Dear Chairman Berman, "I know that the purpose of this petition is to entitle the __________________________________ Party to have its nominees placed on the ballot in the general election for state and county officers. I have not voted in a primary election or participated in a convention of another party during this voting year, and I understand that I become ineligible to do so by signing this petition. I understand that by signing more than one petition to entitle a party to have its nominees placed on the general election ballot in the same election is prohibited." HB2280 is very specific as it would only remove the part about participating in a primary. Please take notice that the petition specifically addresses nominees and not candidates. It is quite obvious that the signature placing the party on the ballot has no bearing on who becomes our nominees. Therefore signing the petition is not a nominating process and we do not recognize it as such. In summary, signing a petition is not a vote! The petition has no place for a person to cast a vote as there is no person to vote for and it is not a nominating process as we nominate our candidates at our convention. Therefore under HB2280 there is no voting twice issue in our opinion.
If however, you still contend that signing a petition is voting twice, then we have a most serious issue that must be resolved immediately, and that is, access to the ballot in Texas unconstitutionally disenfranchises every Texas voter who signs any petition. Under your contention that signing a petition is voting twice, everyone and anyone who signed a petition can not and should not vote in the general election! This is a very serious issue! |