."
Bradbury rejected all the Frink sheets (and hundreds of sheets of
other circulators) with no notice to him or to the Nader campaign and
then refused to consider the affidavits Mr. Frink and the others
provided, vouching for their signatures and showing those same
signatures on past important documents.

Another "unwritten rule" rejected any sheet having any correction
whatever of the date on the circulator's signature. If the circulator
made any slip of the pen in writing the date, Bradbury threw out all
of the county-verified voter signatures on that sheet. If a
circulator began to write a "7" for the day of the month, realizing
the error, crossed it out and wrote an "8," the entire sheet was
discarded, and Bradbury allowed absolutely no way for the circulator
to correct such a slip of the pen. Banks accept checks with such
"dating errors," but not Bradbury, even though there exists no
statute or rule requiring that the date on a circulator's signature
be the result of a pristine flow of ink on paper.

In addition, Bradbury discarded 2,354 county-verified voter
signatures (out of the 18,186 submitted to him), because they were on
sheets filed with the county elections officers without sequential
sheet numbers on them. Employees of the Secretary of State could
provide no instance of this ever being applied to reject nominating
petitions. Further, the manager of the Nader campaign testified at
trial, using his log of notes, that he had been submitting the sheets
with sequential sheet numbers until being advised by Bradbury's
office late in the process that he should stop numbering the sheets.
That employee testified that she did not recall the conversation but
that she had more than once provided incorrect advice to candidates
and that the resulting violations of written rules were waived by
Bradbury. But no waiver for Nader.

Testimony at trial showed that the county elections officers
themselves placed numbers the sheets missing them and that counting
these county-numbered sheets would qualify Nader for the ballot.
Bradbury offered no reason for questioning the county-numbered sheets
and no instance of ever rejecting them in the past. The counties had
no problem with accepting and verifying 2,354 voter signatures on the
non-numbered sheets. Each sheet was then signed and dated by a county
official. Only the original sheets, with the original county official
signatures (and often official seals as well) were filed with
Bradbury. And he threw them all away, thus leaving Nader 218 short.

There are also an unknown number of other signatures discarded by
county officials, after Bradbury ordered them not to accept
circulator signatures that were not "legible" or that had "dating
errors." Despite repeated requests, Bradbury has never identified how
many hundreds or thousands of otherwise valid voter signatures were
tossed away by the counties, at his unpublished order.

While the Oregonian would prefer that Nader be off the ballot, it
should at least inform the public of the actual tactics Bradbury used
to accomplish this goal.

Dan Meek is a public interest lawyer based in Portland, Oregon.
--
ENVIRONMENTALISM
IS MOM AND APPLE PIE!

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Nobody but Nader in California
Write In is Right On.
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