Two more third party candidates have made it onto the West Virginia's ballot in November to run for president of the United States and West Virginia's next governor.
Tennessee resident Darrell Castle and West Virginia native Phil Hudok have both surpassed the 6,645 signatures needed to get their names listed as candidates for the Constitution Party.
Castle is running for the presidency along with Scott Bradley, his vice presidential running mate.
Hudok, who also ran a failed campaign for one of West Virginia's U.S. Senate seats in 2014, now is casting his hat into the ring to become the Mountain State's next governor.
"With Phil Hudok on the ballot," a press release about his campaign says, "the people have a proven champion of Christian principles with a message of no compromise on Constitutional Rule of Law issues.
"We cannot afford to abandon the original intent and Christian heritage of America," it adds.
Hudok previously has sued over the state's rules for mandated-vaccination for children attending public schools, arguing for a religious exemption for his daughter.
"He refuses to accept and continues to expose the deceptive and unconstitutional yoking of churches and corporate government," the press release says.
Last year, Hudok was shown in a video with a man from Mineral Wells who later was arrested for threatening to commit a terrorist act at the West Virginia State Capitol.
His press release says he continues to fight "the burgeoning police state."