GOP threatened to sue over November ballot if Biden dropped out. Experts call that 'ridiculous'
Even before President Joe Biden’s long-speculated withdrawal from the 2024 presidential race, allies of former President Donald Trump floated the possibility of suing to block Democrats from having anyone other than Biden on the ballot in November.
But election administration and legal experts said the timing of Biden’s exit on Sunday makes it unlikely that any Republican ballot access challenges will succeed, with some calling the idea “ridiculous” and “frivolous.” Democrats are on safe legal ground as they identify a new standard-bearer, they say, because the party hasn’t officially chosen its nominee. That typically occurs with a vote of delegates at the party’s convention.
“It’s ridiculous for people to talk about ‘replacing Biden.’ He hasn’t been nominated yet,” said Richard Winger, a leading expert on state ballot access laws and the longtime editor of the “Ballot Access News” newsletter.
My opinion is that persons who continue to bring up Bernie Sanders not winning the primary as a reason to not shift the parties through their primaries is that those persons are making that assumption and that I am trying to refute it by pointing out the existence of the progressive Squad since his losing bids in 2016 and 2020. So it appears we're both misunderstanding each other on that point.
I don't think I've ever seen a ballot that doesn't have 3rd party candidates on it. I see Green and Libertarian candidates all the way up and down the ballot here in Texas. Going back to my first election in 96 there have always been both Green and Libertarian candidates to vote for in the general.I'm
I disagree with this. My observation thus far is that in the last 40 years of elections I've voted in the presence of 3rd party platforms on the ballot has not any measurable effect on the Democratic platform or candidates. And the only thing that did, in my opinion, was Bernie Sanders running in the Democratic primary for the presidential nomination. I started voting in the primaries in 2008.
I'm in Texas, in a district gerrymandered Republican. Greens and Libertarians are already on the ballot. Democratic candidates aren't getting more progressive here to appeal to Green party voters. Not that I can see.
As long as you're voting.
What I looked up showed a law suit filed in Florida by Bernie supporters asserting they had been defrauded.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilding_v._DNC_Services_Corp.
https://observer.com/2017/08/court-admits-dnc-and-debbie-wasserman-schulz-rigged-primaries-against-sanders/
The circuit court ruled against them because "none of the plaintiffs had claimed to have donated to the DNC on the basis of promises contained in the DNC charter." The 11th circuit appellate court unanimously upheld the circuit court ruling, and SCOTUS declined to hear the case.
How did the DNC prevent voters from voting for Bernie in the primary? He was included in the debates for all the voters to hear him present his platform. He was on the primary ballot in every state for the voters to chose him. I've not been made aware of any actual vote tampering to contest the winners of the popular vote in each state or super delegate ratfuckery to overrider the popular votes. And to my knowledge Hillary won more delegates through the popular primary votes around the country.
I'm under no delusion that shifting the parties through their primaries is a 5 year plan. I'm of the opinion that people who keep citing Bernie losing the 2016 and 2020 primaries as reasons to vote 3rd party or not vote are the ones under such a delusion. The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is today.
I'm in Texas in a gerrymandered red district, so I voted in the Republican primary for the best chance at defeating Abbot's school voucher program, and I'm voting Democratic in the general for the same. It's just a matter of enough voters showing up to flip the script though. Bill Clinton came within a quarter million of winning the state in 96. Biden received more votes in Texas in 2020 than he did in New York, and Trump only won by ~650k votes that year, which is a significantly lower margin than the number of voters in the core blue areas of the state who did not vote. Gen Z turned out in 2022 to temper the red wave, and we have a woman running in the first post-Roe presidential election. I think we can do it if we get all the left-leaning voters to come out and vote Democratic.
You decided to go back to assigning me others' opinions instead of the ones I explained to you as mine. You're having a conversation with yourself to beat down your own straw men because it serves your ego.
Old habits die hard. I'll leave you to it.
edit: The SCOTUS ruling, dummy. Wiki even links the appeal. You're better off not trying to be king of the idiots.
No more so than you did of me. I was trying to provide in my last comment the context under which I had been engaging with other people that was informing my responses prior your clarifications.
Lemmy seems to be stripping the trailing '.' off my wikipedia link link in my prior comment, but the text "scotus" does not appear in either of the links I provided. But here's another article that affirms my statement that SCOTUS declined to hear the appeal.
https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/politics/2020/06/01/supreme-court-bernie-sanders-supporters-dnc-lawsuit/5307489002/
Maybe you could provide a link to the ruling you're talking about, because I can't find anything that says the SCOTUS did anything other than decline to hear the appeal of the 2016 lawsuit brought by Bernie supporters.
Best of luck. You'll need it.