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Many Texas Independent Candidates for Congress File Notice of Intent

January 5th, 2010 · 4 Comments

Ballot Access News:

Texas has a uniquely restrictive law for independent candidates (for office other than president). It requires them to file a notice in early January, if they intend to petition for a place on the ballot. Petitioning itself can’t start in Texas until after the primary, but anyone who didn’t file the January notice has already given up the chance to try to circulate a petition later in the year.

In 17 of Texas’ 32 U.S. House districts, at least one independent candidate filed the form. Here is the list. For statewide state offices, there are no independents except two for Governor, Stephen McGee and Kevin Sill.

Texas also requires an unqualified party to file a notice by the same early date, if it intends to try to petition for a place on the ballot later in the year. Four parties filed the notice: Constitution, Green, Reform, and Socialist. The Texas petition to qualify a new party also can’t start to circulate until after the March primary. It requires 43,991 signatures. Independent candidates for statewide office also need that number of signatures in 2010. But independent candidates for U.S. House only need 500 signatures.

The Constitution Party has only once successfully petitioned for the Texas ballot, in 1996. The Green Party also completed the petition just once in its history, in 2000. The Reform Party has never appeared on the statewide ballot in Texas (Ross Perot in both 1992 and 1996 petitioned as an independent, and Pat Buchanan in 2000 also petitioned as an independent). The Socialist Party has never completed the Texas petition. Before 1967, Texas did not require any petition for a new party to get on the ballot. Before 1967, any party that held a state convention, and county conventions in any 20 counties, was put on the ballot. Texas never had a ballot that was crowded with too many parties. The highest number of statewide parties ever in Texas history was six parties, and that includes the Democratic and Republican Parties.

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Filed Under: Independents

4 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Joey G. Dauben // Jan 5, 2010 at 7:23 pm

    Correction: Barry Cooper didn’t file as a Libertarian, but he’s planning to file as a write-in candidate/independent.

    Disregard the past article I posted from my blog.

  • 2 James W. Clifton // Jan 5, 2010 at 7:31 pm

    I have been thinking about all the independents running or planning to run. Most of them have come out of the two-party system so I wonder how “independent” they would really be if elected. I am certain most of them have ties and obligations to their “former” parties.

    I have even wondered about an independent being elected to Congress. They still have to caucus with one of the major parties; so, are they really completely free of partisan politics?

  • 3 Morgan Brykein // Jan 6, 2010 at 12:28 am

    To my knowledge, there is nothing that forces an independent to caucus with one of the major parties.

  • 4 Kevin Still // Jan 10, 2010 at 1:07 am

    How unfortunate that the Secretary of State has a Typo. My last name is Still not Sill. Check out my site, http://www.stillforthepeople.com

    also on facebook
    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kevin-Still-for-Texas-Governor/362165185713?ref=nf

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