Democratic presidential candidate falls short of the 1,000 required signatures after only 772 of the 1,175 signatures the campaign submitted were deemed valid

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley failed to qualify for Ohio’s primary ballot after falling short of the signatures needed to appear before the state’s voters, a spokesman for the state’s elections chief said on Thursday.



O’Malley needed 1,000 valid signatures to appear on the 15 March primary ballot. The former Maryland governor’s campaign submitted 1,175 signatures, but only 772 were deemed valid, Josh Eck, a spokesman for the Ohio secretary of state, Jon Husted, told the Associated Press.

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O’Malley’s campaign expressed disappointment, though it noted the candidate is on the ballot in 18 other states.

“While this news is disappointing, we are exploring all of our options, and Governor O’Malley will campaign vigorously in Ohio,” spokeswoman Haley Morris said in an emailed statement.

O’Malley is running an underdog bid for his party’s nomination against Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. Both his Democratic rivals qualified for Ohio’s primary ballot, Husted’s office said.

Clinton already has the support of some key Democratic insiders in Ohio, where she won the 2008 primary over Barack Obama.