Iowa's Supreme Court Keeps Libertarian Congressional Candidates Off the Ballot
Some Republicans didn't want the competition and opt for petty procedural complaints to kneecap their Libertarian rivals.

The Iowa Supreme Court this week upheld a decision made by a State Objections Panel last month that barred three Libertarian federal congressional candidates from the ballot in November. The long litigious process began in January when the Libertarian Party of Iowa (LPIA) held its precinct caucuses and county conventions on the same day.
According to Iowa law, delegates are elected at these precinct caucuses and then participate in county conventions which select delegates for the state convention. That process resulted in the nominations of Nicholas Gluba, Marco Battaglia, and Charles Aldrich for Iowa's 1st, 3rd, and 4th congressional districts, respectively, during the LPIA's state convention held in June.
Months later, Republicans from the districts with Libertarian opponents challenged the process, initially alleging that the Libertarians had skipped county conventions and moved directly from precinct caucuses to the state convention, in violation of Iowa law. This led to a State Objections Panel hearing late last month to determine if the LPIA had held proper county conventions.
According to the appellate brief, a day before the hearing the objection shifted from whether the LPIA had a county convention at all to whether they adhered to the legal requirement to hold precinct caucuses and county conventions on different days. This undermined the evidence the LPIA had prepared addressing that earlier, distinct question.
By Iowa law, delegates do not officially start their terms until the day after they are elected, so the LPIA delegates who selected the delegates for the state convention weren't legally delegates yet. Had the LPIA delayed their conventions by just 181 minutes, they would have met the legal requirements.
The State Objections Panel, voting 2–1, disqualified the Libertarian candidates. (The two voting against the Libertarians were the two Republicans on the panel.) An appeal was filed two days later, and a temporary injunction was granted the following week, just before Iowa's secretary of state planned to certify the ballots. The appeals judge upheld the disqualification, leaving the Iowa Supreme Court as the final chance Libertarians had to appear on the ballot.
During the oral arguments held the day before the decision, the Iowa Supreme Court heard a passionate defense from the Libertarians, who argued that disqualifying their candidates violated the fundamental right to vote. Jennifer H. De Kock, one of the attorneys representing the LPIA candidates, emphasized that Alan Ostergren, the lawyer representing the objectors, had contacted county auditors with procedural questions as early as June 5. Since June 14 was the deadline for holding a county convention, De Kock says Ostergren could have raised his objections then, which would have allowed the Libertarians to address the issues. "But he did not," she said. "He chose to hold his powder, and so that's why this is obstructionism and voter suppression."
Ostergren countered that every Iowan still had the opportunity to vote for the Libertarians as write-ins on November 5. "This is about how you as a candidate have access to the general election ballot," Ostergren said.
De Kock also questioned the standing of the Republicans who objected, suggesting they could not prove that any Libertarians in the affected districts objected to the process. "There's no injury, there's no threat to Iowa election law," De Kock told the Court.
Justice Edward M. Mansfield, however, insisted that the perceived injury for the Republican objectors could be the potential electoral disadvantage they faced if Libertarians remained on the ballot. "They view having the [Libertarian] candidates on the ballots as potentially an injury to the candidates that they've nominated, and so it is an injury," Mansfield said.
This represented an open admission that the Republicans' raw desire to not have opponents on the ballot was being treated as a valid injury worthy of court action. Many of the Libertarians and Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand (who was the sole Democrat objector on the State Objections Panel) insisted that quashing opponents—and not any high-minded obsession with proper delegate selection policies—was why the complaint was launched in the first place, and this seemed to ratify their cynical view.
LPIA would-be congressional candidate Battaglia said in a statement sent to Reason that the removal of him and his fellow Libertarians was an example of "Iowa GOP practicing lawfare in an attempt to keep competition off of the ballot." Sand, in a press conference following the original State Objections Panel decisions, called the candidates' original disqualification "a wrong-headed plot by Iowa's uniparty to limit voters' choices."
Jules Cutler, the chair of the LPIA and a lawyer representing the candidates, spelled out in an email the political motivation behind disqualifying the Libertarian candidates. "For instance, Mr. Gluba's opponent, a currently elected Congresswoman [Mariannette] Miller-Meeks, won by only 6 votes last time."
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If we would just appoint democrats to all offices, we wouldn't have all these petty lawsuits.
So you defend the GOP here. Gottit.
Making a witty quip isn’t a defense of anything, bruv.
"Attack the Democrats = defending the GOP"
Tells you everything you need to know about him.
TBF, that can cut both ways, which is why I don’t jump on the bandwagon of saying that sarc’s ridiculous strawmen are proof of his Democrat support.
That he's a mirror image of you?
Thanks peewee dumbass.
Look at the big chimp trying to be dominant.
Get a life, loser.
I'm still laughing at your retarded attempts to pretend you had a well founded argument on immigration this morning. You simply kept yelling out morality. No concept of an argument.
I mean you're upset I responded to you attacking someone else right here lol.
Such a hypocrite.
Wish I could charge rent for the time I spend in your head. I haven’t spent a single second thinking about that.
When you make an argument at me you post a bunch of lies, false premises, and strawmen dressed up in false dichotomies. If I respond I must address them all or you claim failure to do so as tacit agreement. If I do address them all you call me a liar and keep arguing against the voices in your head. I never get a chance to make an argument because I’m always on defense. It’s all a bad faith rhetorical game with you, and I'm tired of playing.
Even if I did make an argument, you wouldn’t understand it because I talk about principles and concepts, while you focus on tiny little details. You’re the personification of the old adage about not seeing the forest because there’s too many damn trees in the way. Heck, you can’t even see the trees because of all the stupid leaves.
Shocker. More pablum, ranting, and bald assertions.
Have you tried a cogent argument?
You claiming to have principles is fucking hilarious by the way. Lol.
Or do you think principles simply means ignorant first impressions not butressed by facts or evidence?
The solution is to use sortition (random selection – similar process to a jury pool) for all such panels. Not appointees.
It isn’t specifically L but the outcome would tend to diminish partisanship without the spit of reversing partisanship. It would put L's on that panel in proportion to the number of L's in the population (v the % of elected officials. And the minute one panel like that works, it creates a dynamic within the DeRps to expand its usage.
Power isn't going to monger itself. GOP has to do something, their platform is wavering. They spent all that money to get rid of abortion at the fed level, only for people in the states to vote to keep it. If they let actual Libertarians in the halls of power, people might vote for what they want instead of following the GOP line. It's madness !
nothing in this post makes any sense at all
Pretty common for the act blue employee. See their demands ti trust journalists in the first line of defense of truth.
JusticeTyrant Edward M. MansfieldFTFY.
Also go ahead and kick Trump off any every ballot. No objections from me anymore.
The Trumpanzee who shot the schoolkid in the face? Thought he was passing out LP doorhangers.
Too bad your mother was bullied out of aborting you. You would have supported your own abortion, right?
I expect this from both parties as they do it every election cycle. But still, fuck that shit.
>>Iowa law ... delegates are elected at these precinct caucuses and then participate in county conventions which select delegates
indicates two processes separated by time
That process resulted in the nominations of Nicholas Gluba, Marco Battaglia, and Charles Aldrich
did it? I hate rules as much as apparently these guys ... and this is why I don't run for office in Iowa.
Look. I have to agree. Yeah, it frustrates me. However, these are existing laws that they should have followed in the planning process.
I had the same issue with the DNC's primary. They scheduled it, knowing it was past the deadline for ballot submissions in some states, and they wanted to change the law anyway.
This is a professional organization that should comply with existing laws.
Republicans don’t want Libertarians on the ballot. Democrats don’t want Libertarians on the ballot, and then do. Who’s worse? Are they both worse? Why do I ask questions when I already know the answer?
It ought to be perjury for (a) changing their complaint at the last minute, and (b) delaying their complaint by ten days so it was after the deadline.
This idea that perjury only applies in courtrooms, as seems to be the case, is wrong. Their complaint was presumably official, and sworn to as officers of the court. Yet here they blatantly lie, twice, and there will be no repercussions. Why is that not perjury? Yes, it's a rhetorical question.
did Reason ask the three where they stand on the 2020 election?
If Libertarians are all leftists as the Trump defenders claim, why would Republicans want the Party off the ballot? Seems to me if Libertarians support the left then they'd be a spoiler for Democrats, not the Trump Party, I mean GOP.
libertarians spoil GOP and greens spoil Dems. This is known.
Oohhh…….. another JeffSarc bullshit strawman.
We should just label the 3 arguments he has. Which aren't actually arguments.
Poor sarc.
WE'RE YOUR FRIENDS! Let our bigoted Jesus Caucus infiltraitors write your platform and run for office on your nickel and reputation.
Hi. We're God's Own Prohibitionists and we approve this ad.
"By Iowa law, delegates do not officially start their terms until the day after they are elected, so the LPIA delegates who selected the delegates for the state convention weren't legally delegates yet."
If the LPIA had just followed the law, they would be in a much better place.
There's battle lines bein' drawn
Nobody's right if looters is all rawng
Young people votin' LP
A-gitt'n so much resistance
From DT
The two dominant political parties in the U.S. have their hands so far up this country's ass that they've been giving it colonoscopies for two hundred forty-five years.
"If you think the LP's ideas are so dangerous to the GOP that they can't be heard in the general election, then perhaps you'd rather we Libertarians join the GOP and run our candidates in your primaries?
Then the Democrats can attribute the dangerous ideas to Republicans."
Ironically Trump gave them the biggest media coverage of this cycle.
The original LP plank recognizing pregnant women as individuals with rights over their own constitutional persons effectively repelled superstitious girl-bulliers in the Wallace-Nixon National Socialist party. The early infiltrator who tried to associate the LP with killing friendless women was an Army Of God clone named Perry, running against "Magic Bullet" Specter, the guy who got Long Dong Silver confirmed on the Suprema Corte. https://libertariantranslator.wordpress.com/2016/10/01/supreme-court-job-safety-valve/
"The Iowa Supreme Court this week upheld a decision made by a State Objections Panel last month that barred three Libertarian federal congressional candidates from the ballot in November."
This decision came from the ol' legal reasoning of, "fuck you, that's why!"
Isn't it wonderful to know some things in life never change?
Don't worry, this article will be memory-holed in a few days, at which point the Usual Suspects will be screaming once again "but only Democrats play political games with ballot access! You MUST MUST MUST vote for Team Red in order to stop the Evil Democrats doing Evil Things that Team Red would never ever do!"
Makes sense. I could see how libertarians on the ballot might encourage libertarians to vote, and thus create a public health danger at the polling stations.
Question: what percentage of the LPIA are girl-bullying Jesus Caucus mystics?
I suppose there’s some grounds for getting on one’s high horse and crying about the Injustice Of It All, but given I’m not too keen in having 20,000 Haitians dumped in my town, my attitude about injustices committed to libertarians goes something like this…
http://j.aufbix.org/plif/archive/wc253.gif
Just goes to show how scared the major parties of of a tiny bit of competition. No way would the libertarians have won, but the idea that a different message might get out is terrifying to the authoritarians in charge. And yes, BOTH parties are authoritarians.