Georgia’s highest court will hear oral arguments next week about whether minor presidential candidates Cornel West and Claudia De la Cruz should be on the November ballot, after
Liberal independent presidential candidate Cornel West has been disqualified from running in the presidential election on Georgia’s ballot ahead of the November election. Two state court judges ruled Wednesday that West and socialist candidate Claudia De la Cruz have been disqualified from the ballot because their electors did not file the proper paperwork.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has not yet said whether third-party candidate Cornel West can stay be the ballot.
With Cornel West's candidacy eliminated, Kamala Harris faces one less obstacle to winning Pennsylvania this fall.
Cornel West will be on Virginia's presidential ballot in November. Why it matters: The state's Department of Elections had initially disqualified his candidacy because of faulty paperwork before reversing its decision earlier this month.
Georgia state court judges have disqualified presidential candidates Cornel West and Claudia De la Cruz from running for president in the state.
The Michigan Supreme Court has ruled that independent presidential candidate Cornel West’s name will remain on Michigan’s Nov. 5 presidential ballot. In an order issued Monday, the state’s highest court upheld a ruling by the Michigan Court of Appeals last week,
Cornel West and Abdullah will also appear on the ballots of the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Georgia
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.
In separate rulings, two Georgia judges have ruled that independent candidates Cornel West and Claudia De la Cruz are not qualified candidates for president.
Georgia requires presidential candidates to collect at least 7,500 signatures from votes to qualify for the ballot. West and De la Cruz cleared that hurdle, but state law requires those signatures to be submitted in the name of one of their 16 potential state electors.