Posts Tagged ‘Proposition 14’

Filing Fees-Poll Taxes by any other name

Saturday, December 25th, 2010

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For over a hundred years, people who believe that the right to run for office, and the right of people to vote for candidates of their choice, should not be restricted based upon the wealth of the candidates or their supporters. In 1909 the California Socialist Party lost the lawsuit Socialist Party vs. Uhl in its effort to do away with filing fees to run for public office in California in the State Supreme Court. Even though the Socialist Party lost that decision, the court held (Independent Progressive Party vs County Clerks, 1948, 31 C 2nd 549) that “”Throughout the court’s opinion in the Uhl case [Socialist Party v. Uhl, 155 Cal. 776 (103 P. 181)] it is emphasized that the power of the Legislature to restrict the right of suffrage is limited to prescribing tests and conditions for participation in primary elections which are reasonable and not arbitrary.” [Emphasis added].

John Haag - PFP Founder

In Haag vs California the California Peace & Freedom Party challenged the filing fees again in 1970, with John Haag of Venice, candidate for Lieutenant Governor, as the lead Plaintiff. The State Supreme Court turned PFP down.

In 1972, PFP started a new effort with Blaine vs Brown. John Blaine of Mount Washington (LA 90065). Due to a federal court injunction in Choate vs. Brown, all of the legislative and congressional candidates in the suit were able to run that year without paying the filing fees, but that left Don Paul Lubin, a PFP candidate for the non-partisan County Supervisor seat held by Pete Schabarum, as the only candidate left, so the PFP suit morphed into Lubin vs. Panish.

In the trial court, the runner-up for the Democratic Party nomination for Lieutenant Governor in 1970, Judge Robert A. Wenke, made the not so veiled racist/sexist remark that “any welfare mother who can’t afford $200 to run for Assembly is obviously a frivolous candidate.” Neither Wenke nor then-Secretary of State Edmund G. “Jerry” Brown, Jr., the defendant in Blaine vs. Brown, revealed that Wenke was a campaign contributor to Brown of $200 and an airline ticket for the 1970 election. Wenke’s decision against PFP came about a week after the U.S. Supreme Court decided in Bullock vs Carter 7-0 (two justices abstaining) 405 US 134 (decided February 24, 1972) that Texas’s filing fees were unconstitutional even though you could get on the ballot as an independent without paying the fees or have your write-in votes counted without a filing fee. In California, neither of those options existed.

Don Paul Lubin

Don Lubin’s case went to the California Court of Appeals and the State Supreme Court to no avail. Not a single judge even wanted to hear the case. Related litigation for injunctions went before the U.S. District Court and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Only 9th Circuit Justice Walter R. Ely Jr. saw the case for what it was, but was outvoted 2-1. When California Deputy Attorney General Henry G. Ullerich argued that filing fees dissuaded frivolous candidates from running for office, Ely inquired of him, “tell me counselor: how do these filing fees dissuade frivolous millionaires from running for office?” Ullerich had no answer.

With the case pending in the U.S. Supreme Court, we brought a new lawsuit, Jan B. Knaizansky-Tucker (and David Noble) vs Brown, which got an injunction from the 9th Circuit against the enforcement of the filing fees. Yes by the way, that was me while I was 18 years old and running for State Senator against Alan Robbins.

With a brief signed by the ACLU’s A.L. Wirin and Fred Okrand and signed and argued by Marguerite “Marge” Buckley and printed by Agency Lithograph with an Allied Printing Trades Union Label, nine justices of the Supreme Court decided 9-0 (nine to nothing) that California’s filing fees were facially unconstitutional.

So, the legislature eventually enacted a new filing fee law that allows candidates to get more signatures to get on the ballot without a filing fee or a proration of fees by the number of signatures.

Fast forward to this past week. With new election rules for the passage of Proposition 14 by the voters, the way that things worked out for me attempting to file in the 28th State Senate and Carl Iannalfo trying to run in the 17th State Senate district for special elections, instead of the old requirement for PFP candidates of 10% or 150 signatures whichever is less, with months to get them, the rules became 3,000 signatures with 3 days to get them for me and 2 days to get them for Carl.

Does that sound “reasonable and not arbitrary?”

Tucker for Senator: Fight filing fees

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

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Peace & Freedom Party

In 1974 I ran for State Senator against Democratic incumbent Alan Robbins (the same Alan Robbins who later was convicted of various felonies while in office). In order to run for office that year I had to get a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals injunction against the enforcement of California’s filing fees for which there was then no legal alternative. You couldn’t even have write-in votes counted for you without paying a fee, meaning that indigents and people who worked for a living couldn’t run unless they had rich supporters to finance their campaigns.

While my case tied up the state with the injunction, Don Paul Lubin of the Peace and Freedom Party, who wanted to run for Board of Supervisors, got his case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Marge Buckley handled both cases. When Lubin vs Panish was decided 9-0 by the Supreme Court striking down California’s filing fees as facially unconstitutional, Jerry Brown, then Secretary of State, responded by throwing five (5) candidates off the ballot for not paying the fees that had just been declared unconstitutional, including Peace and Freedom Party candidates Bob Donovan (Attorney General), Bernie Klitzner (Controller), and Jim Stanbery (State Treasurer).

Since then, I’ve run for everything from Assembly to President at one time or another.

Tucker in Che Beret from Cuba

In 1974 as mentioned, I ran against Alan Robbins for State Senator in the San Fernando Valley. In 1976, I ran against Jim Keysor in the SFV for State Assembly. In 1978, I was the PFP nominee for Lieutenant Governor against Merv Dymally and Mike Curb. In 1980, I caused the defeat of ranking Californian in Congress Jim Corman by taking away nearly 2,100 votes, almost three times as many as the 750 votes he lost by to the Republican. In 1982, I ran for the PFP nomination for Governor against a candidate who claimed that nuclear power was safe and environmentally sound in the Soviet Union (sure, like the plant at Chernobyl). I lost the election, but in the light of history, I won the argument.

In 1992, I ran for Congress against Republican Carlos Moorhead, who had answered a question I posed to him at a community forum by saying he voted against Barbara Boxer’s bill for abortion funding for rape and incest victims because it included funding for victims of spousal rape, which he described as being “when a husband gets a little too aggressive with his wife.” I exposed him for the male chauvinist pig that he was throughout the district.

Jan B. Tucker with Dr. Benjamin Spock - 1976

In 1994 I was the PFP Candidate for State Treasurer against Phil Angelides and Matt Fong Eu. Following the one debate that included Angelides, Eu, and Libertarian Petersen along with myself, Eu and Petersen congratulated me admitting that I’d really kicked ass in the KQED FM forum, while Angelides stalked off.

In 1996, I ran for the PFP Presidential nomination and placed second out of four candidates in the primary, trouncing the Socialist Party’s candidate and edging out the party leadership endorsed candidate. I placed second to the Workers World Party nominee, Monica Moorhead.

In 1998, I was again the PFP’s State Treasurer nominee, setting the record for the highest vote ever in any PFP primary election that I hold to this day. That year, I was the party’s highest vote getter in the general election and got more votes than Green Party gubernatorial candidate and former Democratic Congressman Dam Hamburg. That was in spite of the fact that the party leadership refused to support me and overtly denounced me. In 2000, while PFP was off the ballot, I ran in the Green Party’s U.S. Senate primary.

Now, due to the death of State Senator Jenny Oropeza, I’ve taken out petitions to run for the 28th State Senate special election, but there’s a catch. After our court victories in 1974 getting the old filing fee law thrown out, the legislature wrote a new law. It imposed thousands of signatures to wave the filing fees for Democrats and Republicans, and a pretty hard but doable 10% or 150 signatures, whichever is less for a district or statewide election, for third parties. That may sound easy but it still is very, very difficult and almost impossible for candidates who are actively opposed by their own party’s leadership (which defeats the very purpose of party primaries, which are supposed to give the choice of a party’s candidate to the party rank and file, not to party bosses). Usually, you have months in which to gather the necessary signatures.

However for the special election in the 28th District, in which the State of California is now implementing the so-called “open primary” rules under Proposition 14, the alternative to paying the filing fee is that I got to take out the petition yesterday (Friday) and they have to be back with 3,000 good signatures on Monday. The State of California is just pretending to have an alternative to paying the filing fee at this point, because this is ridiculous, especially when it’s raining cats and dogs throughout the 28th District.

So California, get ready for another lawsuit.

For more info about my candidacy, go to the Facebook event page:

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=121386141253835

Jan B. Tucker @ South Central Farm