Trouble in the Connecticut Independent Party as ballot spot in doubt over disagreement on candidate
From Ballot Access News:
The Independent Party is a ballot-qualified in Connecticut for all statewide offices except President. In this year’s U.S. Senate race, two factions of the party support different candidates for the party’s U.S. Senate nomination. If they can’t agree, the Secretary of State won’t print anyone on the November ballot as the party’s nominee, and then it will lose its ballot status for the office of U.S. Senate for the 2018 election.
The two major party nominees are incumbent Democrat Richard Blumenthal, and Republican Dan Carter. One faction of the Independent Party wants to also nominate Dan Carter, so that he would be on the November ballot twice, under both the Republican label and the Independent label. This faction of the party is centered in Danbury, where the Mayor is an Independent Party leader even though he is a registered Republican.
The other faction, centered in Waterbury, wants the Independent Party to run its own nominee for U.S. Senate, John R. Price, who is not the nominee of any other party. See this story.
In 2012 the Independent Party nominated Rocky Anderson for President (who was the Justice Party nominee around the remainder of the U.S.). But in the 2012 U.S. Senate race, the Independent Party nominated the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate, Linda McMahon. Anderson and McMahon had very little in common politically, but that showed the two factions of the Independent Party, at least in 2012, were able to get along with each other. Thanks to Joshua Van Vranken for the link.
From the News-Times:
They are torn between Republican state Rep. Dan Carter, of Bethel, who is seeking the cross-endorsement of independents, and Wallingford businessman John R. Price, a registered Democrat. Round one of the nominating contest went to Carter, who was endorsed Aug. 23 by the party’s Danbury faction.
But the legislator’s bid to secure a second line on the ballot was derailed Tuesday night when the party’s Waterbury faction endorsed Price 12 to 10 after an initial tie-vote. The split is the latest dispute between rival wings of the minor party, which are mired in a lawsuit over their legitimacy to call the shots for the state’s 17,021 registered independents.
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