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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Erin Golden

Trump will be on Minnesota ballots, state's high court rules

MINNEAPOLIS _ Donald Trump's name will be on Minnesota ballots this November, following a ruling by the Minnesota Supreme Court.

In a decision issued Monday afternoon, the state's highest court dismissed a petition filed last week by the state Democratic-Farm-Labor Party in which DFL leaders argued that Republican presidential candidate Trump and his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, should not be listed on the ballot because Republicans had not properly selected alternate electors.

The DFL argued that Secretary of State Steve Simon should not have accepted the GOP's "certificate of nomination" for Trump and Pence because Republicans had missed one required step at its convention last spring: selecting 10 alternate electors for the presidential race. GOP leaders selected the electors in August, after discovering the problem, but state law requires that the selection be made at political parties' conventions.

But in its six-page decision, the Supreme Court dismissed the DFL complaint, saying the party waited too long to raise its objections to the Republicans' technical error. DFL leaders had argued that they waited until Sept. 8 to file their petition _ needed time to investigate the problem after it was discovered in late August _ about two weeks before the start of early voting _ because they needed time to investigate the issue.

The court, however, said the timeline was too tight to ensure that voters would get a fair election, writing that "the petitioner that seeks a change in a candidacy designation that the Secretary of State has already certified cannot lose sight of the fact that every day of delay increases the potential prejudicial impact on election processes and the electorate's right to vote."

With early voting set to begin Sept. 23, the court noted that at least 1 million ballots had already been printed at the time of the ruling.

In a statement issued Monday afternoon, state DFL Chairman Ken Martin said his party was disappointed with the ruling and remained convinced that filing the petition had been the proper course of action to remedy another party's failure to follow the rules.

"This lawsuit was about the rule of law," he said. "Although the Republican Party and its standard bearer, Donald Trump, frequently talk about the rule of law, they consistently apply a double standard _ making clear that everyone else should follow the rules but not them."

Republican Party of Minnesota Chairman Keith Downey issued his own statement, cheering the court's decision in what he called a "sad chapter of Democrat corruption."

"We are pleased the Court struck down this blatant Democrat attempt to rig the Minnesota election for Hillary Clinton and disenfranchise Minnesota voters," he said. "Our legally filed ballot of Donald Trump and Mike Pence and our electors and alternate electors were properly certified by the Secretary of State."

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