Current:Home > reviewsAlaska election officials to recalculate signatures for ranked vote repeal measure after court order -Golden Summit Finance
Alaska election officials to recalculate signatures for ranked vote repeal measure after court order
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:18:45
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — A state court judge on Friday disqualified numerous booklets used to gather signatures for an initiative that aims to repeal Alaska’s ranked choice voting system and gave elections officials a deadline to determine if the measure still had sufficient signatures to qualify for the November ballot.
The decision by Superior Court Judge Christina Rankin in Anchorage comes in a lawsuit brought by three voters that seeks to disqualify the repeal measure from the ballot. Rankin previously ruled the Division of Elections acted within its authority when it earlier this year allowed sponsors of the measure to fix errors with petition booklets after they were turned in and found the agency had complied with deadlines.
Her new ruling Friday focused on challenges to the sponsors’ signature-collecting methods that were the subject of a recent trial. Rankin set a Wednesday deadline for the division to remove the signatures and booklets she found should be disqualified and for the division to determine if the measure still has sufficient signatures to qualify for the ballot.
The state requires initiative sponsors meet certain signature-gathering thresholds, including getting signatures from voters in at least three-fourths of state House districts. Backers of the repeal initiative needed to gather 26,705 signatures total.
The plaintiffs alleged petition booklets, used for gathering signatures, were improperly left unattended at businesses and shared among multiple circulators. An expert testifying for the plaintiffs said suspicious activity was “endemic” to the repeal campaign, according to a filing by plaintiffs’ attorneys, including Scott Kendall.
Kendall was an architect of the successful 2020 ballot initiative that replaced party primaries with open primaries and instituted ranked voting in general elections. Under open primaries, the top four vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the general election. The new system was used for the first time in 2022 and will be used this year.
Rankin wrote there was no evidence of a “pervasive pattern of intentional, knowing, and orchestrated misconduct to warrant” the petition totally be thrown out. But she said she found instances in which the signature-gathering process was not properly carried out, and she disqualified those booklets.
Kevin Clarkson, a former state attorney general who is representing the repeal initiative sponsors, said by email Friday that the ruling “looks mostly favorable” to his clients.
“We won on a lot of issues and on a lot of the books they were challenging,” he wrote. But he added he would need to run the numbers accounting for those Rankin rejected, a process that he said is complicated and would take time.
Kendall said Rankin disqualified 27 petition booklets containing nearly 3,000 signatures. “Clearly there were serious issues in this signature drive,” he said in a text message.
The Division of Elections still must assess whether the measure has enough signatures in 30 out of the 40 House districts, “and then all parties will need to consider their appeal options,” he said.
Patty Sullivan, a spokesperson for the Alaska Department of Law, said the Division of Elections “appreciates the court’s quick decision and will recalculate the final signature count according to the court’s ruling as soon as it can.”
veryGood! (39481)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- A candidate for a far-right party is elected as the mayor of an eastern German town
- More than 300 rescued from floodwaters in northeast Australia
- Houston Texans channel Oilers name to annihilate Tennessee Titans on social media
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- 'SNL' host Kate McKinnon brings on Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph for ABBA spoof and tampon ad
- Live updates | Israel’s allies step up calls for a halt to the assault on Gaza
- Klarna CEO Siemiatkowski says buy now, pay later is used by shoppers who otherwise avoid credit
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Greek parliament passes government’s 2024 budget
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- James Cook leads dominant rushing attack as Bills trample Cowboys 31-10
- How to manage holiday spending when you’re dealing with student loan debt
- A suspected cyberattack paralyzes the majority of gas stations across Iran
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- 2024 NFL draft first-round order: Carolina Panthers' win tightens race for top pick
- New details emerge about Alex Batty, U.K. teen found in France after vanishing 6 years ago: I want to come home
- Several feared dead or injured as a massive fuel depot explosion rocks Guinea’s capital
Recommendation
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Blake Lively's Touching Tribute to Spectacular America Ferrera Proves Sisterhood Is Stronger Than Ever
Is Sister Wives’ Kody Brown Ready for Monogamy? He Says…
Eagles QB Jalen Hurts questionable with illness; Darius Slay, two others out vs. Seahawks
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Near-final results confirm populist victory in Serbia while the opposition claims fraud
Colombia’s leftist ELN rebels agree to stop kidnapping for ransom, at least temporarily
BP is the latest company to pause Red Sea shipments over fears of Houthi attacks