PHILADELPHIA (AP) — New Jersey county clerks have withdrawn their appeals to a federal court ruling requiring them to redraw primary election ballots that some argued favored candidates backed by the state’s Democratic Party. The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals based in Philadelphia dismissed the appeals on Friday in response to the clerks’ action. U.S. Judge Zahid Quraishi had ordered Democrats to scrap a ballot that listed party-endorsed candidates together in a bracketed group on the ballot — commonly called the county line — while listing others outside the bracket. New Jersey is the only state to set its primary ballots in this way. Democratic Rep. Andy Kim filed the lawsuit as part of his bid for the Senate seat held by indicted Sen. Bob Menendez, who said he would not run in the primary. Republicans will not be affected by Quraishi’s order; the judge said it applies only to Democrats and only to the June 4 election. |
Rashee Rice warning sent to NFL teams before 2023 Draft amid Chiefs star's legal troublesRangers reacquire OF Robbie Grossman in trade with White SoxMoment Harry chuckles as he's asked 'are you happy to be home' during whistleArkansas cannot prevent 2 teachers from discussing critical race theory in classroom, judge rulesUber, Shopify fall; Lyft, Arista Networks rise, Wednesday, 5/8/2024North Carolina may join other states in codifying antisemitism definitionNYC real estate developer charged with driving into woman at proSouthern Brazil still reeling from flooding as it faces risk from new stormsGeorge Clooney beams as he rings in his 63rd birthday with cake and balloons alongside coAirbnb shares slide on lower revenue forecast despite a doubling of net income