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N.Y. Times' Nick Kristof Can't Run for Oregon Governor
So the Oregon Supreme Court held today, ruling that Kristof doesn't satisfy the state constitution's requirement that a candidate "have been three years next preceding his election, a resident within this State."
From today's decision in State ex rel. Kristof v. Fagan:
Relator [Kristof] is a prospective candidate for governor. After he filed his declaration of candidacy with the Secretary of State, the secretary asked relator for additional information to substantiate that he will "have been three years next preceding his election, a resident within this State," as required to serve as governor by Article V, section 2, of the Oregon Constitution.
Relator submitted additional materials in support of his claim that he meets the constitutional eligibility requirement. Upon reviewing those materials, the secretary determined that, although relator had previously been a resident of Oregon, he had been a resident of New York since at least 2000 and he had not reestablished Oregon residency by November 2019. The secretary therefore concluded that relator did not meet the constitutional requirement….
In communicating its decision to relator, the Elections Division correctly emphasized that "it is not the Elections Division's role to determine whether any candidate is sufficiently 'Oregonian'" or "to examine the depth or sincerity of a candidate's emotional connection to Oregon." That is not this court's role either. It is undisputed that relator has deep roots in Oregon and has consistently spent time here over many years.
This case, however, requires us to decide two legal questions: (1) the meaning of "resident within this State," as those words are used in Article V, section 2, of the Oregon Constitution; and (2) whether the secretary was required to conclude that relator met that legal standard.
As we explain below, we conclude that "resident within," when viewed against the legal context that surrounded the Oregon Constitution's 1857 ratification, is best understood to refer to the legal concept of "domicile," which requires "the fact of a fixed habitation or abode in a particular place, and an intention to remain there permanently or indefinitely[.]" Reed's Will (Or. 1906). Under that legal concept, a person can have only a single residence at a time.
For the reasons that follow, we further hold that, on the record before the secretary, she was not required to conclude that relator was domiciled in Oregon between November 2019 and December 2020. Finally, although relator challenges the constitutionality of the durational residency requirement in Article V, section 2, we conclude that that question is not properly considered through this mandamus proceeding. We therefore … deny relator's petition….
We recognize that relator has longstanding ties to Oregon, that he owns substantial property and operates a farm here, and that the secretary did not question his current Oregon residency. Moreover, he has thought deeply and written extensively about the challenges faced by those living in rural areas of Oregon—and the rest of the country.
But that is not the issue here. The issue, instead, is whether relator has been, during the three years preceding the November 2022 election, "a resident within this State." For the reasons set out above, we conclude that the secretary was not compelled to conclude, on the record before her, that relator satisfied that requirement.
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So, a NYC carpetbagger can't get traction in far left Oregon?
Good!
Kristof might not be your cup of tea but in what sense could be be considered a carpetbagger? He lived there as a kid. That said, I agree with the opinion.
Not a fan of carpetbaggers?
What do you think of three leading candidates for the Republican nomination for Senate in Pennsylvania -- one from Connecticut, another from California, the third from New Jersey?
One is a woman who married a nine-figure, 60-something sugar daddy in her 30s, then was a spectacular success at inheriting the money. Another is a daytime television huckster of miracle cures, breakthrough pain relievers, and assorted snake oil supplements. The third is a hedge funder who dons silly hunting gear for gun-toting commercials filmed in locations he ordinarily wouldn't leave his Greenwich mansion for on a bet.
A win for Oregon. A loss for readers of the NY Times.
He’s got 2.7 million in the bank!!! Who are these people throwing money at him??
His association with the NY Times marked him as way too conservative for elected office in Oregon.
He quit his job, I don't think the NYT will necessarily just give it back.
If they wanted him gone, this is the way to achieve that - just don't rehire him
Do they want him gone?
He's just come back to Oregon recently?
Then he's an Oregon transplant.
Ha Ha
But he identifies as being back for 3 years ... such a bigoted decision!
"Home is where the heart is" is not a recognized legal doctrine.
I don't object to this decision. States can impose residency restrictions.
But... I am not sure I agree with residency rules as a policy matter. If the public really wants to vote for someone, why not let them vote for the person? I could imagine a situation where a state's politics got so corrupt... say, Illinois at certain points in time... that the voters say "screw it, we want an outsider". Why shouldn't the voters have that choice?
I suppose the argument is that you are balancing the risk of importing someone popular but unaware of local conditions with the risk of missing out on the best candidate on the rare occasion no one local is suitable.
Age limits follow similar logic - why require the president to be 35? Alexander became king at 20, Scipio Africanus went to Hispania at 25, and are among the most successful commanders of all time. On the one hand you can look at them as arguments against an age requirement, but in counterpoint you can find a long list of young kings/generals going down in flames due to a lack of experience.
A rule doesn't have to give you the best result in every case to be sensible, it just has to give you better results on average.
(FWIW, I don't have a particular preference, just giving the counterargument)
Obvious candidate suppression.