Anti-Corporate Money Initiative Aims for Special Election

How hard is it to count valid signatures of registered D.C. voters? Apparently, very hard.

The grass-rooters known as D.C. Public Trust, who want to ban corporations from giving directly to local political campaigns, asked a judge today to give them an extra month to verify that they have enough signatures to put the issue to the voters. The request, which was granted, means there's no chance the initiative will be on the November general election. If Public Trust can convince a judge that it does have the required 23,000 signatures, which the Board of Elections says they don't, then the initiative would like be on the ballot in a spring special election to fill Council Chairman Phil Mendelson's former at-large seat (that's assuming Mendo wins a special election in November to be chairman, which he almost certainly will).

Elissa Silverman, a spokeswoman for Public Trust, said the group needed more time because there is "a lack of clarity" about how the board counts valid signatures. The trust also said the 3,100 signatures from registered voters who gave addresses that didn't match up with BOE's records should count, as well.

Anti-Corporate Money Initiative Aims for Special Election was originally published by Washington City Paper on Sep 4, 2012

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