Libertarian and Green Parties Sue Arizona Over Omission on Voter Registration Forms

antenori frank state senator.JPG
Image: Arizona State Legislature
State Senator Frank Antenori, R-Tucson, sponsored the change to Arizona's voter registration form.

Omitting the Libertarian and Green parties as options to check on Arizona's new voter registration forms is unfair and has already led to confusion, the parties say in a federal complaint.

Representatives of the parties are suing state Secretary of State Ken Bennett in hopes of halting the new forms and being "treated equally." They also want to recover attorneys' fees.

Because of an amendment to election law passed last year by the State Legislature, the voter registration form doesn't simply include a blank space for "party preference." The field on the form now prompts would-be voters to pick one of two Arizona's two biggest political parties -- Democrats and Republicans, of course -- or to check the nebulous field of "other" and write in a party.

The plaintiffs say the change disadvantages the two smaller parties, which are always automatically included on ballots because they each have a good number of supporters in Arizona.

From the complaint:

Even if the thought of registering Green or Libertarian does come to the future voter's mind, he or she may assume that those parties must not be real political parties or do not have ballot access, and thus there is no purpose to registering in them. When Plaintiff Steve Lackey attempted to register Libertarian at the Motor Vehicle Department, the personnel there refused to allow him to do so, in the belief that "Other" referred to Independent, and not any third party.


In an Arizona Daily Sun story on Sunday about the flap, Republican State Senator Frank Antenori of Tucson, who sponsored the change, said there was no room on the form for "15 million party boxes."

Yet he also said he'd consider changing the form again if people thought it was a problem.


Libertarian Green Lawsuit


My Voice Nation Help
1 comments
Richardwinger
Richardwinger

The greatest number of qualified parties Arizona ever had on the ballot was in 1968, when there were seven.  That was back when fewer than 500 signatures were required to get a party on the ballot.  The law was greatly toughened in 1969, and since then, there has been no Arizona election with more than five qualified parties on the ballot.

From the Vault

 

General

Auto

Home

©2013 Phoenix New Times, LLC, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Phoenix

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city