Candidates removed from ballot
Matt Volz | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 8 months AGO
HELENA — Eight legislative candidates, including one from Kalispell, did not file their required business disclosures and have been removed from the ballot.
The removal eliminates five contested primary races and leaving two Democratic candidates without Republican opponents in November’s general election.
Roxanne Brothers was removed as a Democratic candidate in Kalispell’s House District 7.
That leaves Catie Henderson and Alex Schaeffer as Democratic candidates in that district. Ronalee Skees and Frank Garner are seeking the Republican nomination in House District 7.
Brothers and Steve Gray in House District 55 decided not to run when they learned other Democratic candidates were already in those races, according to Lauren Caldwell, the party’s legislative campaign committee chairwoman.
State law requires candidates who missed Tuesday’s disclosure deadline to be taken off the ballot, Commissioner of Political Practices Jonathan Motl said. The commissioner forwarded the names to Secretary of State Linda McCulloch, who removed them from her candidate list.
Candidates are required to file disclosure statements with Motl’s office that list their business interests, property and past and present companies from which they receive benefits.
Four of the removed candidates were Republicans: Sebastien Guilhemotonia for House District 94, Billie Love for House District 61, David August for House District 98 and James Davis for House District 77.
Guilhemotonia and Davis were the only Republicans running in their races, leaving the Democratic candidates with no opponents in the general election.
Those districts, one north of Missoula and the other covering Drummond, Anaconda and Philipsburg, are heavily Democratic districts, said Sen. Ed Walker, head of the Republican Party’s legislative campaign committee.
“I don’t think it’s going to change much for the elections. But it is the candidates’ responsibility to comply with the law,” Walker said.
Love’s and August’s removals leave one Republican candidate in each of those races.
The other removed candidates had filed as Democrats: Harry Pennington for Senate District 32 and Laura Springer for House District 63.
Democratic party officials said Pennington and Springer were conservatives who filed as Democrats in an effort disrupt June’s primary elections.
“It’s a good thing when voters have a clear choice between Republicans running as Republicans and Democrats running as Democrats,” Caldwell said.
Springer said Wednesday she had planned to drop out because her father died and she was in Texas seeing to his estate. She previously said she was “between homes” and living in a motel, while Pennington was homeless and unable to afford a phone.