Game and fish; Oklahoma Wildlife Act of 2025; effective date.
ND HB 1446 shifts primary ballot access from party endorsements to nominating petitions, ending automatic ballot placement and removing a minimum-vote requirement.
ND HB 1446 shifts primary ballot access from party endorsements to nominating petitions, ending automatic ballot placement and removing a minimum-vote requirement.
Status: Introduced Nov 21, 2024; placed on second reading Feb 25, 2025 (amendments adopted and engrossed); second reading failed (yeas 32, nays 58); died in House committee at sine die adjournment May 5, 2025.
Purpose
- To revise North Dakota election law governing how a candidate’s name is placed on the primary election ballot — specifically changing the role of party endorsements, certificates of endorsement, and nominating petitions — and to update related campaign reporting provisions.
Key provisions and changes (by subject)
- Party conventions and endorsements (16.1‑03‑14; 16.1‑11‑05.1 repealed)
- Retains state party conventions and their authority to endorse, but removes or limits statutory mechanisms by which party endorsements automatically translate into ballot placement (see repeals below).
- Requires convention actions to follow party rules and provides for issuance of certificates consistent with remaining law.
Who may nominate / ballot access for organizations (16.1‑03‑21)
Nominating petitions and appointment (16.1‑11‑06, 16.1‑11‑10 et seq.; repeal of 16.1‑11‑09)
Elimination of certain party endorsement mechanics and vote minimum (repeals)
Campaign finance reporting (16.1‑08.1‑02.3 and 16.1‑08.1‑02.4)
Other related statutory edits
Who is affected
- State and local political parties and party committees (organization rules, petition vs. endorsement processes).
- Candidates for federal, statewide, and legislative office (changes in how to secure primary ballot placement).
- Secretaries of state and election administrators (processing petitions, appointment notifications, and enforcement of reporting deadlines).
- Voters to the extent ballot composition, primary nomination processes, and public reporting of campaign activity change.
Procedural / timeline notes
- Bill advanced through Government & Veterans Affairs Committee with amendments; several floor amendments were adopted and the bill was engrossed.
- Placed on second reading Feb 25, 2025; failed second reading (32–58), and did not advance before adjournment (died in House committee May 5, 2025).
Potential impacts (summary)
- Would reduce statutory mechanisms by which party endorsements alone secure primary ballot placement, shifting greater emphasis to the nominating‑petition process.
- Potentially increases administrative clarity around petition timing and party appointments when petitions are not filed.
- Repeal of the minimum‑vote provision could change nomination outcomes in closely contested primaries (removes a statutory floor that previously applied).
- Alters timing and content of campaign finance disclosure before elections, affecting compliance obligations for candidates and committees.
Sources: Bill text and committee report (House Bill No. 1446, Sixty‑ninth Legislative Assembly of North Dakota) and House journal actions (dates and votes noted above).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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