Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jul 17
Florida Judge Keeps Cory Mills on Ballot, Tossing Rival's Challenge With Prejudice
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jul 17

Florida Judge Keeps Cory Mills on Ballot, Tossing Rival's Challenge With Prejudice

3 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jul 17

Summary

  • Circuit Judge J. Lee Marsh dismissed Michael Johnson’s lawsuit with prejudice, leaving Rep. Cory Mills on Florida’s primary ballot after state election officials had already accepted his qualifying paperwork.
  • Marsh said the new ballot-challenge law covers eligibility requirements such as age and residency, not the filing process, and called the secretary of state’s review of candidate oaths a ministerial duty.
  • Johnson’s lawyers had argued the statute was a broad catch-all that should reach alleged flaws in how Mills’ documents were signed and notarized, but Marsh warned that reading could trigger a flood of candidate litigation.
  • Anthony Sabatini, representing Johnson, said an appeal is likely, keeping alive a dispute that comes as Mills struggles to raise money and faces a House ethics investigation.

Insights

A judge upheld his ballot access, but could a higher court ruling on a notary technicality change the outcome?