In 2003, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rendered a decision that would pave the way for drastic changes in Washington State\u27s election process. In Democratic Party of Washington v. Reed, the court held that Washington\u27s nearly seventy-year-old blanket primary was unconstitutional, and the Supreme Court declined to review the case. The Ninth Circuit professed to be bound by California Democratic Party v. Jones, the Supreme Court case that ruled California\u27s blanket primary unconstitutional just three years earlier, ignoring the argument that Washington\u27s blanket primary differed materially from California\u27s. What followed was a melee of voter disapproval and disappointment. The Washington State Legislature reacted with...
The passage of Proposition 198, which brought the blanket primary to California, was in plain defian...
An unprecedented number of noncompetitive or safe electoral districts operate in the United States...
The 2000 presidential election broke records in the amount of litigation it produced. The forty or s...
In 2003, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rendered a decision that would pave the way for drastic ...
In 2008, following a series of legal battles, Washington State adopted an open nonpartisan “Top-Two”...
Top-two primaries pose significant constitutional issues for political parties, but primary system s...
Nominating procedures in the American states rely on three types of primary elections: closed, open,...
After the 2008 presidential election season concludes, no doubt there will be calls to change the pr...
Political parties always disliked the Progressive Era changes that pulled the entire electorate into...
Political parties always disliked the Progressive Era changes that pulled the entire electorate into...
After the 2008 presidential election season concludes, no doubt there will be calls to change the pr...
The latter half of the twentieth century saw a dramatic transformation in the degree and quality of ...
Scholars, politicians, parties, and the U.S. Supreme Court argue that restricting the set of eligibl...
Top-two primaries pose significant constitutional issues for political parties, but primary system s...
Examines arguments for and against proposed reforms to state and U.S. House and Senate primaries tha...
The passage of Proposition 198, which brought the blanket primary to California, was in plain defian...
An unprecedented number of noncompetitive or safe electoral districts operate in the United States...
The 2000 presidential election broke records in the amount of litigation it produced. The forty or s...
In 2003, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rendered a decision that would pave the way for drastic ...
In 2008, following a series of legal battles, Washington State adopted an open nonpartisan “Top-Two”...
Top-two primaries pose significant constitutional issues for political parties, but primary system s...
Nominating procedures in the American states rely on three types of primary elections: closed, open,...
After the 2008 presidential election season concludes, no doubt there will be calls to change the pr...
Political parties always disliked the Progressive Era changes that pulled the entire electorate into...
Political parties always disliked the Progressive Era changes that pulled the entire electorate into...
After the 2008 presidential election season concludes, no doubt there will be calls to change the pr...
The latter half of the twentieth century saw a dramatic transformation in the degree and quality of ...
Scholars, politicians, parties, and the U.S. Supreme Court argue that restricting the set of eligibl...
Top-two primaries pose significant constitutional issues for political parties, but primary system s...
Examines arguments for and against proposed reforms to state and U.S. House and Senate primaries tha...
The passage of Proposition 198, which brought the blanket primary to California, was in plain defian...
An unprecedented number of noncompetitive or safe electoral districts operate in the United States...
The 2000 presidential election broke records in the amount of litigation it produced. The forty or s...