One of the first sign of trouble in Montana was when one of the Green Party’s candidates for the U.S. Senate was a guy who was on the state Republican Party’s payroll. It suggested some of Sen. Jon Tester’s (D) GOP opponents intended to use the Green Party’s ballot slot to undermine the incumbent and elect Republican state Auditor Matt Rosendale.
As of this week, those efforts have suffered a setback. The Independent Record in Helena reported:
A Helena judge is ordering the Montana Green Party removed from the ballot this fall, saying the group did not submit enough valid signatures to qualify.
Helena District Court Judge James Reynolds on Monday signed an order directing the Secretary of State to take the Montana Green Party off the ballot after he invalidated signatures gathered through a petition process.
Apparently, in order for the Montana Green Party to appear on the statewide ballot, it had to gather 5,000 signatures from at least 34 of the state House districts. According to Montana Democrats, the Green Party fell several districts short, and this week, a state judge agreed, adding that some of the collected signatures were invalid.
This will likely help Tester, who can’t afford to lose progressive votes if he’s going to keep Republicans from taking his seat, but I’m still curious about how the Montana Green Party collected its signatures in the first place.









