"None of These Candidates" is a voting option in
Nevada for all statewide, presidential and vice presidential election ballots.[1] This option is listed along with the names of individuals running for the position and is often described as "
none of the above". The option first appeared on the Nevada ballot in 1975.[2]
Notable impact on elections
If the "None of These Candidates" option receives the most votes in an election, then the actual candidate who receives the most votes still wins the election. This has most notably happened on two occasions: in the 1976 Republican primary for
Nevada's At-large congressional district, None of These Candidates received 16,097 votes, while Walden Earhart received 9,831 votes, followed by Dart Anthony with 8,097 votes. Even though he received fewer votes than "None of These Candidates", Earhart won the Republican nomination.[2] He lost to incumbent Democratic Representative
Jim Santini in the general election. In the
2014 Democratic gubernatorial primary, "None of These Candidates" received 30% of the popular vote, a plurality. Robert Goodman, the runner-up with 25% of the vote, was the Democratic nominee by state law.[3]
According to a report by then-
Secretary of StateDean Heller, "None of These Candidates" has finished first on three other occasions:
a 1978 Republican congressional primary
a 1978 Republican Secretary of State primary
a 1986 Democratic Treasurer primary.
The "None of These Candidates" options has finished first on a few other occasions after Heller published his report:
The "None of These Candidates" option has possibly played a
spoiler effect in close races, such as in the
1998 U.S. Senate election, in which Democratic incumbent
Sen.Harry Reid defeated Republican challenger
John Ensign by only 428 votes, while None of These Candidates drew 8,125 votes.[6]
Court challenge
In June 2012, anticipating a close race in
Nevada during the 2012 presidential elections, the
Republican National Committee challenged the constitutionality of the option. Fearing that the option would siphon votes from
the Republican ticket, the RNC claimed that the option is not constitutional because if "None of these Candidates" received the most votes, it would not win the election. The
Nevada Attorney General, on behalf of the
Secretary of State of Nevada, argued that the option was a protest vote intended to send a message and whose outcome was no different from not voting at all. On August 22,
U.S. District Court JudgeRobert Jones agreed with the plaintiffs and struck down the law allowing the option as unconstitutional. He refused to issue a
stay pending the outcome of an appeal, meaning the ban on this option was immediate.[7]
On September 4, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued an emergency stay against the district court's order.[8] The emergency stay barred the implementation of Judge Jones's injunction until the Ninth Circuit could hear an appeal, allowing the "none of these candidates" option to remain on the ballot in the
November 2012 elections. On July 10, 2013, the Court of Appeals threw out the lawsuit, preserving the "none of these candidates" option.[9] One member of that panel, Judge
Stephen Reinhardt, criticized Jones' handling of the case: "His dilatory tactics appear to serve no purpose other than to seek to prevent the state from taking an appeal of his decision before it prints the ballots.... Such arrogance and assumption of power by one individual is not acceptable in our judicial system."[10]
General election results in presidential, senatorial, and gubernatorial elections
^a little more than the margin of victory which was 27,202 votes
^Values given are for the general election. During the Republican primary, the "None of These candidates" received more votes than any actual candidate. However, no delegates were awarded based on the primary. Delegates were awarded at the Republican caucuses in lieu.[5]
^just under the margin of victory, which was 5,657 votes
^almost 19 times the margin of victory, which was 428 votes
^almost four times the margin of victory, which was 11,576 votes
^about 57% higher than the margin of victory, which was 26,915 votes
^about 57% higher than the margin of victory, which was 7,928 votes
^a little under the margin of victory, which was 23,319 votes
^Values given are for the general election. During the Democratic primary, the "None of These candidates" received more votes than any actual candidate. Since only actual candidates can win, Bob Goodman, the candidate with the most votes, won the primary and advanced to the general election.
^just under the margin of victory, which was 15,386)