Alternative Ballot Access
for Minor Parties and Independent Candidates
Nomination by Petition
While the official parties nominate candidates in
the primary, or by convention if the party is small, other
citizens who want to run independently or under the banner of a
minor party must petition the voters to get on the General
Election ballot. The petitioning process assures that a
candidate or party has some level of support among the voters
before being placed on the ballot.
Basic Rules for Petitions
The essential requirements for petitions for
nomination are listed below. For a publication containing
detailed information, review
Running for
Office in 2008.
- Petitions must be on forms prescribed by the Secretary of State. To prevent problems,
a completed version of the petition heading should be submitted to the Secretary of State
for review and approval before any petitions are circulated. All copies of the petition
form should be reproduced in identical format.
- The candidates named on the petition for offices other than President and Vice President
must file a certificate of announcement and filing fee no later than 30 days before the petitions are due on the day
before the Primary Election.
- The petitioners must obtain credentials from the
County Clerk of each county authorizing them to solicit
signatures, and those credentials must be exhibited to each
voter canvassed. In 2002, a new law was adopted that no longer requires
petitioners to be residents of West Virginia.
- For groups of citizens petitioning under the name of a minor
party, multiple candidates may be listed on the same
petition, and a valid signature will be counted for each
candidate providing the signing voter resides in the division
where that candidate is to be nominated. For example,
petitions circulated in one county could contain the names of
statewide candidates, the congressional district candidate
from that county, and so forth.
- Each page of the petition should be used in only one
county, and the county name should be entered on the
petition. This allows the completed petitions to be
returned to the proper county for checking.
- The completed petitions must contain valid signatures
of at least two percent of registered voters who voted for the
specific office in the previous election for that office.
For example, since 755,887 voters cast ballots for President of
the United States in 2004, the number of valid signatures to get
on the ballot for that office in that district would be 15,118.
- The completed petitions must be filed no later than the day before the Primary Election.
- The petitions will be checked and the number of valid
signatures counted by the County Clerk of the county where
the signatures were obtained.
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