Loren wrote:
A Legal Lohengrin wrote:
Therefore, I believe that even blatantly ineligible candidates like Calero, just as "Mickey Mouse," should be on the ballot if they otherwise meet the procedural requirements.
And I tend to think that's a rather bad idea.
I'm aware of that, and you have a lot of good reasoning on your side.
Loren wrote:
Most of all, I think it would serve to greatly undermine voter confidence in the electoral system.
I believe the electoral system is very rickety and flawed, and that these flaws stem from the bad (but unavoidable) compromises we made when drafting the Constitution. The Electoral College, for instance, has been an utter disaster, and has resulted in numerous electoral debacles that called into question the legitimacy of a Presidency.
Bush v. Gore was hardly the first such imbroglio. The dispute between Hayes and Tilden is particularly apropos, and resulted in extensive controversy in Congress. More to the point, the disputes between Jefferson and Adams in 1796 (which resulted in Adams being elected President and his opponent Jefferson Vice-President), and the bitter 1800 election (which led to the Twelfth Amendment), showed that there are very deep flaws in our electoral system.
I do not think these deep flaws should be ignored, and while events like Mickey Mouse appearing on the ballot may seem to deride the idea of democracy itself, I think that such events are actually an entirely valid expression of derision for a ridiculous and flawed system, and that including such candidates actually furthers the improvement of democracy.
In short, I think democracy should be a mess and should look silly, because it is.
Loren wrote:
One of the little things that underlies Birther paranoia is the fact that there's no formal federal scrutiny of eligibility. They just wrongfully assume that Obama somehow exploited that.
Now imagine expanding that lack of scrutiny to every race on the ballot. Voters in the voting booth couldn't have confidence that their votes will really count. They wouldn't know if the person they're voting for would actually be permitted to take office. It could be a severe blow to one's faith in even minimally competent government. I know that I would be bothered to think that any number of the candidates on the ballot might be ineligible, and worse yet, that the state office in charge of elections didn't care.
I don't think this encourages the view that the state office of elections doesn't care, so much as that the system we laid out in the Constitution is actually deeply flawed. I think citizens should be aware of the flaws in our Constitution. It may be one of the best constitutions on Earth, and it may have inspired similar documents all over the world, but let's not pretend it's perfect. It may be the case that the Article V process for amending it is permanently broken, and that our system for electing Members of Congress and the President are hopelessly flawed without amendment, but I don't think that stripping voters of expressive rights, via provisions prohibiting write-in votes or excluding ineligible candidates, actually serves any valid purpose.
Loren wrote:
Moreover, such a system permitting ineligible candidates onto the ballot (especially "Mickey Mouse" and the like), would create some insanely perverse incentives. In a moderately close race, the supporters of one candidate could simply raise funds to put on the ballot an ineligible person with a name that's identical to the opposition's. After all, if candidates aren't being scrutinized for eligibility, it doesn't matter if they're too young or live out of state. Or, like Mickey Mouse, aren't even real.
I'm in complete agreement with you that "malicious" ineligible candidates should be prohibited, if the other side can make a showing that some candidate is an actual sham candidate with no interest in the office, injected into the race solely to harm a legitimate candidate. There is virtually no chance, however, that "Mickey Mouse" would be such a candidate.
Loren wrote:
Worse yet, such a system of allowing on ineligible candidates could easily screw up races with multiple candidates, like open-seat judicial races.
And what do you do if an ineligible candidate actually *won*? Particularly in a two-person race? That constituency has to be told that the guy they chose won't take office, and instead the win goes to the loser.
An obviously ineligible candidate, like Calero, would be disqualified. Most such candidates are so unlikely to win that the issue is not going to arise. If an obviously ineligible candidate like Calero ever did win, it would do no more than demonstrate that the electoral system is
hopelessly broken and needs to be fixed.
I don't see that happening. I think the ballot is the very core of our democratic republic, and that it should by definition be open to expressive conduct, even if that conduct is stupid.