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WI Suit to Bring Back Fusion Voting    04/29 06:15

   

   MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Voters in Wisconsin could be seeing double on Election 
Day if the practice of fusion voting -- which allows the same candidate to 
appear on the ballot under multiple party lines -- makes a comeback in the 
battleground state.

   A lawsuit filed Tuesday seeks to legalize the practice, saying it would 
empower independent voters and lesser-known political parties at a time of 
increasingly bitter partisanship between Republicans and Democrats. The lawsuit 
comes just four weeks after the Wisconsin Supreme Court election that broke 
records for spending and saw massive involvement from the two parties and 
partisan interests.

   Common in the 1800s, fusion voting means a candidate could appear on the 
ballot as nominated by Republican or Democratic parties and one or more 
lesser-known political parties. Critics argue it complicates the ballot, 
perhaps confusing the voter, while also giving minor parties disproportionate 
power because major-party candidates must woo them to get their endorsements.

   Currently, full fusion voting is only happening in Connecticut and New York. 
There are efforts to revive the practice in other states, including Michigan, 
Kansas and New Jersey.

   The lawsuit by the newly formed group United Wisconsin seeks a ruling 
affirming that minor parties can nominate whoever they like -- even if that 
person was nominated by the Republican or Democratic parties. Under fusion 
voting, "John Doe, Democrat" could appear on the same ballot with "John Doe, 
Green Party." All of the votes that candidate receives are combined, or fused, 
for their total.

   United Wisconsin wants to become a fusion political party that will 
cross-nominate a major party candidate, said Dale Schultz, co-chair of the 
group and a former Republican Senate majority leader. But first, he said, "we'd 
like to see the state courts affirm that we have a constitutional right to 
associate with whomever we want."

   The lawsuit filed against the Wisconsin Elections Commission in Dane County 
Circuit Court argues the state's nearly 130-year-old prohibition on candidates 
appearing on the ballot more than once for the same office is unconstitutional.

   Schultz is one of five named plaintiffs, which include a former Democratic 
county sheriff and a retired judge who was also a Republican state lawmaker.

   Attorney Jeff Mandell, president of Law Forward, which is representing 
United Wisconsin in the lawsuit, said voters want more choices and called the 
current two-party system "calcified and deeply unstable."

   Fusion voting was common in the United States in the 1800s, a time when 
political parties nominated their preferred candidates without restriction. The 
practice helped lead to the creation of the Republican Party in 1854, when 
antislavery Whigs and Democrats, along with smaller parties, joined forces at a 
meeting in Wisconsin to create the GOP.

   Less than 50 years later, in 1897, that same Republican Party enacted a 
prohibition on fusion voting in Wisconsin to weaken the Democratic Party and 
restrain development of additional political parties, the lawsuit contends. 
That's in violation of the state constitution's equal protection guarantee, 
United Wisconsin argues.

   Similar anti-fusion laws began to take hold nationwide early in the early 
1900s as the major political parties moved to reduce the influence and 
competition from minor parties.

 
 
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