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House rejects overhaul of party endorsement process and related bills after heated debate
Summary
Two bills that would have changed how candidates get onto primary ballots — including ending district endorsing conventions and requiring petition signatures — failed on the House floor after extended debate. Lawmakers argued tradeoffs between grassroots vetting and open primary access.
The House rejected multiple bills this week that would have substantially altered North Dakota’s partisan nominating process, including proposals to require all candidates to reach the primary ballot by petition and to make party certificates of endorsement exclusive of primary ballot access.
What happened: After extended floor debate that lasted for hours and drew numerous members onto the floor, the chamber voted down House Bill 14‑46 (mandating petition access for all partisan candidates) 32‑58. A companion bill, House Bill 14‑24, which would have made a certificate of endorsement exclude other primary ballot routes, was defeated 3‑86.
Why it mattered: Supporters argued petition‑based access would broaden participation and…
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