Politics
Ashcroft can’t legally remove Biden from the 2024 ballot
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Missouri law won’t allow Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft to unilaterally disqualify President Joe Biden from the ballot, as he has threatened to do if Donald Trump is kept off the ballot in other states, according to participants in a decade-old case that set limits on the authority of the office.
Only a court can remove Biden from the ballot, they said, and only if another presidential hopeful files a lawsuit.
In 2014, Natalie Vowell filed as a candidate for the Missouri House. Then-Secretary of State Jason Kander, after checking her voter registration, determined she had not been a registered voter for two years and removed her from the list of candidates.
In a case challenging that decision, the Western District Court of Appeals found no authority in state law for the secretary of state to decide on the qualifications of candidates. The legislature gave that authority to the courts, the judges ruled, and as a result it “minimizes the partisan political mischief that can result from ministerial officers adjudicating candidate qualifications.”
David Roland, the attorney who represented Vowell, and Boone County Clerk Brianna Lennon, who worked as elections counsel for Kander at the time, said nothing new in state law has changed that precedent.
“The problem of empowering an executive official to make a decision on whether someone should or should not be on the ballot is hugely problematic,” said Roland, the director of litigation for the libertarian Freedom Center of Missouri. “That is why it is so important we took that case at that time.”
The case ended a process that was routine in the office at the time, Lennon said.
“I was the elections counsel in Secretary Kander’s office so it is burned into my memory,” she said. What it proved is that “the secretary of state’s office does not have very much power in Missouri.”
In this year’s presidential contest, Colorado and Maine have issued rulings that Trump is not eligible because his actions during the violent assault on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, violated the 14th Amendment. Passed after the Civil War, the amendment bars from federal office anyone who had previously taken an oath as a federal or state officer to support the Constitution and then “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the United States or “given aid or comfort” to its enemies.
Ashcroft, in an interview with The Independent, said he believes that if the Colorado or Maine decisions are upheld, it will mean he could decide that Biden is not eligible. His authority in that instance, he said, would depend on how the decision was written and whether it supersedes Missouri law.
“It would have to be from the Supreme Court affirming that like that secretaries of state to have the authority or election authorities have the ability on their own to say that the 14th Amendment applies to someone,” Ashcroft said.
It’s not a power he’s eager to have.
“I don’t think I should have that authority,” Ashcroft said.
Jason Rosenbaum
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St. Louis Public RadioMissouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft speaks to attendees at Missouri Republican Party Lincoln Days last February in Springfield, Mo.
Ashcroft is running for governor this year in a hotly contested Republican primary. House Minority Leader Crystal Quade of Springfield, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, said Ashcroft is seeking publicity and has no power to decide who is on the ballot for any election.
“This is a ridiculous notion that he has any authority to do this,” Quade said. “We’ll see what he tries to do, but I think it’s just another grasping at straws for an election that he’s trying to win and get headlines, just like we’ll continue to see for a long time.”
The Colorado and Maine decisions are the only ones of numerous challenges to Trump’s eligibility that have resulted in a ruling that he is ineligible.
Both decisions are on hold pending appeal. The U.S. Supreme Court has scheduled arguments for Feb. 8 on an appeal of the Colorado ruling. On Friday, Ashcroft used social media to declare that “Secretaries of State will step in & ensure the new legal standard for @realDonaldTrump applies equally to @JoeBiden!”
The 14th Amendment’s insurrection clause, according to the Associated Press, was used once in the 20th century, to deny a House seat to a socialist who opposed U.S. involvement in World War I. Since the Jan. 6 attack, it has been cited by a court to remove a rural New Mexico County Commissioner who had entered the Capitol on Jan. 6.
In the interview, Ashcroft argued that neither the Colorado nor the Maine decisions provided Trump adequate due process.
“It was done by a court in Colorado, but none of the due process that any of us would want if we had a child that was in a Colorado court being prosecuted for something was followed,” Ashcroft said.
In Maine, he said, “it was done by a partisan political elected official that years prior to this even coming up had already said that what had happened was an insurrection and the president shouldn’t be allowed to be on the ballot.”
The Colorado Supreme Court made its decision after an appeal from a trial court. The Main Secretary of State conducted an eight-hour hearing before issuing a 34-page ruling on her findings.
Under Missouri law, a person who otherwise meets the basic qualifications for office can be disqualified for having a felony conviction, failing to pay taxes or failing to file campaign finance reports.
The Department of Revenue, not the secretary of state, determines if taxes have been paid and can act only after a complaint. The Missouri Ethics Commission polices campaign disclosure. Other questions of eligibility are left to the court and the only person who can file the challenge is an opponent seeking the same office.
Ashcroft has no official role in the presidential nominating process in Missouri since there is no longer a state-run primary.
“I have no authority to tell them with regard to the caucus, which is essentially their selection process,” who can be a candidate, he said.
Ashcroft’s office will receive official notice of presidential nominations late in the summer after the parties hold conventions. And the process for electing a president – voters pick electors and do not vote directly for president – raises questions about whether a Missouri court considering a 14th Amendment challenge would look at the candidate for president or the candidates for elector, Roland said.
“For an elector who was at the Capitol on Jan. 6, you could challenge the elector and have a really good chance of getting them knocked off the ballot,” Roland said.
The elector’s political party would designate an alternate and the election result would not change, he said.
Getting a presidential candidate kicked off the ballot by Missouri’s court process would be tricky because it would have to be filed by a presidential candidate themselves, Roland said.
With the Supreme Court hearing arguments Feb. 8, Roland said he expects a decision long before the national conventions.
Republicans threatening Biden’s ballot status are also using the 14th Amendment. Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick have said Biden could be removed for “aid and comfort” to enemies of the United States because so many people have entered the U.S. illegally during his administration.
In an interview Monday with CNN, Ashcroft cited the statements from Patrick and DeSantis as providing possible reasons for Biden’s removal in Missouri.
Ashcroft is running for governor this year. One of his rivals, state Sen. Bill Eigel, introduced legislation barring anyone from the presidential ballot based on a declaration from the governor that the state is subject to “invasion” by immigrants in the U.S. illegally and the candidate for president “has been identified by the governor as being associated with such invasion.”
Ashcroft said he wants the election to proceed with all candidates on the ballot.
“I do not like the idea of secretaries of state removing people from the ballot without due process without limiting factors set by law,” he said. “Our job is to follow the law and not in any way to be seen as putting a thumb down on the scale.”
This story was originally published by the Missouri Independent, part of the States Newsroom.
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Poll: Support for Missouri abortion rights amendment growing
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A proposed constitutional amendment legalizing abortion in Missouri received support from more than half of respondents in a new poll from St. Louis University and YouGov.That’s a boost from a poll earlier this year, which could mean what’s known as Amendment 3 is in a solid position to pass in November.SLU/YouGov’s poll of 900 likely Missouri voters from Aug. 8-16 found that 52% of respondents would vote for Amendment 3, which would place constitutional protections for abortion up to fetal viability. Thirty-four percent would vote against the measure, while 14% aren’t sure.By comparison, the SLU/YouGov poll from February found that 44% of voters would back the abortion legalization amendment.St. Louis University political science professor Steven Rogers said 32% of Republicans and 53% of independents would vote for the amendment. That’s in addition to nearly 80% of Democratic respondents who would approve the measure. In the previous poll, 24% of Republicans supported the amendment.Rogers noted that neither Amendment 3 nor a separate ballot item raising the state’s minimum wage is helping Democratic candidates. GOP contenders for U.S. Senate, governor, lieutenant governor, treasurer and secretary of state all hold comfortable leads.“We are seeing this kind of crossover voting, a little bit, where there are voters who are basically saying, ‘I am going to the polls and I’m going to support a Republican candidate, but I’m also going to go to the polls and then I’m also going to try to expand abortion access and then raise the minimum wage,’” Rogers said.Republican gubernatorial nominee Mike Kehoe has a 51%-41% lead over Democrat Crystal Quade. And U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley is leading Democrat Lucas Kunce by 53% to 42%. Some GOP candidates for attorney general, secretary of state and treasurer have even larger leads over their Democratic rivals.
Brian Munoz
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St. Louis Public RadioHundreds of demonstrators pack into a parking lot at Planned Parenthood of St. Louis and Southwest Missouri on June 24, 2022, during a demonstration following the Supreme Court’s reversal of a case that guaranteed the constitutional right to an abortion.
One of the biggest challenges for foes of Amendment 3 could be financial.Typically, Missouri ballot initiatives with well-funded and well-organized campaigns have a better chance of passing — especially if the opposition is underfunded and disorganized. Since the end of July, the campaign committee formed to pass Amendment 3 received more than $3 million in donations of $5,000 or more.That money could be used for television advertisements to improve the proposal’s standing further, Rogers said, as well as point out that Missouri’s current abortion ban doesn’t allow the procedure in the case of rape or incest.“Meanwhile, the anti side won’t have those resources to kind of try to make that counter argument as strongly, and they don’t have public opinion as strongly on their side,” Rogers said.There is precedent of a well-funded initiative almost failing due to opposition from socially conservative voters.In 2006, a measure providing constitutional protections for embryonic stem cell research nearly failed — even though a campaign committee aimed at passing it had a commanding financial advantage.Former state Sen. Bob Onder was part of the opposition campaign to that measure. He said earlier this month it is possible to create a similar dynamic in 2024 against Amendment 3, if social conservatives who oppose abortion rights can band together.“This is not about reproductive rights or care for miscarriages or IVF or anything else,” said Onder, the GOP nominee for Missouri’s 3rd Congressional District seat. “Missourians will learn that out-of-state special interests and dark money from out of state is lying to them and they will reject this amendment.”Quade said earlier this month that Missourians of all political ideologies are ready to roll back the state’s abortion ban.“Regardless of political party, we hear from folks who are tired of politicians being in their doctor’s offices,” Quade said. “They want politicians to mind their own business. So this is going to excite folks all across the political spectrum.”
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Democrat Mark Osmack makes his case for Missouri treasurer
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Mark Osmack has been out of the electoral fray for awhile, but he never completely abandoned his passion for Missouri politics.Osmack, a Valley Park native and U.S. Army veteran, previously ran for Missouri’s 2nd Congressional District seat and for state Senate. Now he’s the Democratic nominee for state treasurer after receiving a phone call from Missouri Democratic Party Chairman Russ Carnahan asking him to run.“There’s a lot of decision making and processing and evaluation that goes into it, which is something I am very passionate and interested in,” Osmack said this week on an episode of Politically Speaking.Osmack is squaring off against state Treasurer Vivek Malek, who was able to easily win a crowded GOP primary against several veteran lawmakers including House Budget Chairman Cody Smith and state Sen. Andrew Koenig.While Malek was able to attract big donations to his political action committee and pour his own money into the campaign, Osmack isn’t worried that he won’t be able to compete in November. Since Malek was appointed to his post, Osmack contends he hasn’t proven that he’s a formidable opponent in a general election.“His actions and his decision making so far in his roughly two year tenure in that office have been questionable,” Osmack said.Among other things, Osmack was critical of Malek for placing unclaimed property notices on video gaming machines which are usually found in gas stations or convenience stores. The legality of the machines has been questioned for some time.As Malek explained on his own episode of Politically Speaking, he wanted to make sure the unclaimed property program was as widely advertised as possible. But he acknowledged it was a mistake to put the decals close to the machines and ultimately decided to remove them.Osmack said: “This doesn’t even pass the common sense sniff test of, ‘Hey, should I put state stickers claiming you might have a billion dollars on a gambling machine that is not registered with the state of Missouri?’ If we’re gonna give kudos for him acknowledging the wrong thing, it never should have been done in the first place.”Osmack’s platform includes supporting programs providing school meals using Missouri agriculture products and making child care more accessible for the working class.He said the fact that Missouri has such a large surplus shows that it’s possible to create programs to make child care within reach for parents.“It is quite audacious for [Republicans] to brag about $8 billion, with a B, dollars in state surplus, while we offer next to no social services to include pre-K, daycare, or child care,” Osmack said.Here’s are some other topics Osmack discussed on the show:How he would handle managing the state’s pension systems and approving low-income housing tax credits. The state treasurer’s office is on boards overseeing both of those programs.Malek’s decision to cut off investments from Chinese companies. Osmack said that Missouri needs to be cautious about abandoning China as a business partner, especially since they’re a major consumer of the state’s agriculture products. “There’s a way to make this work where we are not supporting communist nations to the detriment of the United States or our allies, while also maintaining strong economic ties that benefit Missouri farmers,” he said.What it was like to witness the skirmish at the Missouri State Fair between U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley and Democratic challenger Lucas Kunce.Whether Kunce can get the support of influential groups like the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, which often channels money and staff to states with competitive Senate elections.
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As Illinois receives praise for its cannabis equity efforts, stakeholders work on system’s flaws
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Medical marijuana patients can now purchase cannabis grown by small businesses as part of their allotment, Illinois’ top cannabis regulator said, but smaller, newly licensed cannabis growers are still seeking greater access to the state’s medical marijuana customers.Illinois legalized medicinal marijuana beginning in 2014, then legalized it for recreational use in 2020. While the 2020 law legalized cannabis use for any adult age 21 or older, it did not expand licensing for medical dispensaries.Patients can purchase marijuana as part of the medical cannabis program at dual-purpose dispensaries, which are licensed to serve both medical and recreational customers. But dual-purpose dispensaries are greatly outnumbered by dispensaries only licensed to sell recreationally, and there are no medical-only dispensaries in the state.As another part of the adult-use legalization law, lawmakers created a “craft grow” license category that was designed to give more opportunities to Illinoisans hoping to legally grow and sell marijuana. The smaller-scale grow operations were part of the 2020 law’s efforts to diversify the cannabis industry in Illinois.Prior to that, all cultivation centers in Illinois were large-scale operations dominated by large multi-state operators. The existing cultivators, mostly in operation since 2014, were allowed to grow recreational cannabis beginning in 2019.Until recently, dual-purpose dispensaries have been unsure as to whether craft-grown products, made by social equity licensees — those who have lived in a disproportionately impacted area or have been historically impacted by the war on drugs — can be sold medicinally as part of a patient’s medical allotment.Erin Johnson, the state’s cannabis regulation oversight officer, told Capitol News Illinois last month that her office has “been telling dispensaries, as they have been asking us” they can now sell craft-grown products to medical patients.“There was just a track and trace issue on our end, but never anything statutorily,” she said.
Dilpreet Raju
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Capitol News IllinoisThe graphic shows how cannabis grown in Illinois gets from cultivation centers to customers.
No notice has been posted, but Johnson’s verbal guidance comes almost two years after the first craft grow business went online in Illinois.It allows roughly 150,000 medical patients, who dispensary owners say are the most consistent purchasers of marijuana, to buy products made by social equity businesses without paying recreational taxes. However — even as more dispensaries open — the number available to medical patients has not increased since 2018, something the Cannabis Regulation Oversight Office “desperately” wants to see changed. Johnson said Illinois is a limited license state, meaning “there are caps on everything” to help control the relatively new market.Berwyn Thompkins, who operates two cannabis businesses, said the rules limited options for patients and small businesses.“It’s about access,” Thompkins said. “Why wouldn’t we want all the patients — which the (adult-use) program was initially built around — why wouldn’t we want them to have access? They should have access to any dispensary.”Customers with a medical marijuana card pay a 1% tax on all marijuana products, whereas recreational customers pay retail taxes between roughly 20 and 40% on a given cannabis product, when accounting for local taxes.While Illinois has received praise for its equity-focused cannabis law, including through an independent study that showed more people of color own cannabis licenses than in any other state, some industry operators say they’ve experienced many unnecessary hurdles getting their businesses up and running.The state, in fact, announced last month that it had opened its 100th social equity dispensary.But Steve Olson, purchasing manager at a pair of dispensaries (including one dual-purpose dispensary) near Rockford, said small specialty license holders have been left in the lurch since the first craft grower opened in October 2022.“You would think that this would be something they’re (the government) trying to help out these social equity companies with, but they’re putting handcuffs on them in so many different spots,” he said. “One of them being this medical thing.”Olson said he contacted state agencies, including the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, months ago about whether craft products can be sold to medical patients at their retail tax rate, but only heard one response: “They all say it was an oversight.”This potentially hurt social equity companies because they sell wholesale to dispensaries and may have been missing out on a consistent customer base through those medical dispensaries.Olson said the state’s attempts to provide licensees with a path to a successful business over the years, such as with corrective lotteries that granted more social equity licenses, have come up short.“It’s like they almost set up the social equity thing to fail so the big guys could come in and swoop up all these licenses,” Olson said. “I hate to feel like that but, if you look at it, it’s pretty black and white.”Olson said craft companies benefit from any type of retail sale.“If we sell it to medical patients or not, it’s a matter of, ‘Are we collecting the proper taxes?’ That’s all it is,” he said.State revenue from cannabis taxes, licensing costs and other fees goes into the Cannabis Regulation Fund, which is used to fund a host of programs, including cannabis offense expungement, the general revenue fund, and the R3 campaign aiming to uplift disinvested communities.For fiscal year 2024, nearly $256 million was paid out from Cannabis Regulation Fund for related initiatives, which includes almost $89 million transferred to the state’s general revenue fund and more than $20 million distributed to local governments, according to the Illinois Department of Revenue.Medical access still limitedThe state’s 55 medical dispensaries that predate the 2020 legalization law, mostly owned by publicly traded multistate operators that had been operating in Illinois since 2014 under the state’s medical marijuana program, were automatically granted a right to licenses to sell recreationally in January 2020. That gave them a dual-purpose license that no new entrants into the market can receive under current law.Since expanding their clientele in 2020, Illinois dispensaries have sold more than $6 billion worth of cannabis products through recreational transactions alone.Nearly two-thirds of dispensaries licensed to sell to medical patients are in the northeast counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake and Will. Dual-purpose dispensaries only represent about 20 percent of the state’s dispensaries.While the state began offering recreational dispensary licenses since the adult-use legalization law passed, it has not granted a new medical dispensary license since 2018. That has allowed the established players to continue to corner the market on the state’s nearly 150,000 medical marijuana patients.But social equity licensees and advocates say there are more ways to level the playing field, including expanding access to medical sales.Johnson, who became the state’s top cannabis regulator in late 2022, expressed hope for movement during the fall veto session on House Bill 2911, which would expand medical access to all Illinois dispensaries.“We would like every single dispensary in Illinois to be able to serve medical patients,” Johnson said. “It’s something that medical patients have been asking for, for years.”Johnson said the bill would benefit patients and small businesses.“It’s something we desperately want to happen as a state system, because we want to make sure that medical patients are able to easily access what they need,” she said. “We also think it’s good for our social equity dispensaries, as they’re opening, to be able to serve medical patients.”Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, who was the first statewide project coordinator for Illinois’ medical cannabis program prior to joining the legislature, wrote in an email to Capitol News Illinois that the state needs to be doing more for its patients.“Illinois is failing the state’s 150,000 medical cannabis patients with debilitating conditions. Too many are still denied the patient protections they deserve, including access to their medicine,” Morgan wrote, adding he would continue to work with stakeholders on further legislation.Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.
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