Posted on 08/07/2003 1:50:46 PM PDT by Dog
Breaking!
Mine is bigger than yours. I think davis will invoke his emergency powers (left over from the energy crisis and never relinquished) to call off the recall election "for the good of the children".
California Supreme Court declines to intervene in gubernatorial recall
Drudge Report ^
Posted on 08/07/2003 4:39 PM PDT by William Creel
Looks like easy sailing from now on, per say.
-- snip --
KNX reported the same.
The five cases dismissed include the following challenges:
- to include Davis' name on question #2,
- the recall election should only ask yes/no, but not for a replacement,
- the propositions shouldn't be on the recall ballot, and
- something about the $3500 fee + 65 signatures
CLICK HERE for the rest of that thread
California Supreme Court declines to intervene in recall election
(08-07) 16:53 PDT SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --
The California Supreme Court on Thursday declined to intervene in the recall election, clearing the way for an Oct. 7 vote on whether or not to remove Gov. Gray Davis from office and replace him with someone from a list of qualified candidates.
The announcement came after the justices held hours of closed-door discussions that began Wednesday, and after more than 400 would-be governors from all political persuasions and backgrounds took out nomination papers in advance of the 5 p.m. Saturday deadline to file their candidacy.
The justices, six Republicans and one Democrat, chose not to enter the politically charged recall arena, two weeks after the election was certified. Never before has California's sitting governor been targeted by a voter-driven recall election that qualified for the ballot.
The court was reponding to five petitions. Two asked to block challengers' names from appearing on the ballot. One asked to move two unrelated ballot initiatives to the March primary election.
Another, filed by Gov. Gray Davis, sought to delay the entire vote until March amid accusations that some of the state's counties would otherwise use outdated punch-card machines. Another asked the court to review the requirement that candidates need $3,500 and 65 signatures of registered voters to get on the ballot.
Still, several federal lawsuits remain. A leading case was filed early Thursday in Los Angeles by the American Civil Liberties Union, alleging that some of the state's 58 counties are ill-prepared to administer a vote by Oct. 7, and that others would be forced to use voting machines they had promised a federal judge they would discard before using them again in March.
The error rate of the machines, which gained national notoriety during Florida's bungled 2000 presidential election, is between 2 and 3 percent, the ACLU said. In addition to Los Angeles County, the ACLU suit says the punch-card machines would be used in Alameda, Mendocino, San Diego, Shasta and Solano.
21 posted on 08/07/2003 4:57 PM PDT by george wythe
Then again, it may not matter. Nobody is going to talk about that issue during this campaign, so there's no assurance that any changes will be made.
If Davis was a team player, and note that that's a really big "if", he'd resign, make Bustamente Governor, and render the whole recall moot. I suspect, however, that he'll go out as easily as Ouday and Qusay Hussien did.
"...Still, several federal lawsuits remain. A leading case was filed early Thursday in Los Angeles by the American Civil Liberties Union, alleging that some of the state's 58 counties are ill-prepared to administer a vote by Oct. 7, and that others would be forced to use voting machines they had promised a federal judge they would discard before using them again in March.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.