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Louisiana Family Forum

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Louisiana Family Forum ( LFF ) is a social conservative non-profit group based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana . The organization supports Louisiana's covenant marriage law and opposes abortion and same-sex marriage. The group's stated mission is to "persuasively present biblical principles in the centers of influence on issues affecting the family through research, communication and networking." According to its website the group "maintains a close working relationship with Focus on the Family and Family Research Council " and is part of a network of individual state Family Policy Councils . In 2023, the Southern Poverty Law Center designated it as a hate group.

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47-527: Louisiana Family Forum was founded in Baton Rouge in 1998 by a group of citizens, including retired City Court Judge Darrell White, former State Representative Tony Perkins , and LSU law professor Katherine Spaht. The organization is currently headed by Executive Director Gene Mills, while Judge White and former State Senator Dan Richey serve as consultants. Louisiana Family Forum is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit organization . The Family Forum honors

94-530: A $ 2.1 million donation from former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and a $ 2.75 million donation from former Enron executive John D. Arnold to support it. Maryland has explored a top-two primary, erroneously naming it an open primary, such as in 2019 House Bill 26. Testimony was provided by several organizations, including FairVote and Common Cause , and independent constituents, and included statements about Condorcet systems, proportional representation and single transferable vote , and concerns that

141-401: A Louisiana state legislator each year for the member's advocacy of moral principles and family values. Louisiana Family Forum Action (LFF Action), is a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt non-profit organization advocacy group formed by LFF. Dan Richey, who holds the title of Grassroots Coordinator for LFF Action, joined the organization as a consultant in 2005. Prior to his work with LFF Action, Richey

188-521: A general election that uses ranked-choice voting . It is used for all state and federal elections except for the president. California's blanket primary system was ruled unconstitutional in California Democratic Party v. Jones in 2000. It forced political parties to associate with candidates they did not endorse. Then in 2004, Proposition 62 , an initiative to bring the nonpartisan blanket primary to California, failed with only 46% of

235-607: A health and education financing bill for fiscal year 2008; the earmark specifies payment to the Louisiana Family Forum "to develop a plan to promote better science education." This received national attention and was later cut from the bill after Vitter yielded to opposing political pressure. Louisiana House of Representatives Minority [REDACTED] [REDACTED] The Louisiana House of Representatives (French: Chambre des Représentants de Louisiane ; Spanish : Cámara de Representantes de Luisiana )

282-414: A legislature that looked different or functioned differently from the legislature elected under a partisan primary." In Washington, major parties originally used an alternate process of party endorsement for partisan legislative and county administrative positions. This would ensure that one official party candidate will be in the primary, theoretically reducing the risk of intra-party vote-splits. However,

329-870: A member of the House of Representatives), after switching from the Democratic to the Republican Party , resigned his seat as a Democrat on January 5, ran as a Republican for his own vacancy in a special election held on February 12, and won rather handily. There have also been efforts in Oregon to pass a similar law. However, the Oregon Senate rejected it in May 2007 , and it failed in a November 2008 referendum as Measure 65. Oregon voters defeated it again in November 2014 as Measure 90, despite

376-691: A much more competitive race than if the Tea Party candidate had run against Murray. The 4th district is a large and predominantly rural district in Central Washington that encompasses numerous counties and is dominated by the Tri-Cities and Yakima areas. Republican Doc Hastings , who represented the 4th district since 1995, retired. The two winners of the top two primary were the Tea Party candidate Clint Didier (endorsed by Ron Paul ) and Dan Newhouse ,

423-499: A new primary system in 2004, which would have created a top-two nonpartisan blanket primary system. It provided an open primary as a backup, giving the Governor the option to choose. Although Secretary of State Sam Reed advocated the blanket, non-partisan system, on April 1, 2004, the Governor used the line-item veto to activate the Open primary instead. In response, Washington's Initiative 872

470-539: A relatively close general election. Clint Didier and Dino Rossi were the two main Republicans vying to run against the incumbent Democratic Senator Patty Murray . Rossi had much greater name recognition, had narrowly lost two races for governor, and was favored by the party establishment. Didier, a former tight end for the National Football League 's Washington Redskins , had never run for elected office and

517-416: A result, eight congressional districts featured general elections with two candidates of the same party: the 15th , 30th, 35th, 40th , 43rd , and 44th with two Democrats, and the 8th and 31st with two Republicans. In the 2014 general election, eight congressional districts featured general elections with two candidates of the same party: the 17th, 19th, 34th, 35th, 40th, and 44th with two Democrats, and

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564-450: A top-two rather than top-three or more primary would not supply adequate choice for voters. In Florida, an amendment to adopt the top-two primary was unsuccessful in 2020. 57% of votes were in favor but this failed to reach the threshold of 60% to pass. In the 2020 Alaska elections , voters approved Measure 2 , which replaced party primaries with a single non-partisan blanket primary, a top-four primary . The top 4 candidates advance to

611-531: A two-way race between two members of the same party (Republicans) in the general election. With over 20% of the population voting for the Democrat and neither Republican winning close to a majority in the primary, both of the Republican candidates had to appeal to Democrats and other voters who did not support them in the first round. For example, incumbent Norm Johnson came out in favor of same-sex civil unions, moving to

658-407: Is a "preference" and not a declaration of party membership, candidates can assert party affiliation without the party's approval or use alternate terms for a given party. Gubernatorial candidate Dino Rossi's 2008 stated preference was for the "GOP Party", although he is a prominent Republican. First Ballot, August 17, 2010 Second Ballot November 2, 2010 In this race a three-way primary led to

705-409: Is a primary election in which all candidates for the same elected office run against each other at once, regardless of political party. This distinguishes them from partisan elections, which are segregated by political party. This is a two-round system (with minor differences from others in the dates of the elections and that the second election is always held even if one candidate gets more than 50% in

752-597: Is no voter party registration in Washington, and candidates are not restricted to stating an affiliation with an established major or minor party. The candidate has up to 16 characters to describe on the ballot the party that they prefer. Some candidates state a preference for an established major party, such as the Democratic Party or the Republican Party, while others use the ballot to send a message, such as Prefers No New Taxes Party or Prefers Salmon Yoga Party. Since this

799-488: Is the lower house in the Louisiana State Legislature , the state legislature of the U.S. state of Louisiana . This chamber is composed of 105 representatives, each of whom represents approximately 42,500 people (2000 figures). Members serve four-year terms with a term limit of three terms (twelve years). The House is one of the five state legislative lower houses that has a four-year term, as opposed to

846-728: Is the lower legislative chamber of the Louisiana State Legislature ; the upper house is the Louisiana State Senate . The Louisiana House has sole authority to impeach state officials and introduce appropriation bills. The Louisiana House of Representatives was established, along with its functions and authority, in Article III, Section 3 of the Louisiana Constitution . The committees of the Louisiana House review proposed bills and either kill them or recommend their passage to

893-491: The California Journal of Politics & Policy called "The Top Two Primary: What Can California Learn from Washington?" Donovan was the only expert witness in favor of the top-two idea, for the as applied court challenge of Top-Two. His academic paper states, "The partisan structure of Washington's legislature appears unaltered by the new primary system." Donovan concluded, "The aggregate of all this did not add up to

940-637: The 13th district from 1993 to 2013 and its predecessors since 1973, lost reelection to fellow Democrat Eric Swalwell in the general election after Stark won the primary. Along with California and Alaska , Washington had a blanket primary system that allowed every voter to choose a candidate of any party for each position. That kind of system was ruled unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court in California Democratic Party v. Jones (2000) because it forced political parties to endorse candidates against their will. The Washington State Legislature passed

987-521: The 4th and 25th with two Republicans. In the 2016 general election, the U.S. Senate race featured two Democrats running against each other and seven congressional districts with two Democrats running against each other: the 17th, 29th, 32nd, 34th, 37th, 44th, and 46th. There were no races with two Republicans running against each other. The 15th district is based in the East Bay and includes Hayward and Livermore . Democrat Pete Stark , who represented

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1034-525: The US Supreme Court refused to hear appeals from Washington Libertarian Party and Washington State Democratic Party . The Washington State Republican Party had earlier dropped out of the appeal process. Both Washington and California implement a two-winner nonpartisan blanket primary by plurality vote. The plan is used in Texas and other states in special elections but not primaries. A notable example involved former US Senator Phil Gramm , who in 1983 (while

1081-523: The candidates to advance to the general election , and for that reason, it was ruled facially constitutional by the Supreme Court in the 2008 decision Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party . Chief Justice John Roberts concurred in the 2008 decision, stating: "If the ballot is designed in such a manner that no reasonable voter would believe that the candidates listed there are nominees or members of, or otherwise associated with,

1128-460: The earlier blanket primary, it officially disregards party affiliation while allowing candidates to state their party preference. However, the court wanted to wait for more evidence before addressing the chief items in the complaint and remanded the decision to the lower courts. Washington state implemented this Top 2 primary, starting in the 2008 election, which applies to federal, state, and local elections, but not to presidential elections. There

1175-423: The election results were upheld, and Berkey was prevented from running in the general election. Harper easily won the subsequent uncompetitive runoff election. First Ballot, August 17, 2010 (only top three vote-getters listed) Second Ballot November 2, 2010 In this race, the three leading candidates' competition resulted in a more moderate and popular Republican facing off against the incumbent Democrat, with

1222-631: The first round for a candidate from any political party. The partisan blanket primary was used in Washington for nearly 65 years and briefly in California. However, the blanket primary was ruled unconstitutional in 2000 by the Supreme Court of the United States in California Democratic Party v. Jones , as it forced political parties to associate with candidates they did not endorse. The nonpartisan blanket primary disregards party preference in determining

1269-430: The first round). Advocates claim the system will elect more moderate candidates, as members of a minority party could vote for a more moderate candidate from the majority party, with some political scientists expressing similar views. However, empirical research on the system have found no effect on candidate moderation or turnout among independent voters. Such primaries are also susceptible to vote-splitting :

1316-513: The flow of legislation and committee assignments. The Louisiana House of Representatives also elects a speaker pro tempore to preside in the absence of the Speaker. The current speaker is Republican Phillip DeVillier . His deputy is the speaker pro tempore, currently Republican Michael T. Johnson . The speaker pro tempore presides when the Speaker is not present. The Louisiana House of Representatives comprises 105 representatives elected from across

1363-532: The former Director of the Washington State Department of Agriculture under Christine Gregoire and Jay Inslee and former State Representative. In a close general election, Newhouse prevailed. Though the intention is to allow multiple candidates from the majority party to advance to the second round, critics note that this can also happen to a minority party when that party runs fewer candidates than another and thus faces less vote-splitting . Under

1410-672: The full house. Each committee has a specialized area it oversees. Committees can call upon state officials to testify at committee meetings. Committee memberships, including chairmanships and vice chairmanships, are assigned by the Speaker. Nonpartisan blanket primary Condorcet methods Positional voting Cardinal voting Quota-remainder methods Approval-based committees Fractional social choice Semi-proportional representation By ballot type Pathological response Strategic voting Paradoxes of majority rule Positive results A nonpartisan primary , top-two primary , or jungle primary

1457-452: The general election. When Berkey placed third in the primary by a margin of 122 votes, the Moxie Media scandal ensued: the state's election watchdog committee unanimously voted to refer the case to the state Attorney General Rob McKenna , who within hours "filed suit, alleging multiple campaign-finance violations". Despite the call of several former state senators to hold another election,

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1504-514: The law does not allow nominations or endorsements by interest groups, political action committees, political parties, labor unions, editorial boards, or other private organizations to be printed on the ballot. The indication of party preference as opposed to party affiliation opens the door for candidates to misrepresent their leanings or otherwise confuse voters. In 2008, a Washington gubernatorial candidate indicated party preference as "G.O.P." instead of Republican. A public poll found that 25% of

1551-454: The left of challenger Michele Strobel, who opposed them. First Ballot August 17, 2010 Second Ballot November 2, 2010 In this heavily Democratic district, Berkey was officially endorsed by the 38th District Democratic Party. However, Democratic challenger Nick Harper bankrolled ads for the Republican candidate to "Squeeze the Middle" and prevent the moderate incumbent Berkey from running in

1598-510: The more candidates from the same party run in the primary, the more likely that party is to lose. The top-two system is used for all primaries in Washington and California (except presidential primaries). Alaska has used a highly-similar top-four primary with a ranked-choice runoff since the 2022 House special election . The nonpartisan blanket primary is different from the blanket primary . They are similar in that voters can vote in

1645-507: The near-universal two-year term. The House convenes at the State Capitol in Baton Rouge . The Speaker of the House presides over the House of Representatives. The speaker is customarily recommended by the governor (although this is not in House rules), then elected by the full House. In addition to presiding over the body, the speaker is also the chief leadership position, and controls

1692-453: The nonpartisan blanket primary, a party with two candidates and only 41% popular support would beat a party with three candidates and 59% popular support if voters split their votes evenly among candidates for their own party. For example, in Washington's 2016 primary for state treasurer , Democrats won a majority of the vote but failed to move on to the general election: Political science professor Todd Donovan published an article in 2012 for

1739-527: The parties the candidates claimed to 'prefer', the I–872 primary system would likely pass constitutional muster." Each candidate for partisan office can state a political party that they prefer. Ballots must feature disclaimers that a candidate's preference does not imply the candidate is nominated or endorsed by the party or that the party approves of or associates with the candidate. Subsequent as applied challenges were rejected by lower courts. On October 1, 2012,

1786-404: The public did not know that the two terms mean the same thing. Further research on California's 2012 jungle primaries suggests that a jungle primary does not tend to lead to large amounts of crossover votes. Most voters who crossed over did so for strategic reasons. Furthermore, there is evidence that having the top two candidates from the same party could lead to a drop in voter participation in

1833-442: The second round. With regards to reducing political polarization, this does not seem to hold true. Due to lack of crossover votes, an extreme candidate from the majority party can still win over a moderate from the other party. Though the intention of the system is to get a moderate from the majority party, this will not happen if there is no moderate, if the moderate lacks name recognition, or if voters are unsure of which candidate

1880-444: The state from single-member districts by registered voters in the district. Representatives must be electors, be at least eighteen years old, be domiciled in the district they represent at least one year, and have resided in the state two years. It is the judge of its members' qualifications and elections. All candidates for state representative in a district compete in a nonpartisan blanket primary ; if no candidate earns 50+1 percent of

1927-505: The top two candidates advance to the November general election. That does not affect the presidential primary, local offices, or non-partisan offices such as judges and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. The California Secretary of State now calls the system a "Top-Two Primary". The 2012 general election was the first non-special election in California to use the nonpartisan blanket primary system established by Proposition 14 . As

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1974-460: The vote, the top two vote-getters advance into the general election. Elections occur every four years and representatives are limited to three four-year terms (12 years). If a seat is vacant, it will be filled in a special election. Its sessions occur along with the Louisiana State Senate , every year, for sixty legislative days in even-numbered years and forty-five legislative days in odd-numbered years in which only monetary bills can be considered. It

2021-463: The vote. However, Proposition 14 , a nearly identical piece of legislation, passed on the June 2010 ballot with 53.7% of the vote. Under Proposition 14, statewide and congressional candidates in California, regardless of party preference, participate in the nonpartisan blanket primary. However, a candidate must prefer the major party on the ballot that they are registered in. After the June primary election,

2068-713: Was a paid consultant in David Vitter's 2004 U.S. Senate campaign . Records show that Vitter's campaign employed Beryl Amedee of Gray in Terrebonne Parish , then the LFF Education Resource Council chairman and currently the District 51 Republican member of the Louisiana House of Representatives . In 2007, Amedee was named LFF education chairman. In September 2007, U.S. Senator Vitter earmarked $ 100,000 in

2115-458: Was doing much worse in polls against Murray, most Democrats seemed content voting for Murray. If any tactical voting occurred, it seemed to be on the Republican side, with the vast majority of the Republican voters choosing Rossi, perceived as a more electable candidate. In this case, the Top Two primary resulted in a more moderate Republican candidate running against the Democratic incumbent, and likely

2162-471: Was endorsed by Tea Party favorites Ron Paul and Sarah Palin . Didier might have been able to win the GOP nomination from Rossi in a closed primary that rewards candidates for appealing to the hardline of their base, but the more moderate Rossi was easily able to defeat Didier in the Top Two primary. While one might expect more Democrats in the Top Two primary to vote tactically for Didier, the Republican candidate who

2209-555: Was filed on January 8, 2004, by Terry Hunt from the Washington Grange , which proposed to create a nonpartisan blanket primary in that state. The measure passed with 59.8% of the vote (1,632,225 yes votes and 1,095,190 no votes) in 2004. On March 18, 2008, the US Supreme Court ruled, in Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party , that Washington's Initiative 872 was constitutionally permissible. Unlike

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