Pennsylvania court rejects Cornel West's bid to get on ballot and clears way for mail voting
- Pennsylvania's Supreme Court upheld a ruling that rejected Cornel West's bid to be on the November ballot as reported by AP.
- The courts sided with the secretary of state's office under Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro regarding West's candidacy paperwork.
- The decision allows counties to begin printing and sending mail-in ballots ahead of the November 5 election.
21 Articles
21 Articles
Presidential candidate Cornel West loses bid for Pennsylvania ballot
Independent presidential candidate Cornel West will not make Pennsylvania's ballot after the battleground state's Supreme Court on Monday upheld a lower court ruling, and counties started printing ballots.
Cornel West loses bid to get on presidential election ballots in key swing state
Independent presidential candidate Cornel West will not appear on ballots in the battleground Pennsylvania, the state’s Supreme Court ruled Monday. West’s insurgent candidacy had been challenged in Pennsylvania by Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s administration, with his secretary of state’s office arguing that the 71-year-old far-left candidate did not submit all the required paperwork on time. The state’s Supreme Court ruling affirmed a lower c…
Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirms Cornel West will not appear on state ballots
Academic and activist Cornel West, who is running for president as an independent candidate, won't be on the ballot in Pennsylvania, the state Supreme Court decided Monday in upholding a lower court's ruling.

Pennsylvania court rejects Cornel West's bid to get on ballot and clears way for mail voting
Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court has upheld a lower ruling that rejected a bid to get independent presidential candidate Cornel West on the battleground state's ballot for the November election.
Cornel West will not appear on Pennsylvania presidential ballot: PA Supreme Court
The candidates that will appear on Pennsylvania's presidential ballots are Vice President Kamala Harris for the Democratic Party, former President Donald Trump for the Republican Party, Chase Oliver for the Libertarian Party, and Jill Stein for the Green Party.
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