Submitted by Guerlaingal t3_1188s7e in Pennsylvania
IamSauerKraut t1_j9ii0ug wrote
Reply to comment by SunOutrageous6098 in What are the rules on signing multiple nominating petitions? by Guerlaingal
But! If you are a democrat, for most races you can only sign the petitions of democrats. Same with republicans. Only exception may be mag/dist judge.
Also, for school board races, a republican can sign only the petition circulated by a republican. Same for democrats. Example: if you are a republican and the petition is being circulated by a democrat, you can not sign that petition. (Well,, you can put your signature on that petition but it can be challenged in court.)
SunOutrageous6098 t1_j9kqr3m wrote
Correct. The signers must be registered in the same party as presented on the petition- some candidates can cross file (like School Director) so they could be circulating a D petition and an R petition. Signers must also live in the district that the office represents. Using School Director as example, a person who lives outside the school district cannot sign.
I guess a better way to say it would be that you can sign a petition for a candidate you would be eligible to vote for in the Primary and as many candidates that you would be able to vote for in the Primary.
IamSauerKraut t1_j9lpl2u wrote
>some candidates can cross file (like School Director) so they could be circulating a D petition and an R petition.
Clarification: No school board candidate is allowed to carry a petition for both parties. If that candidate is republican, they can only circulate for republican signatures. They will need to reach out to a democrat to circulate for democratic signatures. And vice-versa.
SunOutrageous6098 t1_j9lqm4h wrote
Good point of clarification!
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments