Which of the following is not a position of the Texas Green Party?
- substance abuse, including alcoholism, to be treated as a disease or psychological disorder, not a crime.
- the decriminalization of marijuana, and the immediate release of all prisoners held on only nonviolent marijuana-related charges.
- consenting adults ought not be restricted from partaking in activities that harm no one else. This includes possession, consumption and/or market transactions of
substances for medicinal, recreational, or other purposes.
- pre-employment and/or random drug screening is a violation of the 4th amendment of the U.S. Constitution and an immediate ban on these practices.
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In most states, candidates get on the primary ballot by filing a petition. State election laws specify how many signatures the petition has to contain--either a specific number or a percentage of the vote for the office in the past election. States vary a lot in the difficulty of this step. Some have complicated rules requiring a lot of signatures, designed to favor party insiders. In some other states, a candidate needs only to appear before the clerk of elections and pay a small fee. A few states even put presidential candidates on the ballot if they are "generally recognized" to be running. These simple rules have consequences for parties. The easier it is for candidates to get on the ballot, the more likely it becomes that dissident, or even crackpot, candidates will enter a race and engage the party's preferred candidates in costly primary battles. In states with easy ballot access, citizens can be treated to grudge campaigns, in which people file to oppose the sheriff who arrested them, for instance, or who simply enjoy the thought of wreaking havoc in a primary.
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