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Centrist Project Condemns New South Dakota Law Restricting Ballot Access

South Dakota’s Senate Bill 69, the petition reform bill, has gained unfavorable national attention. The Centrist Project, which promoted Independent U.S. Senate candidates Larry Pressler in South Dakota and Greg Orman in Kansas, reviews South Dakota’s new petition reform law and finds the new limitations on Independent petitioners unfairly deny voters and candidates their rights.

“For voters, by virtue of your membership in a party, either active or lapsed, your electoral rights have been truncated,” said Centrist Project Founder Charles Wheelan, a senior lecturer and policy fellow at the Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth College and the bestselling author of Naked Economics and The Centrist Manifesto. “This bill forces voters to drop their party affiliation if they want to support an independent candidacy.  That’s not a choice that any voter should be forced to make” Wheelan said [Pamela Peak, “South Dakota Bill Limits Voter Choice and Ballot Access for Independents,” The Centrist Project, 2015.03.23].

The Centrist Project recognizes that the South Dakota Legislature is using SB 69 to rig elections further in favor of partisan incumbents:

SB69 includes another amendment, 69fe, to modify the number of signatures required for Independents, from 1% of the total votes cast in the previous gubernatorial election, to 1% of the number of voters registered with no party affiliation. At face value, this drops the number of required signatures.  In reality, it dramatically increases the number of man hours required to collect signatures because finding people “qualified” to sign will be much more difficult. Of the total number of registered voters in South Dakota, 110,000 are qualified to sign, around 20% of the voting population across the entire state. The change represents a large hurdle for an Independent candidate without the backing of the party machinery to help with collecting signatures.

“I am sure that this bill, if well known, would be unpopular with South Dakota voters, because it takes important rights away from voters and reduces voter choice – no voter would be in favor of that. This bill provides further evidence that both major parties are willing to do anything, including taking away important voting rights, in order to defend their position, and it will only add to voter disillusionment of the two major parties” said Pamela Peak, Executive Director of The Centrist Project [Peak, 2015.03.23].

The Centrist Project asks Governor Dennis Daugaard and our Legislature to “revisit” SB 69, but that train left the station with the Governor’s signature Friday. The only action now that can stop Senate Bill 69 is a referendum to put this bill on ice and let voters decide if they want to give up voting rights in the 2016 election. Perhaps the Centrist Project’s attention is the first step toward gaining more national attention to help fight the South Dakota Legislature’s attack on voting rights.

12 Comments

  1. Deb Geelsdottir 2015-03-23 21:08

    Has anyone told the Centrist Project that this bill had no input from SD’s Democratic Party? In other words, “This bill provides further evidence that both major parties are willing to do anything,” is incorrect. I think that’s important.

  2. grudznick 2015-03-23 21:17

    Maybe the SD Democrat Party should have provided some input, Ms. Geelsdottir. For gosh sakes, you can’t expect somebody to hold their hands on everything when they can barely keep their own existence from imploding now, can you? I say, have some Party Responsibility and take charge of your own matters. Stop asking for somebody to bail you out and work harder. If you work harder you can get out of that rut. It’s just like welfare.

  3. larry kurtz 2015-03-23 21:23

    grudzenstein.

  4. larry kurtz 2015-03-23 21:26

    gruzopathy
    grudznflush
    grudzomania
    grudzophrenia.

  5. Deb Geelsdottir 2015-03-23 21:32

    Grudzilla, calm down. I’m not talking about blame or responsibility. I’m making an observation of fact. The SD Democratic Party had no role in SB69. Understand?

  6. CLCJM 2015-03-24 01:15

    I was trying to follow the legislative sessions but this is the first I’ve heard of this one! Boy, they want to eliminate any competition at all. Was this reported on anywhere!?

  7. leslie 2015-03-24 01:43

    oh yeah, dems sent emergency volunteers to testify against the foolishness,
    cory rode herd on this pathos from day one; it is a cop out, big time, very republican-like to spin something like this as democrats’ fault, directly or indirectly. it is the fault of every, registered republican.

    (oh, hi les. please stop reading . the rest will offend your delicate “standing in line for a free hotdog/blood pressure test” notion of white privilege.)

    […edited by CAH]

  8. caheidelberger Post author | 2015-03-29 08:38

    The Centrist Project has its agenda. They are not party-friendly. They ignore the fact that Democrats voted solidly and consistently against this bill. The only Democratic aye I see on SB 69 is Senator Jim Bradford’s vote in the Senate on the final version of the bill (he voted nay the first time… and I’m not sure he understood the entire bill).

  9. larry kurtz 2015-03-29 08:52

    When are you going to announce a run against Kristi, Cory?

  10. Kurt Evans 2015-03-29 12:39

    Cory wrote:
    >”The Centrist Project has its agenda. They are not party-friendly. They ignore the fact that Democrats voted solidly and consistently against this bill.”

    In this case the Centrist Project has ironically manifested a slightly modified version of the partisan spirit it supposedly opposes (i.e., “Unaffiliated voters good; voters with party affiliation bad”). American political discussion needs more bridges and fewer walls.

    SB 69 may serve to entrench the Republican Party, but it will ultimately be bad for everyone, including individual Republicans who’ll have less influence over their party establishment.

    Wake up, South Dakota.

Comments are closed.