Ex-Delegate Sued Over Missing Campaign Finance Reports

Former Republican Delegate Suzette Raines is being fined $100 a day over four missing campaign finance reports.

A lawsuit filed by the West Virginia secretary of state’s office says the fines, which started Aug. 28, totaled $8,500 Nov. 20.

Raines told the Charleston Gazette-Mail that there was never any reason for her to file the four requested reports regarding the times she campaigned for office in 2012 and 2014.

Raines represented Kanawha County in the House of Delegates before withdrawing while running for reelection in August 2014, citing personal reasons.

Raines’ withdrawal came several weeks after the state Democratic Executive Committee filed a petition to remove her, saying she hadn’t filed financial disclosures with the state Ethics Commission. Raines says she never spent any money after her 2012 election.

Tab for 35th House District Ballot Reprint Will Be $37,000

Kanawha County Clerk Vera McCormick says reprinting ballots to include a Republican House of Delegates candidate will cost $37,000.

McCormick told media outlets 50,800 ballots will be reprinted after a Supreme Court decision Wednesday. The ruling requires adding Marie Sprouse-McDavid’s name. New ballots will be sent to 103 people already sent absentee ballots.

In August, election commissioners denied Republicans’ request to fill the 35th District ballot after GOP Del. Suzette Raines withdrew.

Raines cited her mother’s death in March and the end of her engagement. She’s completing her term.

State Democrats sued Raines, alleging she doesn’t live where she claims and didn’t complete certain paperwork.

The ruling says Secretary of State Natalie Tennant and state election commissioners misinterpreted election laws by letting Raines withdraw without filling the ballot opening.

Supreme Court Rules Republican Candidate Must Be on Ballot

Just a day after hearing oral arguments, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has ruled Republican Delegate Suzette Raines must be replaced on November’s ballot.

The court released a unanimous decision Wednesday afternoon, with Justices Menis Ketchum and Allen Loughry writing separately.

Raines withdrew her re-election bid for the 35th House District in August, citing personal reasons, including the recent passing of her mother.

Days later, the Kanawha County Republican Executive Committee requested the Election Commission allow them to name a replacement, but the commission never voted on the issue, discussing it informally and deciding Raines had not shown the “extenuating personal circumstances” required for a substitute to be appointed.

The Secretary of State’s Office, however, removed Raines’s name from the ballot.

A month later, the Republican Committee sued.

In the opinion, the court wrote the Republican Committee “has demonstrated sufficient grounds to warrant issuance” of their request, saying the case did not present any new or significant questions of law.

In his concurring opinion, Ketchum wrote:

“I write separately to make very clear my belief that the Election Commission blatantly ignored both a black-letter election law, and a 22-year-old case interpreting that law.”

That law, a West Virginia Supreme Court decision in Cravotta v. Hechler, says the commission must do one of two things when a candidate requests to withdraw. If the commission does not believe the candidate meets the “extenuating personal circumstances” measure, that candidate must remain on the ballot.

If he or she does, the commission must authorize the appointment of a replacement.

Loughry also concurred with the court, writing:

“The respondents’ actions in this case reflect either an inexplicable ignorance of the laws they are sworn to uphold or a brazen refusal to abide by them. Seldom is this Court confronted with a case of which the outcome is so plainly dictated by existing precedent. The fact that this Court’s previous ruling on this precise issue was disregarded by the statutory body charged with oversight of our electoral process, as well as the State’s chief election official, is both disturbing and unconscionable.”

Because of the court’s ruling, Marie Sprouse-McDavid, the executive committee’s chosen replacement candidate, will be added to the ballot.

Reprinting the ballots by Nov. 4 is estimated to cost some $25,000, but in a statement after the decision, a representative of the Secretary of State’s Office said the office and commission will absorb the cost.

Supreme Court to Determine Raines Ballot Dispute

In August of this year, House of Delegates member Suzette Raines decided she would not seek re-election for her seat in the 35th District in Kanawha County. The decision lead to petitions over replacing her name on the ballot and that petition has since turned into a lawsuit, one that will now be decided by the state’s highest court.

After Raines’s issued her withdraw, citing personal reasons including the recent death of her mother, the Kanawha County Republican Executive Committee asked the state Elections Commission to allow them to appoint a replacement. The commission took up the issue, but never voted either way, essentially leaving the party without the ability to appoint. 

In their case before the West Virginia Supreme Court Tuesday, the executive committee, represented by Mark Carter, argued state statute says if a candidate withdraws from a race post-primary, the commission “shall” appoint a replacement. That shall, Carter told the court, means they are required making the decision easy for the justices. Raines name must be replaced.

But Laura Young, counsel for the Election Commission and Secretary of State’s Office, argued the candidate never asked for someone to be appointed in her place. Raines tendered her withdraw unilaterally, never asking for the commission’s approval, but did not request a replacement, therefore, there was no need for them to vote on the issue.

Young also argued a Kanawha County Circuit Court order issued around the same time required Raines to drop out of the race in order to avoid civil litigation filed against her. 

Even so, the Secretary of State’s Office removed Raines’s name from the ballot without the election commission’s vote of approval, something Young said the office does have the power to do. Now, the multi-member 35th District ballot is one Republican name short.

Should the court choose to rule in favor of the Republican Executive Committee, the ballots will have to be reprinted at the cost of the taxpayers and mailed again to absentee and military voters. That fact did not sit well with the justices and they are expected to decide the case quickly.

GOP Asks State Supreme Court to Fill Ballot Spot

  Kanawha County Republicans have filed a challenge with the West Virginia Supreme Court to fill an empty House of Delegates ballot slot.

Marie Sprouse-McDavid and the Kanawha County Republican Executive Committee filed the challenge Monday. It targets Secretary of State Natalie Tennant and state Election Commission members.

Last month, the Election Commission denied Republicans’ request to fill a 35th District ballot vacancy left by GOP Del. Suzette Raines’ withdrawal last month. Sprouse-McDavid would run instead.

Raines said she needed time to heal after her mother’s death in March and the end of her engagement. She’s completing her term.

A legal complaint by state Democrats alleged Raines doesn’t live where she claims. It said she didn’t file or sign certain paperwork.

Commissioners said Raines’ extenuating circumstances didn’t suffice under election law.

Panel: No Replacing Withdrawn W.Va. GOP Candidate

The State Election Commission won’t allow a replacement for a Republican delegate who withdrew from the November election.

With GOP Delegate Suzette Raines off the ballot, Wednesday’s decision gives Democrats an edge in the 35th House district. Four Democrats and three Republicans will vie for the four Kanawha County seats. Write-in candidates are possible.

In Monday’s withdrawal, Raines said she needed time to heal after her mother’s death in March and the end of her engagement.

Commissioners didn’t think her extenuating circumstances sufficed under election law.

State GOP Chairman Conrad Lucas called the decision sad for the democratic process. He said the party is exploring legal options.

State Democrats had filed a complaint alleging Raines doesn’t live where she claims. It said she didn’t file or sign certain paperwork.

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