IVP is best known for authoring California's
nonpartisan blanket primary (top-two primary), which was enacted through
Proposition 14 in 2010. Along with other political reforms, the top-two primary was credited with easing gridlock in state government. In 2014, IVP was one of a group of plaintiffs (including IndependentVoting.org and seven individual plaintiffs who were unaffiliated with either major political party) who filed a complaint in federal court alleging that New Jersey's current closed primary election process violated the
federal and
state constitutions. The plaintiffs specifically claimed that closed primaries violated their
First Amendment right not to associate with a political party, and also claimed that the state constitution barred the state government from allocating money for the administration of primary elections. The IVP was unsuccessful; the complaint was dismissed in 2014 by the
U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, and in 2015 this decision was affirmed by the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. In 2016 and 2017, the IVP filed two
amicus briefs in support of the plaintiffs in the case
Level the Playing Field, et al. v. Federal Election Commission. The plaintiffs (the
Green Party,
Libertarian Party, and others) allege that the
Federal Election Commission violated the
Administrative Procedure Act in dismissing two administrative complaints regarding the
Commission on Presidential Debates and "in denying a petition to engage in rulemaking to change the FEC's regulations regarding debate staging organizations." == References ==