Urge your State Representative to OPPOSE HB 855, which seeks to remove a local political party’s ability to nominate candidates according to its own bylaws and force primary elections.
House Bill 855 proposes significant changes to Tennessee’s election laws by mandating primary elections for nominating all partisan candidates at the county level, removing the current flexibility that allows local parties to choose between primaries and nominating conventions. While the state legislature’s aim may be to standardize election processes, this bill raises serious constitutional concerns. By eliminating nominating conventions, local parties lose the critical safeguard against crossover voting inherent in Tennessee’s open primary system, thereby compromising their fundamental First Amendment associational rights to ensure nominees represent genuine party interests and ideological alignment.
Moreover, HB 855 creates a troubling equal protection issue through its arbitrary grandfathering clause, allowing some counties to continue using nominating conventions temporarily based solely on historical practices, while immediately forcing others into compulsory primaries. This arbitrary distinction lacks rational justification and imposes disparate treatment upon similarly situated local parties, creating constitutional vulnerability under the Fourteenth Amendment. Such unequal burdens weaken public trust and fairness in the electoral process, potentially affecting election outcomes unevenly across the state.
In conclusion, while the legislature simultaneously considers adopting closed primaries (HB 886)—a measure supportive of strengthening party associational rights—this potential reform should not be seen as permission to remove local parties’ autonomy to choose their nomination method. Protecting local discretion to use conventions remains essential regardless of the primary system adopted, preserving constitutional rights, ensuring ideological consistency, and providing fairness across all counties. HB 855, by mandating primaries and arbitrarily dividing counties, undermines these principles and should therefore be opposed.
We strongly OPPOSE this bill and ask that you contact your state representative to vote NO on HB 855.
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