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Public Act 102-0668 |
SB0536 Enrolled | LRB102 12960 SMS 18303 b |
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AN ACT concerning elections.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Election Code is amended by changing |
Sections 1A-16, 2A-1.1b, 9-8.5, 9-10, 11-2, 11-3, 11-4.2, |
11-8, 19-2, 19-2.5, and 19-6 and by adding Section 1-19 as |
follows: |
(10 ILCS 5/1-19 new) |
Sec. 1-19. Access to Voting for Persons with Disabilities |
Advisory Task Force. |
(a) The Access to Voting for Persons with Disabilities |
Advisory Task Force is hereby created to review current laws |
and make recommendations to improve access to voting for |
persons with disabilities. Members of the Task Force shall be |
appointed as follows: |
(1) Three members appointed by the Governor, one of |
whom shall serve as chair, and at least one with |
experience representing or working with persons with |
physical disabilities and one with experience representing |
or working with person with neurological or mental |
disabilities; |
(2) Three members appointed by the President of the |
Senate, including at least one attorney with election law |
|
experience; |
(3) Three members appointed by the Senate Minority |
Leader, including at least one attorney with election law |
experience; |
(4) Three members appointed by the Speaker of the |
House of Representatives, including at least one attorney |
with election law experience; |
(5) Three members appointed by the Minority Leader of |
the House of Representatives, including at least one |
attorney with election law experience. |
(b) The Task Force shall hold a minimum of 4 meetings. No |
later than August 1, 2022, the Task Force shall produce and the |
State Board of Elections shall publish on its website a report |
with a summary of the laws and resources available for persons |
with disabilities seeking to exercise their right to vote. The |
Task Force shall produce a report with recommendations for |
changes to current law or recommendations for election |
authorities submit the report to the Governor and General |
Assembly no later than December 15, 2022. |
(c) The Members shall serve without compensation. If a |
vacancy occurs on the Task Force, it shall be filled according |
to the guidelines of the initial appointment. At the |
discretion of the chair, additional individuals may |
participate as non-voting members in the meetings of the Task |
Force. |
(d) The State Board of Elections shall provide staff and |
|
administrative support to the Task Force. |
(e) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2024.
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(10 ILCS 5/1A-16)
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(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-292 )
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Sec. 1A-16. Voter registration information; Internet |
posting; processing
of voter registration forms; content of |
such forms. Notwithstanding any law to
the contrary, the |
following provisions shall apply to voter registration under
|
this Code.
|
(a) Voter registration information; Internet posting of |
voter registration
form. Within 90 days after August 21, 2003 |
(the effective date of Public Act 93-574), the State Board of |
Elections shall post on its World Wide Web
site the following |
information:
|
(1) A comprehensive list of the names, addresses, |
phone numbers, and
websites, if applicable, of all county |
clerks and boards
of election commissioners in Illinois.
|
(2) A schedule of upcoming elections and the deadline |
for voter
registration.
|
(3) A downloadable, printable voter registration form, |
in at least English
and in
Spanish versions, that a person |
may complete and mail or submit to the
State Board of |
Elections or the appropriate county clerk or
board of |
election commissioners.
|
Any forms described under paragraph (3) must state the |
|
following:
|
If you do not have a driver's license or social |
security number, and this
form is submitted by mail, and |
you have never registered to vote in the
jurisdiction you |
are now registering in, then you must send, with this
|
application, either (i) a copy of a current and valid |
photo identification, or
(ii) a copy of a current utility |
bill, bank statement, government check,
paycheck, or other |
government document that shows the name and address of the
|
voter. If you do not provide the information required |
above, then you will be
required to provide election |
officials with either (i) or (ii) described above
the |
first time you vote at a voting place.
|
(b) Acceptance of registration forms by the State Board of |
Elections and
county clerks and board of election |
commissioners. The
State Board of Elections, county clerks, |
and board of election commissioners
shall accept all completed |
voter registration forms
described in subsection (a)(3) of |
this Section and Sections 1A-17 and 1A-30 that are:
|
(1) postmarked on or before the day that voter |
registration is closed
under this
Code;
|
(2) not postmarked, but arrives no later than 5 days |
after the close
of registration;
|
(3) submitted in person by a person using the form on |
or before the
day that voter registration is closed under |
this Code; or
|
|
(4) submitted in person by a person who submits one or |
more forms
on behalf of one or more persons who used the |
form on or before
the day that voter registration is |
closed under this Code.
|
Upon the receipt of a registration form, the State Board |
of Elections shall
mark
the date on which the form was received
|
and send the form via first class mail to the appropriate |
county clerk or board
of
election commissioners, as the case |
may be, within 2 business days based upon
the home address of |
the person submitting the registration form. The county
clerk |
and board of election commissioners shall accept and process |
any form
received from the State Board of Elections.
|
(c) Processing of registration forms by county clerks and |
boards of election
commissioners. The county clerk or board of |
election commissioners shall
promulgate procedures for |
processing the voter registration form.
|
(d) Contents of the voter registration form. The State |
Board shall create
a voter registration form, which must |
contain the following content:
|
(1) Instructions for completing the form.
|
(2) A summary of the qualifications to register to |
vote in Illinois.
|
(3) Instructions for mailing in or submitting the form |
in person.
|
(4) The phone number for the State Board of Elections |
should a person
submitting the form have questions.
|
|
(5) A box for the person to check that explains one of |
3 reasons for
submitting the form:
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(a) new registration;
|
(b) change of address; or
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(c) change of name.
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(6) a box for the person to check yes or no that asks, |
"Are you a citizen
of the United States?", a box for the |
person to check yes or no that asks,
"Will you be 18 years |
of age on or before election day?", and a statement of
"If |
you checked 'no' in response to either of these questions, |
then do not
complete this form.".
|
(7) A space for the person to fill in his or her home |
telephone
number.
|
(8) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her first, |
middle, and last
names, street address (principal place of |
residence), county, city, state, and
zip code.
|
(9) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her mailing |
address, city,
state, and zip code if different from his |
or her principal place of residence.
|
(10) A space for the person to fill in his or her |
Illinois driver's
license number if the person has a |
driver's license.
|
(11) A space for a person without a driver's license |
to fill in the last
four digits of his or her social |
security number if the person has a social
security |
number.
|
|
(12) A space for a person without an Illinois driver's |
license to fill in
his or her identification number from |
his or her State Identification card
issued by the |
Secretary of State.
|
(13) A space for the person to fill the name appearing |
on his or her last
voter registration, the street address |
of his or her last registration,
including the city, |
county, state, and zip code.
|
(14) A space where the person swears or affirms the |
following under
penalty of perjury with his or her |
signature:
|
(a) "I am a citizen of the United States.";
|
(b) "I will be at least 18 years old on or before |
the next election.";
|
(c) "I will have lived in the State of Illinois and |
in my election
precinct at least 30 days as of the date |
of the next election."; and
|
(d) "The information I have provided is true to |
the best of my knowledge
under penalty of perjury. If I |
have provided false information, then I may be
fined, |
imprisoned, or, if I am not a U.S. citizen, deported |
from or refused
entry into the United States.".
|
(15) A space for the person to fill in his or her |
e-mail address if he or she chooses to provide that |
information. |
(d-5) Compliance with federal law; rulemaking authority. |
|
The voter
registration
form described in this Section shall be |
consistent with the form prescribed by
the
Federal
Election |
Commission under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,
|
P.L. 103-31, as amended from time to time, and the Help America |
Vote Act of
2002, P.L. 107-252, in all relevant respects. The |
State Board of Elections
shall periodically update the form |
based on changes to federal or State law.
The State Board of |
Elections shall promulgate any rules necessary for the
|
implementation of this Section; provided that the rules
|
comport with the letter and spirit of the National Voter |
Registration Act of
1993 and Help America Vote Act of 2002 and |
maximize the opportunity for a
person to register to vote.
|
(d-10) No later than 90 days after the 2022 general |
election, the State Board of Elections shall permit applicants |
to choose between "male", "female", or "non-binary" when |
designating the applicant's sex on the voter registration |
form. |
(e) Forms available in paper form. The State Board of |
Elections shall make
the voter registration form available in |
regular paper stock and form in
sufficient quantities for the |
general public. The State Board of Elections may
provide the |
voter registration form to the Secretary of State, county
|
clerks, boards of election commissioners, designated agencies |
of the State of
Illinois, and any other person or entity |
designated to have these forms by this Code in regular paper |
stock and form or some other format deemed
suitable by the |
|
Board. Each county clerk or board of election commissioners |
has
the authority to design and print its own voter |
registration form so long as
the form complies with the |
requirements of this Section. The State Board
of Elections, |
county clerks, boards of election commissioners, or other
|
designated agencies of the State of Illinois required to have |
these forms under this
Code shall provide a member of the |
public with any reasonable
number of forms
that he or she may |
request. Nothing in this Section shall permit the State
Board |
of
Elections, county clerk, board of election commissioners, |
or other appropriate
election official who may accept a voter |
registration form to refuse to accept
a voter registration |
form because the form is printed on photocopier or regular
|
paper
stock and form.
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-292 )
|
Sec. 1A-16. Voter registration information; Internet |
posting; processing
of voter registration forms; content of |
such forms. Notwithstanding any law to
the contrary, the |
following provisions shall apply to voter registration under
|
this Code.
|
(a) Voter registration information; Internet posting of |
voter registration
form. Within 90 days after August 21, 2003 |
(the effective date of Public Act 93-574), the State Board of |
|
Elections shall post on its World Wide Web
site the following |
information:
|
(1) A comprehensive list of the names, addresses, |
phone numbers, and
websites, if applicable, of all county |
clerks and boards
of election commissioners in Illinois.
|
(2) A schedule of upcoming elections and the deadline |
for voter
registration.
|
(3) A downloadable, printable voter registration form, |
in at least English
and in
Spanish versions, that a person |
may complete and mail or submit to the
State Board of |
Elections or the appropriate county clerk or
board of |
election commissioners.
|
Any forms described under paragraph (3) must state the |
following:
|
If you do not have a driver's license or social |
security number, and this
form is submitted by mail, and |
you have never registered to vote in the
jurisdiction you |
are now registering in, then you must send, with this
|
application, either (i) a copy of a current and valid |
photo identification, or
(ii) a copy of a current utility |
bill, bank statement, government check,
paycheck, or other |
government document that shows the name and address of the
|
voter. If you do not provide the information required |
above, then you will be
required to provide election |
officials with either (i) or (ii) described above
the |
first time you vote at a voting place.
|
|
(b) Acceptance of registration forms by the State Board of |
Elections and
county clerks and board of election |
commissioners. The
State Board of Elections, county clerks, |
and board of election commissioners
shall accept all completed |
voter registration forms
described in subsection (a)(3) of |
this Section and Section 1A-17 and voter registration forms |
created under Section 30 of the Address Confidentiality for |
Victims of Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, Human |
Trafficking, or Stalking Act that are:
|
(1) postmarked on or before the day that voter |
registration is closed
under this
Code;
|
(2) not postmarked, but arrives no later than 5 days |
after the close
of registration;
|
(3) submitted in person by a person using the form on |
or before the
day that voter registration is closed under |
this Code; or
|
(4) submitted in person by a person who submits one or |
more forms
on behalf of one or more persons who used the |
form on or before
the day that voter registration is |
closed under this Code.
|
Upon the receipt of a registration form, the State Board |
of Elections shall
mark
the date on which the form was received
|
and send the form via first class mail to the appropriate |
county clerk or board
of
election commissioners, as the case |
may be, within 2 business days based upon
the home address of |
the person submitting the registration form. The county
clerk |
|
and board of election commissioners shall accept and process |
any form
received from the State Board of Elections.
|
(c) Processing of registration forms by county clerks and |
boards of election
commissioners. The county clerk or board of |
election commissioners shall
promulgate procedures for |
processing the voter registration form.
|
(d) Contents of the voter registration form. The State |
Board shall create
a voter registration form, which must |
contain the following content:
|
(1) Instructions for completing the form.
|
(2) A summary of the qualifications to register to |
vote in Illinois.
|
(3) Instructions for mailing in or submitting the form |
in person.
|
(4) The phone number for the State Board of Elections |
should a person
submitting the form have questions.
|
(5) A box for the person to check that explains one of |
3 reasons for
submitting the form:
|
(a) new registration;
|
(b) change of address; or
|
(c) change of name.
|
(6) a box for the person to check yes or no that asks, |
"Are you a citizen
of the United States?", a box for the |
person to check yes or no that asks,
"Will you be 18 years |
of age on or before election day?", and a statement of
"If |
you checked 'no' in response to either of these questions, |
|
then do not
complete this form.".
|
(7) A space for the person to fill in his or her home |
telephone
number.
|
(8) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her first, |
middle, and last
names, street address (principal place of |
residence), county, city, state, and
zip code.
|
(9) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her mailing |
address, city,
state, and zip code if different from his |
or her principal place of residence.
|
(10) A space for the person to fill in his or her |
Illinois driver's
license number if the person has a |
driver's license.
|
(11) A space for a person without a driver's license |
to fill in the last
four digits of his or her social |
security number if the person has a social
security |
number.
|
(12) A space for a person without an Illinois driver's |
license to fill in
his or her identification number from |
his or her State Identification card
issued by the |
Secretary of State.
|
(13) A space for the person to fill the name appearing |
on his or her last
voter registration, the street address |
of his or her last registration,
including the city, |
county, state, and zip code.
|
(14) A space where the person swears or affirms the |
following under
penalty of perjury with his or her |
|
signature:
|
(a) "I am a citizen of the United States.";
|
(b) "I will be at least 18 years old on or before |
the next election.";
|
(c) "I will have lived in the State of Illinois and |
in my election
precinct at least 30 days as of the date |
of the next election."; and
|
(d) "The information I have provided is true to |
the best of my knowledge
under penalty of perjury. If I |
have provided false information, then I may be
fined, |
imprisoned, or, if I am not a U.S. citizen, deported |
from or refused
entry into the United States.".
|
(15) A space for the person to fill in his or her |
e-mail address if he or she chooses to provide that |
information. |
(d-5) Compliance with federal law; rulemaking authority. |
The voter
registration
form described in this Section shall be |
consistent with the form prescribed by
the
Federal
Election |
Commission under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,
|
P.L. 103-31, as amended from time to time, and the Help America |
Vote Act of
2002, P.L. 107-252, in all relevant respects. The |
State Board of Elections
shall periodically update the form |
based on changes to federal or State law.
The State Board of |
Elections shall promulgate any rules necessary for the
|
implementation of this Section; provided that the rules
|
comport with the letter and spirit of the National Voter |
|
Registration Act of
1993 and Help America Vote Act of 2002 and |
maximize the opportunity for a
person to register to vote.
|
(d-10) No later than 90 days after the 2022 general |
election, the State Board of Elections shall permit applicants |
to choose between "male", "female", or "non-binary" when |
designating the applicant's sex on the voter registration |
form. |
(e) Forms available in paper form. The State Board of |
Elections shall make
the voter registration form available in |
regular paper stock and form in
sufficient quantities for the |
general public. The State Board of Elections may
provide the |
voter registration form to the Secretary of State, county
|
clerks, boards of election commissioners, designated agencies |
of the State of
Illinois, and any other person or entity |
designated to have these forms by this Code in regular paper |
stock and form or some other format deemed
suitable by the |
Board. Each county clerk or board of election commissioners |
has
the authority to design and print its own voter |
registration form so long as
the form complies with the |
requirements of this Section. The State Board
of Elections, |
county clerks, boards of election commissioners, or other
|
designated agencies of the State of Illinois required to have |
these forms under this
Code shall provide a member of the |
public with any reasonable
number of forms
that he or she may |
request. Nothing in this Section shall permit the State
Board |
of
Elections, county clerk, board of election commissioners, |
|
or other appropriate
election official who may accept a voter |
registration form to refuse to accept
a voter registration |
form because the form is printed on photocopier or regular
|
paper
stock and form.
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 102-292, eff. 1-1-22.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/2A-1.1b) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) |
Sec. 2A-1.1b. 2022 general primary election and general |
election dates. |
(a) In addition to the provisions of this Code and
|
notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the provisions
|
in this Section shall govern the dates for the conduct of the
|
2022 general primary election and for preparing for the 2022 |
general election. The provisions of this Code shall
control |
any aspect of the administration or conduct of the 2022
|
general primary election and 2022 general election that is not |
provided for in this Section,
provided that in the event of |
conflict between this Section and
any other provision of this |
Code or any other law, the
provisions of this Section shall |
control. The provisions of this Section shall apply to all
|
election authorities, including, but not limited to, those
|
under the jurisdiction of a Board of Election Commissioners. |
The provisions of this Section shall apply for the
dates for |
the 2022 general primary election and the 2022 general |
|
election only
and the provisions of this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General
Assembly shall be in effect through December 31, |
2022. |
(b) Petitions for nomination for the general primary |
election may begin circulation on January 13, 2022. All |
petitions for nomination of an established party candidate for |
statewide office shall be signed by at least 3,250 but not more |
than 6,500 of the qualified primary electors of the |
candidate's party. All petitions for nomination of an |
established party candidate for the office of Representative |
in the General Assembly shall be signed by at least 400 but not |
more than 1,000 of the qualified primary electors of the |
candidate's party in the candidate's representative district. |
All petitions for nomination of an established party candidate |
for the office of State Senator shall be signed by at least 650 |
but not more than 2,000 of the qualified primary electors of |
the candidate's party in the candidate's legislative district. |
The signature requirement for an established party candidate |
for all other offices shall be reduced by one-third and any |
provision of this Code limiting the maximum number of |
signatures that may be submitted for those offices shall be |
reduced by one-third. |
(c) Petitions for nomination for congressional, or |
judicial office, or for any office a nomination for which is |
made for a territorial division or district which comprises |
more than one county or is partly in one county and partly in |
|
another county or counties (including the Fox Metro Water |
Reclamation District) for the general primary election may be |
filed in the principal office of the State Board of Elections |
beginning on March 7, 2022 but no later than March 14, 2022; a |
petition for nomination to fill a vacancy by special election |
in the office of representative in Congress from this State |
(for vacancies occurring between February 21, 2022 and March |
14, 2022) for the general primary election may be filed in the |
principal office of the State Board of Elections beginning |
March 28, 2022 but no later than April 4, 2022. |
(d) Objections to certificates of nomination and |
nomination papers and petitions to submit public questions to |
a referendum for the general primary election shall be filed |
no later than March 21, 2022. |
(e) Electors may request vote by mail ballots for the |
general primary election beginning on March 30, 2022 but no |
later than June 23, 2022. |
(f) Petitions for nomination for independent candidates |
and new political party candidates for the general election |
may begin circulation on April 13, 2022. |
(g) The State Board of Elections shall certify the names |
of candidates who filed nomination papers or certificates of |
nomination for the general primary election with the Board no |
later than April 21, 2022. |
(h) A notarized declaration of intent to be a write-in |
candidate for the general primary election shall be filed with |
|
the proper election authority or authorities no later than |
April 28, 2022. |
(i) Each election authority shall mail ballots to each |
person who has filed an application for a ballot for the |
general primary election under Article 20 no later than May |
14, 2022, and any application received after May 12, 2022 |
shall be mailed within 2 business days after receipt of the |
application. |
(j) The period for early voting by personal appearance for |
the general primary election shall begin on May 19, 2022. |
(k) The general primary election shall be held on June 28, |
2022. |
(l) The last day for an established party managing |
committee to appoint someone to fill a vacancy for the general |
election when no candidate was nominated at the general |
primary election and for the appointee to file the required |
documentation is July 25, 2022 August 13, 2022 . The signature |
requirement for an established party candidate filing to fill |
a vacancy shall be reduced by two-thirds and any provision of |
this Code limiting the maximum number of signatures that may |
be submitted for those offices shall be reduced by two-thirds. |
Objections to nomination papers, certificates of nomination, |
or resolutions for established party candidates filing to fill |
a vacancy shall be filed no later than August 1, 2022. |
(m) Certificates of nomination and nomination papers for |
the nomination of new political parties and independent |
|
candidates for offices to be filled by electors of the entire |
State, or any district not entirely within a county, or for |
congressional, State legislative or judicial offices shall be |
presented to the principal office of the State Board of |
Elections beginning July 5, 2022 but no later than July 11, |
2022. Certificates of nomination and nomination papers for the |
nomination of new political parties and independent candidates |
for all other offices shall be presented to the appropriate |
election authority or local election official with whom such |
nomination papers are filed beginning July 5, 2022 but no |
later than July 11, 2022. |
(n) Objections to certificates of nomination and |
nomination papers for new political parties and independent |
candidates for the general election shall be filed no later |
than July 18, 2022. |
(o) (Blank). A person for whom a petition for nomination |
has been filed for the general election may withdraw his or her |
petition with the appropriate election authority no later than |
August 13, 2022. |
(p) (Blank). The State Board of Elections shall certify to |
the county clerks
the names of each of the candidates to appear |
on the ballot for the general election no later than September |
6, 2022. |
(q) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.) |
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-8.5) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-664 ) |
Sec. 9-8.5. Limitations on campaign contributions. |
(a) It is unlawful for a political committee to accept |
contributions except as provided in this Section. |
(b) During an election cycle, a candidate political |
committee may not accept contributions with an aggregate value |
over the following: (i) $5,000 from any individual, (ii) |
$10,000 from any corporation, labor organization, or |
association, or (iii) $50,000 from a candidate political |
committee or political action committee. A candidate political |
committee may accept contributions in any amount from a |
political party committee except during an election cycle in |
which the candidate seeks nomination at a primary election. |
During an election cycle in which the candidate seeks |
nomination at a primary election, a candidate political |
committee may not accept contributions from political party |
committees with an aggregate value over the following: (i) |
$200,000 for a candidate political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to statewide office, |
(ii) $125,000 for a candidate political committee established |
to support a candidate seeking nomination to the Senate, the |
Supreme Court or Appellate Court in the First Judicial |
District, or an office elected by all voters in a county with |
1,000,000 or more residents, (iii) $75,000 for a candidate |
political committee established to support a candidate seeking |
|
nomination to the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court |
or Appellate Court for a Judicial District other than the |
First Judicial District, an office elected by all voters of a |
county of fewer than 1,000,000 residents, and municipal and |
county offices in Cook County other than those elected by all |
voters of Cook County, and (iv) $50,000 for a candidate |
political committee established to support the nomination of a |
candidate to any other office.
A candidate political committee |
established to elect a candidate to the General Assembly may |
accept contributions from only one legislative caucus |
committee. A candidate political committee may not accept |
contributions from a ballot initiative committee or from an
|
independent expenditure committee. |
(b-5) Judicial elections. |
(1) In addition to any other provision of this |
Section, a candidate political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to the Supreme |
Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court may not: |
(A) accept contributions from any entity that does |
not disclose the identity of those who make |
contributions to the entity, except for contributions |
that are not required to be itemized by this Code; or |
(B) accept contributions from any out-of-state |
person, as defined in this Article. |
(2) As used in this subsection, "contribution" has the |
meaning provided in Section 9-1.4 and also includes the |
|
following that are subject to the limits of this Section: |
(A) expenditures made by any person in concert or |
cooperation with, or at the request or suggestion of, |
a candidate, his or her designated committee, or their |
agents; and |
(B) the financing by any person of the |
dissemination, distribution, or republication, in |
whole or in part, of any broadcast or any written, |
graphic, or other form of campaign materials prepared |
by the candidate, his or her campaign committee, or |
their designated agents. |
(3) As to contributions to a candidate political |
committee established to support a candidate seeking |
nomination to the Supreme Court, Appellate Court, or |
Circuit Court: |
(A) No person shall make a contribution in the |
name of another person or knowingly permit his or her |
name to be used to effect such a contribution. |
(B) No person shall knowingly accept a |
contribution made by one person in the name of another |
person. |
(C) No person shall knowingly accept reimbursement |
from another person for a contribution made in his or |
her own name. |
(D) No person shall make an anonymous |
contribution. |
|
(E) No person shall knowingly accept any anonymous |
contribution. |
(F) No person shall predicate (1) any benefit, |
including, but not limited to, employment decisions, |
including hiring, promotions, bonus compensation, and |
transfers, or (2) any other gift, transfer, or |
emolument upon: |
(i) the decision by the recipient of that |
benefit to donate or not to donate to a candidate; |
or |
(ii) the amount of any such donation. |
(4) No judicial candidate or political committee |
established to support a candidate seeking nomination to |
the Supreme Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court shall |
knowingly accept any contribution or make any expenditure |
in violation of the provisions of this Section. No officer |
or employee of a political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to the Supreme |
Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court shall knowingly |
accept a contribution made for the benefit or use of a |
candidate or knowingly make any expenditure in support of |
or opposition to a candidate or for electioneering |
communications in relation to a candidate in violation of |
any limitation designated for contributions and |
expenditures under this Section. |
(5) Where the provisions of this subsection (b-5) |
|
conflict with any other provision of this Code, this |
subsection (b-5) shall control. |
(c) During an election cycle, a political party committee |
may not accept contributions with an aggregate value over the |
following: (i) $10,000 from any individual, (ii) $20,000 from |
any corporation, labor organization, or association, or (iii) |
$50,000 from a political action committee. A political party |
committee may accept contributions in any amount from another |
political party committee or a candidate political committee, |
except as provided in subsection (c-5). Nothing in this |
Section shall limit the amounts that may be transferred |
between a political party committee established under |
subsection (a) of Section 7-8 of this Code and an affiliated |
federal political committee established under the Federal |
Election Code by the same political party. A political party |
committee may not accept contributions from a ballot |
initiative committee or from an
independent expenditure |
committee. A political party committee established by a |
legislative caucus may not accept contributions from another |
political party committee established by a legislative caucus. |
(c-5) During the period beginning on the date candidates |
may begin circulating petitions for a primary election and |
ending on the day of the primary election, a political party |
committee may not accept contributions with an aggregate value |
over $50,000 from a candidate political committee or political |
party committee. A political party committee may accept |
|
contributions in any amount from a candidate political |
committee or political party committee if the political party |
committee receiving the contribution filed a statement of |
nonparticipation in the primary as provided in subsection |
(c-10). The Task Force on Campaign Finance Reform shall study |
and make recommendations on the provisions of this subsection |
to the Governor and General Assembly by September 30, 2012. |
This subsection becomes inoperative on July 1, 2013 and |
thereafter no longer applies. |
(c-10) A political party committee that does not intend to |
make contributions to candidates to be nominated at a general |
primary election or consolidated primary election may file a |
Statement of Nonparticipation in a Primary Election with the |
Board. The Statement of Nonparticipation shall include a |
verification signed by the chairperson and treasurer of the |
committee that (i) the committee will not make contributions |
or coordinated expenditures in support of or opposition to a |
candidate or candidates to be nominated at the general primary |
election or consolidated primary election (select one) to be |
held on (insert date), (ii) the political party committee may |
accept unlimited contributions from candidate political |
committees and political party committees, provided that the |
political party committee does not make contributions to a |
candidate or candidates to be nominated at the primary |
election, and (iii) failure to abide by these requirements |
shall deem the political party committee in violation of this |
|
Article and subject the committee to a fine of no more than |
150% of the total contributions or coordinated expenditures |
made by the committee in violation of this Article. This |
subsection becomes inoperative on July 1, 2013 and thereafter |
no longer applies. |
(d) During an election cycle, a political action committee |
may not accept contributions with an aggregate value over the |
following: (i) $10,000 from any individual, (ii) $20,000 from |
any corporation, labor organization, political party |
committee, or association, or (iii) $50,000 from a political |
action committee or candidate political committee. A political |
action committee may not accept contributions from a ballot |
initiative committee or from an
independent expenditure |
committee. |
(e) A ballot initiative committee may accept contributions |
in any amount from any source, provided that the committee |
files the document required by Section 9-3 of this Article and |
files the disclosure reports required by the provisions of |
this Article. |
(e-5) An independent expenditure committee may accept |
contributions in any amount from any source, provided that the |
committee files the document required by Section 9-3 of this |
Article and files the disclosure reports required by the |
provisions of this Article. |
(f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a political |
committee from dividing the proceeds of joint fundraising |
|
efforts; provided that no political committee may receive more |
than the limit from any one contributor, and provided that an |
independent
expenditure committee may not conduct joint |
fundraising efforts with a
candidate political committee or a |
political party committee. |
(g) On January 1 of each odd-numbered year, the State |
Board of Elections shall adjust the amounts of the |
contribution limitations established in this Section for |
inflation as determined by the Consumer Price Index for All |
Urban Consumers as issued by the United States Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100. The State Board shall |
publish this information on its official website. |
(h) Self-funding candidates. If a public official, a |
candidate, or the public official's or candidate's immediate |
family contributes or loans to the public official's or |
candidate's political committee or to other political |
committees that transfer funds to the public official's or |
candidate's political committee or makes independent |
expenditures for the benefit of the public official's or |
candidate's campaign during the 12 months prior to an election |
in an aggregate amount of more than (i) $250,000 for statewide |
office or (ii) $100,000 for all other elective offices, then |
the public official or candidate shall file with the State |
Board of Elections, within one day, a Notification of |
Self-funding that shall detail each contribution or loan made |
by the public official, the candidate, or the public |
|
official's or candidate's immediate family. Within 2 business |
days after the filing of a Notification of Self-funding, the |
notification shall be posted on the Board's website and the |
Board shall give official notice of the filing to each |
candidate for the same office as the public official or |
candidate making the filing, including the public official or |
candidate filing the Notification of Self-funding. Notice |
shall be sent via first class mail to the candidate and the |
treasurer of the candidate's committee. Notice shall also be |
sent by e-mail to the candidate and the treasurer of the |
candidate's committee if the candidate and the treasurer, as |
applicable, have provided the Board with an e-mail address. |
Upon posting of the notice on the Board's website, all |
candidates for that office, including the public official or |
candidate who filed a Notification of Self-funding, shall be |
permitted to accept contributions in excess of any |
contribution limits imposed by subsection (b). If a public |
official or candidate filed a Notification of Self-funding |
during an election cycle that includes a general primary |
election or consolidated primary election and that public |
official or candidate is nominated, all candidates for that |
office, including the nominee who filed the notification of |
self-funding, shall be permitted to accept contributions in |
excess of any contribution limit imposed by subsection (b) for |
the subsequent election cycle. For the purposes of this |
subsection, "immediate family" means the spouse, parent, or |
|
child of a public official or candidate. |
(h-5) If a natural person or independent expenditure |
committee makes independent expenditures in support of or in |
opposition to the campaign of a particular public official or |
candidate in an aggregate amount of more than (i) $250,000 for |
statewide office or (ii) $100,000 for all other elective |
offices in an election cycle, as reported in a written |
disclosure filed under subsection (a) of Section 9-8.6 or |
subsection (e-5) of Section 9-10, then the State Board of |
Elections shall, within 2 business days after the filing of |
the disclosure, post the disclosure on the Board's website and |
give official notice of the disclosure to each candidate for |
the same office as the public official or candidate for whose |
benefit or detriment the natural person or independent |
expenditure committee made independent expenditures. Upon |
posting of the notice on the Board's website, all candidates |
for that office in that election, including the public |
official or candidate for whose benefit or detriment the |
natural person or independent expenditure committee made |
independent expenditures, shall be permitted to accept |
contributions in excess of any contribution limits imposed by |
subsection (b). |
(h-10) If the State Board of Elections receives |
notification or determines that a natural person or persons, |
an independent expenditure committee or committees, or |
combination thereof has made independent expenditures in |
|
support of or in opposition to the campaign of a particular |
public official or candidate in an aggregate amount of more |
than (i) $250,000 for statewide office or (ii) $100,000 for |
all other elective offices in an election cycle, then the |
Board shall, within 2 business days after discovering the |
independent expenditures that, in the aggregate, exceed the |
threshold set forth in (i) and (ii) of this subsection, post |
notice of this fact on the Board's website and give official |
notice to each candidate for the same office as the public |
official or candidate for whose benefit or detriment the |
independent expenditures were made. Notice shall be sent via |
first class mail to the candidate and the treasurer of the |
candidate's committee. Notice shall also be sent by e-mail to |
the candidate and the treasurer of the candidate's committee |
if the candidate and the treasurer, as applicable, have |
provided the Board with an e-mail address. Upon posting of the |
notice on the Board's website, all candidates of that office |
in that election, including the public official or candidate |
for whose benefit or detriment the independent expenditures |
were made, may accept contributions in excess of any |
contribution limits imposed by subsection (b). |
(i) For the purposes of this Section, a corporation, labor |
organization, association, or a political action committee |
established by a corporation, labor organization, or |
association may act as a conduit in facilitating the delivery |
to a political action committee of contributions made through |
|
dues, levies, or similar assessments and the political action |
committee may report the contributions in the aggregate, |
provided that: (i) contributions made through dues, levies, or |
similar assessments paid by any natural person, corporation, |
labor organization, or association in a calendar year may not |
exceed the limits set forth in this Section; (ii) the |
corporation, labor organization, association, or a political |
action committee established by a corporation, labor |
organization, or association facilitating the delivery of |
contributions maintains a list of natural persons, |
corporations, labor organizations, and associations that paid |
the dues, levies, or similar assessments from which the |
contributions comprising the aggregate amount derive; and |
(iii) contributions made through dues, levies, or similar |
assessments paid by any natural person, corporation, labor |
organization, or association that exceed $1,000 $500 in a |
quarterly reporting period shall be itemized on the |
committee's quarterly report and may not be reported in the |
aggregate. A political action committee facilitating the |
delivery of contributions or receiving contributions shall |
disclose the amount of contributions made through dues |
delivered or received and the name of the corporation, labor |
organization, association, or political action committee |
delivering the contributions, if applicable. On January 1 of |
each odd-numbered year, the State Board of Elections shall |
adjust the amounts of the contribution limitations established |
|
in this subsection for inflation as determined by the Consumer |
Price Index for All Urban Consumers as issued by the United |
States Department of Labor and rounded to the nearest $100. |
The State Board shall publish this information on its official |
website. |
(j) A political committee that receives a contribution or |
transfer in violation of this Section shall dispose of the |
contribution or transfer by returning the contribution or |
transfer, or an amount equal to the contribution or transfer, |
to the contributor or transferor or donating the contribution |
or transfer, or an amount equal to the contribution or |
transfer, to a charity. A contribution or transfer received in |
violation of this Section that is not disposed of as provided |
in this subsection within 30 days after the Board sends |
notification to the political committee of the excess |
contribution by certified mail shall escheat to the General |
Revenue Fund and the political committee shall be deemed in |
violation of this Section and subject to a civil penalty not to |
exceed 150% of the total amount of the contribution. |
(k) For the purposes of this Section, "statewide office" |
means the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, |
Secretary of State, Comptroller, and Treasurer. |
(l) This Section is repealed if and when the United States |
Supreme Court invalidates contribution limits on committees |
formed to assist candidates, political parties, corporations, |
associations, or labor organizations established by or |
|
pursuant to federal law.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-766, eff. 7-6-12; 98-115, eff. 7-29-13.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-664 ) |
Sec. 9-8.5. Limitations on campaign contributions. |
(a) It is unlawful for a political committee to accept |
contributions except as provided in this Section. |
(b) During an election cycle, a candidate political |
committee may not accept contributions with an aggregate value |
over the following: (i) $5,000 from any individual, (ii) |
$10,000 from any corporation, labor organization, or |
association, or (iii) $50,000 from a candidate political |
committee or political action committee. A candidate political |
committee may accept contributions in any amount from a |
political party committee except during an election cycle in |
which the candidate seeks nomination at a primary election. |
During an election cycle in which the candidate seeks |
nomination at a primary election, a candidate political |
committee may not accept contributions from political party |
committees with an aggregate value over the following: (i) |
$200,000 for a candidate political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to statewide office, |
(ii) $125,000 for a candidate political committee established |
to support a candidate seeking nomination to the Senate, the |
Supreme Court or Appellate Court in the First Judicial |
District, or an office elected by all voters in a county with |
|
1,000,000 or more residents, (iii) $75,000 for a candidate |
political committee established to support a candidate seeking |
nomination to the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court |
or Appellate Court for a Judicial District other than the |
First Judicial District, an office elected by all voters of a |
county of fewer than 1,000,000 residents, and municipal and |
county offices in Cook County other than those elected by all |
voters of Cook County, and (iv) $50,000 for a candidate |
political committee established to support the nomination of a |
candidate to any other office.
A candidate political committee |
established to elect a candidate to the General Assembly may |
accept contributions from only one legislative caucus |
committee. A candidate political committee may not accept |
contributions from a ballot initiative committee or from an
|
independent expenditure committee. |
(b-5) Judicial elections. |
(1) In addition to any other provision of this |
Section, a candidate political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to the Supreme |
Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court may not: |
(A) accept contributions from any entity that does |
not disclose the identity of those who make |
contributions to the entity, except for contributions |
that are not required to be itemized by this Code; or |
(B) accept contributions from any out-of-state |
person, as defined in this Article. |
|
(2) As used in this subsection, "contribution" has the |
meaning provided in Section 9-1.4 and also includes the |
following that are subject to the limits of this Section: |
(A) expenditures made by any person in concert or |
cooperation with, or at the request or suggestion of, |
a candidate, his or her designated committee, or their |
agents; and |
(B) the financing by any person of the |
dissemination, distribution, or republication, in |
whole or in part, of any broadcast or any written, |
graphic, or other form of campaign materials prepared |
by the candidate, his or her campaign committee, or |
their designated agents. |
(3) As to contributions to a candidate political |
committee established to support a candidate seeking |
nomination to the Supreme Court, Appellate Court, or |
Circuit Court: |
(A) No person shall make a contribution in the |
name of another person or knowingly permit his or her |
name to be used to effect such a contribution. |
(B) No person shall knowingly accept a |
contribution made by one person in the name of another |
person. |
(C) No person shall knowingly accept reimbursement |
from another person for a contribution made in his or |
her own name. |
|
(D) No person shall make an anonymous |
contribution. |
(E) No person shall knowingly accept any anonymous |
contribution. |
(F) No person shall predicate (1) any benefit, |
including, but not limited to, employment decisions, |
including hiring, promotions, bonus compensation, and |
transfers, or (2) any other gift, transfer, or |
emolument upon: |
(i) the decision by the recipient of that |
benefit to donate or not to donate to a candidate; |
or |
(ii) the amount of any such donation. |
(4) No judicial candidate or political committee |
established to support a candidate seeking nomination to |
the Supreme Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court shall |
knowingly accept any contribution or make any expenditure |
in violation of the provisions of this Section. No officer |
or employee of a political committee established to |
support a candidate seeking nomination to the Supreme |
Court, Appellate Court, or Circuit Court shall knowingly |
accept a contribution made for the benefit or use of a |
candidate or knowingly make any expenditure in support of |
or opposition to a candidate or for electioneering |
communications in relation to a candidate in violation of |
any limitation designated for contributions and |
|
expenditures under this Section. |
(5) Where the provisions of this subsection (b-5) |
conflict with any other provision of this Code, this |
subsection (b-5) shall control. |
(c) During an election cycle, a political party committee |
may not accept contributions with an aggregate value over the |
following: (i) $10,000 from any individual, (ii) $20,000 from |
any corporation, labor organization, or association, or (iii) |
$50,000 from a political action committee. A political party |
committee may accept contributions in any amount from another |
political party committee or a candidate political committee, |
except as provided in subsection (c-5). Nothing in this |
Section shall limit the amounts that may be transferred |
between a political party committee established under |
subsection (a) of Section 7-8 of this Code and an affiliated |
federal political committee established under the Federal |
Election Code by the same political party. A political party |
committee may not accept contributions from a ballot |
initiative committee or from an
independent expenditure |
committee. A political party committee established by a |
legislative caucus may not accept contributions from another |
political party committee established by a legislative caucus. |
(c-5) During the period beginning on the date candidates |
may begin circulating petitions for a primary election and |
ending on the day of the primary election, a political party |
committee may not accept contributions with an aggregate value |
|
over $50,000 from a candidate political committee or political |
party committee. A political party committee may accept |
contributions in any amount from a candidate political |
committee or political party committee if the political party |
committee receiving the contribution filed a statement of |
nonparticipation in the primary as provided in subsection |
(c-10). The Task Force on Campaign Finance Reform shall study |
and make recommendations on the provisions of this subsection |
to the Governor and General Assembly by September 30, 2012. |
This subsection becomes inoperative on July 1, 2013 and |
thereafter no longer applies. |
(c-10) A political party committee that does not intend to |
make contributions to candidates to be nominated at a general |
primary election or consolidated primary election may file a |
Statement of Nonparticipation in a Primary Election with the |
Board. The Statement of Nonparticipation shall include a |
verification signed by the chairperson and treasurer of the |
committee that (i) the committee will not make contributions |
or coordinated expenditures in support of or opposition to a |
candidate or candidates to be nominated at the general primary |
election or consolidated primary election (select one) to be |
held on (insert date), (ii) the political party committee may |
accept unlimited contributions from candidate political |
committees and political party committees, provided that the |
political party committee does not make contributions to a |
candidate or candidates to be nominated at the primary |
|
election, and (iii) failure to abide by these requirements |
shall deem the political party committee in violation of this |
Article and subject the committee to a fine of no more than |
150% of the total contributions or coordinated expenditures |
made by the committee in violation of this Article. This |
subsection becomes inoperative on July 1, 2013 and thereafter |
no longer applies. |
(d) During an election cycle, a political action committee |
may not accept contributions with an aggregate value over the |
following: (i) $10,000 from any individual, (ii) $20,000 from |
any corporation, labor organization, political party |
committee, or association, or (iii) $50,000 from a political |
action committee or candidate political committee. A political |
action committee may not accept contributions from a ballot |
initiative committee or from an
independent expenditure |
committee. |
(e) A ballot initiative committee may accept contributions |
in any amount from any source, provided that the committee |
files the document required by Section 9-3 of this Article and |
files the disclosure reports required by the provisions of |
this Article. |
(e-5) An independent expenditure committee may accept |
contributions in any amount from any source, provided that the |
committee files the document required by Section 9-3 of this |
Article and files the disclosure reports required by the |
provisions of this Article. |
|
(e-10) A limited activity committee shall not accept |
contributions, except that the officer or a candidate the |
committee has designated to support may contribute personal |
funds in order to pay for maintenance expenses. A limited |
activity committee may only make expenditures that are: (i) |
necessary for maintenance of the committee; (ii) for rent or |
lease payments until the end of the lease in effect at the time |
the officer or candidate is confirmed by the Senate; (iii) |
contributions to 501(c)(3) charities; or (iv) returning |
contributions to original contributors. |
(f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a political |
committee from dividing the proceeds of joint fundraising |
efforts; provided that no political committee may receive more |
than the limit from any one contributor, and provided that an |
independent
expenditure committee may not conduct joint |
fundraising efforts with a
candidate political committee or a |
political party committee. |
(g) On January 1 of each odd-numbered year, the State |
Board of Elections shall adjust the amounts of the |
contribution limitations established in this Section for |
inflation as determined by the Consumer Price Index for All |
Urban Consumers as issued by the United States Department of |
Labor and rounded to the nearest $100. The State Board shall |
publish this information on its official website. |
(h) Self-funding candidates. If a public official, a |
candidate, or the public official's or candidate's immediate |
|
family contributes or loans to the public official's or |
candidate's political committee or to other political |
committees that transfer funds to the public official's or |
candidate's political committee or makes independent |
expenditures for the benefit of the public official's or |
candidate's campaign during the 12 months prior to an election |
in an aggregate amount of more than (i) $250,000 for statewide |
office or (ii) $100,000 for all other elective offices, then |
the public official or candidate shall file with the State |
Board of Elections, within one day, a Notification of |
Self-funding that shall detail each contribution or loan made |
by the public official, the candidate, or the public |
official's or candidate's immediate family. Within 2 business |
days after the filing of a Notification of Self-funding, the |
notification shall be posted on the Board's website and the |
Board shall give official notice of the filing to each |
candidate for the same office as the public official or |
candidate making the filing, including the public official or |
candidate filing the Notification of Self-funding. Notice |
shall be sent via first class mail to the candidate and the |
treasurer of the candidate's committee. Notice shall also be |
sent by e-mail to the candidate and the treasurer of the |
candidate's committee if the candidate and the treasurer, as |
applicable, have provided the Board with an e-mail address. |
Upon posting of the notice on the Board's website, all |
candidates for that office, including the public official or |
|
candidate who filed a Notification of Self-funding, shall be |
permitted to accept contributions in excess of any |
contribution limits imposed by subsection (b). If a public |
official or candidate filed a Notification of Self-funding |
during an election cycle that includes a general primary |
election or consolidated primary election and that public |
official or candidate is nominated, all candidates for that |
office, including the nominee who filed the notification of |
self-funding, shall be permitted to accept contributions in |
excess of any contribution limit imposed by subsection (b) for |
the subsequent election cycle. For the purposes of this |
subsection, "immediate family" means the spouse, parent, or |
child of a public official or candidate. |
(h-5) If a natural person or independent expenditure |
committee makes independent expenditures in support of or in |
opposition to the campaign of a particular public official or |
candidate in an aggregate amount of more than (i) $250,000 for |
statewide office or (ii) $100,000 for all other elective |
offices in an election cycle, as reported in a written |
disclosure filed under subsection (a) of Section 9-8.6 or |
subsection (e-5) of Section 9-10, then the State Board of |
Elections shall, within 2 business days after the filing of |
the disclosure, post the disclosure on the Board's website and |
give official notice of the disclosure to each candidate for |
the same office as the public official or candidate for whose |
benefit or detriment the natural person or independent |
|
expenditure committee made independent expenditures. Upon |
posting of the notice on the Board's website, all candidates |
for that office in that election, including the public |
official or candidate for whose benefit or detriment the |
natural person or independent expenditure committee made |
independent expenditures, shall be permitted to accept |
contributions in excess of any contribution limits imposed by |
subsection (b). |
(h-10) If the State Board of Elections receives |
notification or determines that a natural person or persons, |
an independent expenditure committee or committees, or |
combination thereof has made independent expenditures in |
support of or in opposition to the campaign of a particular |
public official or candidate in an aggregate amount of more |
than (i) $250,000 for statewide office or (ii) $100,000 for |
all other elective offices in an election cycle, then the |
Board shall, within 2 business days after discovering the |
independent expenditures that, in the aggregate, exceed the |
threshold set forth in (i) and (ii) of this subsection, post |
notice of this fact on the Board's website and give official |
notice to each candidate for the same office as the public |
official or candidate for whose benefit or detriment the |
independent expenditures were made. Notice shall be sent via |
first class mail to the candidate and the treasurer of the |
candidate's committee. Notice shall also be sent by e-mail to |
the candidate and the treasurer of the candidate's committee |
|
if the candidate and the treasurer, as applicable, have |
provided the Board with an e-mail address. Upon posting of the |
notice on the Board's website, all candidates of that office |
in that election, including the public official or candidate |
for whose benefit or detriment the independent expenditures |
were made, may accept contributions in excess of any |
contribution limits imposed by subsection (b). |
(i) For the purposes of this Section, a corporation, labor |
organization, association, or a political action committee |
established by a corporation, labor organization, or |
association may act as a conduit in facilitating the delivery |
to a political action committee of contributions made through |
dues, levies, or similar assessments and the political action |
committee may report the contributions in the aggregate, |
provided that: (i) contributions made through dues, levies, or |
similar assessments paid by any natural person, corporation, |
labor organization, or association in a calendar year may not |
exceed the limits set forth in this Section; (ii) the |
corporation, labor organization, association, or a political |
action committee established by a corporation, labor |
organization, or association facilitating the delivery of |
contributions maintains a list of natural persons, |
corporations, labor organizations, and associations that paid |
the dues, levies, or similar assessments from which the |
contributions comprising the aggregate amount derive; and |
(iii) contributions made through dues, levies, or similar |
|
assessments paid by any natural person, corporation, labor |
organization, or association that exceed $1,000 $500 in a |
quarterly reporting period shall be itemized on the |
committee's quarterly report and may not be reported in the |
aggregate. A political action committee facilitating the |
delivery of contributions or receiving contributions shall |
disclose the amount of contributions made through dues |
delivered or received and the name of the corporation, labor |
organization, association, or political action committee |
delivering the contributions, if applicable. On January 1 of |
each odd-numbered year, the State Board of Elections shall |
adjust the amounts of the contribution limitations established |
in this subsection for inflation as determined by the Consumer |
Price Index for All Urban Consumers as issued by the United |
States Department of Labor and rounded to the nearest $100. |
The State Board shall publish this information on its official |
website. |
(j) A political committee that receives a contribution or |
transfer in violation of this Section shall dispose of the |
contribution or transfer by returning the contribution or |
transfer, or an amount equal to the contribution or transfer, |
to the contributor or transferor or donating the contribution |
or transfer, or an amount equal to the contribution or |
transfer, to a charity. A contribution or transfer received in |
violation of this Section that is not disposed of as provided |
in this subsection within 30 days after the Board sends |
|
notification to the political committee of the excess |
contribution by certified mail shall escheat to the General |
Revenue Fund and the political committee shall be deemed in |
violation of this Section and subject to a civil penalty not to |
exceed 150% of the total amount of the contribution. |
(k) For the purposes of this Section, "statewide office" |
means the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, |
Secretary of State, Comptroller, and Treasurer. |
(l) This Section is repealed if and when the United States |
Supreme Court invalidates contribution limits on committees |
formed to assist candidates, political parties, corporations, |
associations, or labor organizations established by or |
pursuant to federal law.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-664, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(10 ILCS 5/9-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 9-10)
|
Sec. 9-10. Disclosure of contributions and expenditures.
|
(a) The treasurer of every political committee shall file |
with the
Board reports of campaign contributions and |
expenditures as required by this Section on forms to be
|
prescribed or approved by the Board.
|
(b) Every political committee shall file quarterly reports |
of campaign contributions, expenditures, and independent |
expenditures. The reports shall cover the period January 1 |
through March 31, April 1 through June 30, July 1 through |
September 30, and October 1 through December 31 of each year. A |
|
political committee shall file quarterly reports no later than |
the 15th day of the month following each period. Reports of |
contributions and expenditures must be filed to cover the |
prescribed time periods even though no contributions or |
expenditures may have been received or made during the period. |
A report is considered timely filed if it is received by the |
Board no later than 11:59 p.m. on the deadline or postmarked no |
later than 3 days prior to the deadline. The Board shall assess |
a civil penalty not to exceed $5,000 for failure to file a |
report required by this subsection. The fine, however, shall |
not exceed $1,000 for a first violation if the committee files |
less than 10 days after the deadline. There shall be no fine if |
the report is mailed and postmarked at least 72 hours prior to |
the filing deadline. When considering the amount of the fine |
to be imposed, the Board shall consider whether the violation |
was committed inadvertently, negligently, knowingly, or |
intentionally and any past violations of this Section. |
(c) A political committee shall file a report of any |
contribution of $1,000 or more electronically with the Board |
within 5 business days after receipt of the contribution, |
except that the report shall be filed within 2 business days |
after receipt if (i) the contribution is received 30 or fewer |
days before the date of an election and (ii) the political |
committee supports or opposes a candidate or public question |
on the ballot at that election or makes expenditures in excess |
of $500 on behalf of or in opposition to a candidate, |
|
candidates, a public question, or public questions on the |
ballot at that election.
The State Board shall allow filings |
of reports of contributions of $1,000 or more by political |
committees that are not required to file electronically to be |
made by facsimile transmission. It is not a violation of this |
subsection (c) and a political committee does not need to file |
a report of a contribution of $1,000 or more if the |
contribution is received and returned within the same period |
it is required to be disclosed on a quarterly report. The Board |
shall assess a civil penalty for failure to file a report |
required by this subsection. Failure to report each |
contribution is a separate violation of this subsection. The |
Board shall impose fines for willful or wanton violations of |
this subsection (c) not to exceed 150% of the total amount of |
the contributions that were untimely reported, but in no case |
shall it be less than 10% of the total amount of the |
contributions that were untimely reported. When considering |
the amount of the fine to be imposed for willful or wanton |
violations, the Board shall consider the number of days the |
contribution was reported late and past violations of this |
Section and Section 9-3. The Board may impose a fine for |
negligent or inadvertent violations of this subsection not to |
exceed 50% of the total amount of the contributions that were |
untimely reported, or the Board may waive the fine. When |
considering whether to impose a fine and the amount of the |
fine, the Board shall consider the following factors: (1) |
|
whether the political committee made an attempt to disclose |
the contribution and any attempts made to correct the |
violation, (2) whether the violation is attributed to a |
clerical or computer error, (3) the amount of the |
contribution, (4) whether the violation arose from a |
discrepancy between the date the contribution was reported |
transferred by a political committee and the date the |
contribution was received by a political committee, (5) the |
number of days the contribution was reported late, and (6) |
past violations of this Section and Section 9-3 by the |
political committee. |
(d) For the purpose of this Section, a contribution is |
considered received on the date (i) a monetary contribution |
was deposited in a bank, financial institution, or other |
repository of funds for the committee, (ii) the date a |
committee receives notice a monetary contribution was |
deposited by an entity used to process financial transactions |
by credit card or other entity used for processing a monetary |
contribution that was deposited in a bank, financial |
institution, or other repository of funds for the committee, |
or (iii) the public official, candidate, or political |
committee receives the notification of contribution of goods |
or services as required under subsection (b) of Section 9-6. |
(e) A political committee that makes independent |
expenditures of $1,000 or more shall file a report |
electronically with the Board within 5 business days after |
|
making the independent expenditure, except that the report |
shall be filed within 2 business days after making the |
independent expenditure during the 60-day period before an |
election.
|
(e-5) An independent expenditure committee that makes an |
independent expenditure supporting or opposing a public |
official or candidate that, alone or in combination with any |
other independent expenditure made by that independent |
expenditure committee supporting or opposing that public |
official or candidate during the election cycle, equals an |
aggregate value of more than (i) $250,000 for statewide office |
or (ii) $100,000 for all other elective offices must file a |
written disclosure with the State Board of Elections within 2 |
business days after making any expenditure that results in the |
independent expenditure committee exceeding the applicable |
threshold. The Board shall assess a civil penalty against an |
independent expenditure committee for failure to file the |
disclosure required by this subsection not to exceed (i) $500 |
for an initial failure to file the required disclosure and |
(ii) $1,000 for each subsequent failure to file the required |
disclosure.
|
(f) A copy of each report or statement filed under this |
Article
shall be
preserved by the person filing it for a period |
of two years from the
date of filing.
|
(g) The Board may assess a civil penalty against a |
committee for any violation of this Section. The Board shall |
|
provide notice of any violation no later than 365 days after |
the date of the violation and provide the committee with an |
opportunity to appeal a violation. A committee shall not be |
fined if notice is not provided as required by this |
subsection. The fine assessed by the Board for a violation of |
this Section shall not exceed the amount of the contribution |
and may be no more than $500 for the first violation, no more |
than $1,000 for the second violation, no more than $2,000 for a |
third violation, and no more than $3,000 for any subsequent |
violations. When determining whether to waive or reduce a |
fine, the Board shall consider: (1) whether the political |
committee made an attempt to disclose the contribution and any |
attempts made to correct the violation; (2) whether the |
violation was inadvertent, knowingly, or intentional; (3) |
whether the violation is attributed to a clerical or computer |
error; (4) the amount of the contribution or total |
contributions in the report; (5) whether the violation arose |
from a discrepancy between the date the contribution was |
reported and the date the contribution was received by a |
political committee; (6) the number of days the report was |
submitted late; and (7) any prior violations. |
(Source: P.A. 99-437, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-2) (from Ch. 46, par. 11-2)
|
Sec. 11-2. Election precincts. The County Board in each |
county, except in counties having
a population of 3,000,000 |
|
inhabitants or over, shall, at its regular
meeting in June or |
an adjourned meeting in July , divide its election precincts |
which contain more than
800 voters, into election districts so |
that each precinct district shall contain,
as near as may be |
practicable, 1,200 registered 500 voters , and not more in any |
case than
800 . Whenever the County Board ascertains that any |
election precinct
contains more than 600 registered voters, it |
may divide such precinct,
at its regular meeting in June, into |
election precincts so that each
precinct shall contain, as |
nearly as may be practicable, 500 voters. Insofar as
is |
practicable, each precinct shall be situated within a single |
congressional,
legislative and representative district and in |
not more than one County Board
district and one municipal |
ward. In order to situate each precinct within a
single |
district or ward, the County Board shall change the boundaries |
of
election precincts after each decennial census as soon as |
is practicable
following the completion of congressional and |
legislative redistricting , except that, in 2021, the county |
board shall change the boundaries at a regular or special |
meeting within 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly .
In determining |
whether a division of precincts should be
made, the county |
board may anticipate increased voter registration in
any |
precinct in which there is in progress new construction of |
dwelling
units which will be occupied by voters more than 30 |
days before the next
election. Each district shall be composed |
|
of contiguous territory in as
compact form as can be for the |
convenience of the electors voting
therein. The several county |
boards in establishing districts shall
describe them by metes |
and bounds and number them. And so often
thereafter as it shall |
appear by the number of votes cast at the general
election held |
in November of any year, that any election district or
|
undivided election precinct contains more than 1,200 |
registered 800 voters, the County
Board of the county in which |
the district or precinct may be, shall at
its regular meeting |
in June, or an adjourned meeting in July next, after
such |
November election, redivide or readjust such election district |
or
election precinct, so that no district or election precinct |
shall
contain more than the number of votes above specified. |
If for any reason
the County Board fails in any year to |
redivide or readjust the election
districts or election |
precinct, then the districts or precincts as then
existing |
shall continue until the next regular June meeting of the
|
County Board; at which regular June meeting or an adjourned |
meeting in
July the County Board shall redivide or readjust |
the election districts
or election precincts in manner as |
herein required. When at any meeting
of the County Board any |
redivision, readjustment or change in name or
number of |
election districts or election precincts is made by the County
|
Board, the County Clerk shall immediately notify the State |
Board of
Elections of such redivision, readjustment or change. |
The County Board
in every case shall fix and establish the |
|
places for holding elections
in its respective county and all |
elections shall be held at the places
so fixed. The polling |
places shall in all cases be upon the ground floor
in the front |
room, the entrance to which is in a highway or public
street |
which is at least 40 feet wide, and is as near the center of |
the
voting population of the precinct as is practicable, and |
for the
convenience of the greatest number of electors to vote |
thereat;
provided, however, where the County Board is unable |
to secure a suitable
polling place within the boundaries of a |
precinct, it may select a
polling place at the most |
conveniently located suitable place outside
the precinct; but |
in no case shall an election be held in any room used
or |
occupied as a saloon, dramshop, bowling alley or as a place of |
resort
for idlers and disreputable persons, billiard hall or |
in any room
connected therewith by doors or hallways. No |
person shall be permitted
to vote at any election except at the |
polling place for the precinct in
which he resides, except as |
otherwise provided in this Section or Article 19 of this
Act. |
In counties having a population of 3,000,000 inhabitants or |
over
the County Board shall divide its election precincts and |
shall fix and
establish places for holding elections as |
hereinbefore provided during
the month of January instead of |
at its regular meeting in June or at an
adjourned meeting in |
July.
|
However, in the event that additional divisions of |
election precincts
are indicated after a division made by the |
|
County Board in the month of
January, such additional |
divisions may be made by the County Board in
counties having a |
population of 3,000,000 inhabitants or over, at the
regular |
meeting in June or at adjourned meeting in July. The county
|
board of such county may divide or readjust precincts at any |
meeting of
the county board when the voter registration in a |
precinct has increased
beyond 1,800 registered voters 800 and |
an election is scheduled before the next regular January
or |
June meeting of the county board.
|
When in any city, village or incorporated town territory |
has been
annexed thereto or disconnected therefrom, which |
annexation or
disconnection becomes effective after election |
precincts or election
districts have been established as above |
provided in this Section, the
clerk of the municipality shall |
inform the county clerk thereof as
provided in Section 4-21, |
5-28.1, or 6-31.1, whichever is applicable. In
the event that |
a regular meeting of the County Board is to be held after
such |
notification and before any election, the County Board shall, |
at
its next regular meeting establish new election precinct |
lines in
affected territory. In the event that no regular |
meeting of the County
Board is to be held before such election |
the county clerk shall, within
5 days after being so informed, |
call a special meeting of the county
board on a day fixed by |
him not more than 20 days thereafter for the
purpose of |
establishing election precincts or election districts in the
|
affected territory for the ensuing elections.
|
|
At any consolidated primary or consolidated election at |
which
municipal officers are to be elected, and at any |
emergency referendum at
which a public question relating to a |
municipality is to be voted on,
notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Code, the election authority
shall establish |
a polling place within such municipality, upon the request
of |
the municipal council or board of trustees at least 60 days |
before the
election and provided that the municipality |
provides a suitable polling
place. To accomplish this purpose, |
the election authority may establish an
election precinct |
constituting a single municipality of under 500
population for |
all elections, notwithstanding the minimum precinct size
|
otherwise specified herein.
|
Notwithstanding the above, when there
are no more than 50 |
registered voters in a precinct who are entitled to
vote in a |
local government or school district election, the election
|
authority having
jurisdiction over the precinct
is authorized |
to reassign such voters to one or more polling
places in |
adjacent precincts, within or without the
election authority's |
jurisdiction, for that
election. For the purposes of such |
local government or school district
election only, the votes |
of the reassigned voters shall be tallied and
canvassed as |
votes from the precinct of the polling place to which such
|
voters have been reassigned. The election authority having
|
jurisdiction over the precinct shall approve all |
administrative and polling
place procedures.
Such procedures |
|
shall take into account voter convenience, and ensure that the
|
integrity of the election process is maintained and that the |
secrecy of the
ballot is not violated.
|
Except in the event of a fire, flood or total loss of heat |
in a place
fixed or established by any county board or election |
authority pursuant to
this Section as a polling place for an |
election, no election authority
shall change the location of a |
polling place so established for any
precinct after notice of |
the place of holding the election for that
precinct has been |
given as required under Article 12 unless the election
|
authority notifies all registered voters in the precinct of |
the change in
location by first class mail in sufficient time |
for such notice to be
received by the registered voters in the |
precinct at least one day prior to
the date of the election.
|
The provisions of this Section apply to all precincts, |
including
those where voting machines or electronic voting |
systems are used.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-867.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 11-3)
|
Sec. 11-3. Election precincts. |
(a) It shall be the duty of the Board of Commissioners
|
established by Article 6 of this Act, within 2 months after its |
first
organization, to divide the city, village or |
incorporated town which may
adopt or is operating under |
Article 6, into election precincts, each of
which shall be |
|
situated within a single congressional, legislative
and |
representative district insofar as
is practicable and in not |
more than one County Board district and one
municipal ward;
in |
order to situate each precinct within a single district or |
ward, the
Board of Election Commissioners shall change the |
boundaries of election
precincts after each
decennial census |
as soon as is practicable following the completion of
|
congressional and legislative redistricting
and such precincts
|
shall contain as nearly as practicable : (i) 1,200 registered |
voters if the precinct is located in a county with fewer than |
3,000,000 inhabitants; or (ii) 1,800 registered voters if the |
precinct is located in a county with 3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants 600 qualified voters, and in
making such division |
and establishing such precincts such board shall
take as a |
basis the poll books, or the number of votes cast at the
|
previous presidential election . |
(b) Within 90 days after each presidential
election, such |
board in a city with fewer than 500,000 inhabitants, village
|
or incorporated town shall revise and rearrange such precincts |
on the
basis of the votes cast at such election, making such |
precincts to
contain, as near as practicable, 1,200 registered |
voters or 1,800 registered voters, as applicable 600 actual |
voters; but at any time in
all instances where the vote cast at |
any precinct, at any election,
equals 800, there must be a |
rearrangement so as to reduce the vote to
the standard of 600 |
as near as may be . However, any apartment building
in which |
|
more than 1,200 or 1,800 800 registered voters , as applicable, |
reside may be made a single
precinct even though the vote in |
such precinct exceeds 1,200 or 1,800 registered voters, as |
applicable 800 .
|
(c) Within 90 days after each presidential election, a |
board in a city with
more than 500,000 inhabitants shall |
revise and rearrange such precincts on
the basis of the votes |
cast at such election, making such precincts to
contain, as |
near as practicable : (i) 1,200 registered voters if the |
precinct is located in a county with fewer than 3,000,000 |
inhabitants; or (ii) 1,800 registered voters if the precinct |
is located in a county with 3,000,000 or more inhabitants , 400 |
actual voters; but at any time in all
instances where the vote |
cast at any precinct, at any election, equals 600,
there must |
be a rearrangement so as to reduce the vote to the standard of
|
400 as near as may be . However, any apartment building in which |
more than
1,200 registered voters or 1,800 registered voters, |
as applicable, 600 registered voters reside may be made a |
single precinct even though the
vote in such precinct exceeds |
1,200 or 1,800 registered voters, as applicable 600 .
|
(d) Immediately after the annexation of territory to the |
city, village or
incorporated town becomes effective the Board |
of Election Commissioners
shall revise and rearrange election |
precincts therein to include such
annexed territory.
|
(e) Provided, however, that at any election where but one |
candidate is
nominated and is to be voted upon at any election |
|
held in any political
subdivision of a city, village or |
incorporated town, the Board of
Election Commissioners shall |
have the power in such political
subdivision to determine the |
number of voting precincts to be
established in such political |
subdivision at such election, without
reference to the number |
of qualified voters therein. The precincts in
each ward, |
village or incorporated town shall be numbered from one
|
upwards, consecutively, with no omission.
|
(f) The provisions of this Section apply to all precincts, |
including
those where voting machines or electronic voting |
systems are used.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1308.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-4.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 11-4.2)
|
Sec. 11-4.2.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in |
subsection (b) all
polling places shall be accessible to |
voters with disabilities and elderly voters, as
determined by |
rule of the State Board of Elections , and each polling place |
shall include at least one voting booth that is wheelchair |
accessible .
|
(b) Subsection (a) of this Section shall not apply to a |
polling place
(1) in the case of an emergency, as determined by |
the State Board of
Elections; or (2) if the State Board of |
Elections (A) determines that all
potential polling places |
have been surveyed and no such accessible place is
available, |
nor is the election authority able to make one accessible; and
|
|
(B) assures that any voter with a disability or elderly voter |
assigned to an
inaccessible polling place, upon advance |
request of such voter (pursuant to
procedures established by |
rule of the State Board of Elections) will be
provided with an |
alternative means for casting a ballot on the day of the
|
election or will be assigned to an accessible polling place.
|
(c) No later than December 31 of each even numbered year, |
the State
Board of Elections shall report to the General |
Assembly and the Federal Election Commission the
number of |
accessible and inaccessible polling places in the State on the
|
date of the next preceding general election, and the reasons |
for any
instance of inaccessibility.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-8) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023) |
Sec. 11-8. Vote centers. |
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, election
|
authorities shall establish at least one location to be |
located at an
office of the election authority or in the |
largest municipality
within its jurisdiction where all voters |
in its jurisdiction
are allowed to vote on election day during |
polling place hours,
regardless of the precinct in which they |
are registered. An
election authority establishing such a |
location under this Section shall identify the location , hours |
of
operation, and any health and safety requirements by the |
|
40th day
preceding the 2022 general primary election and the |
2022 general election and certify such to the
State Board of |
Elections. |
(b) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2023.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.) |
(10 ILCS 5/19-2) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-2) |
Sec. 19-2. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, any |
elector as defined in Section 19-1 may by mail or |
electronically on the website of the appropriate election |
authority, not more than 90 nor less than 5 days prior to the
|
date of such election, or by personal delivery not more than 90 |
nor less
than one day prior to the date of such election, make |
application to the
county clerk or to the Board of Election |
Commissioners for an official
ballot for the voter's precinct |
to be voted at such election , or be added to a list of |
permanent vote by mail status voters who receive an official |
vote by mail ballot for subsequent elections . Such a ballot |
shall be delivered to the elector only upon separate |
application by the elector for each election. Voters who make |
an application for permanent vote by mail ballot status shall |
follow the procedures specified in Section 19-3 and may apply |
year round . Voters whose application for permanent vote by |
mail status is accepted by the election authority shall remain |
on the permanent vote by mail list until the voter requests to |
be removed from permanent vote by mail status, the voter |
|
provides notice to the election authority of a change in |
registration that affects their registration status , or the |
election authority receives confirmation that the voter has |
subsequently registered to vote in another election authority |
jurisdiction county . The URL address at which voters may |
electronically request a vote by mail ballot shall be fixed no |
later than 90 calendar days before an election and shall not be |
changed until after the election.
Such a ballot shall be |
delivered to the elector only upon separate application by the |
elector for each election.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; revised 7-15-21.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-2.5) |
Sec. 19-2.5. Notice for vote by mail ballot. An election |
authority shall notify all qualified voters, not more than 90 |
days nor less than 45 days before a general or consolidated |
election, of the option for permanent vote by mail status |
using the following notice and including the application for |
permanent vote by mail status in subsection (b) of Section |
19-3: |
"You may apply to permanently be placed on vote by mail |
status using the attached application.".
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-6) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-6)
|
Sec. 19-6.
Such vote by mail voter shall make and |
|
subscribe to the
certifications provided for in the |
application and on the return
envelope for the ballot, and |
such ballot or ballots shall be folded by
such voter in the |
manner required to be folded before depositing the
same in the |
ballot box, and be deposited in such envelope and the
envelope |
securely sealed. The voter shall then endorse his certificate
|
upon the back of the envelope and the envelope shall be mailed |
in person by
such voter, postage prepaid, to the election |
authority issuing the ballot or,
if more convenient, it may be |
delivered in person, by either the voter or
by any person |
authorized by the voter, or by a company
licensed as a motor |
carrier of property by the Illinois Commerce Commission
under |
the Illinois Commercial Transportation Law,
which is engaged |
in the business of making deliveries. |
Election authorities shall accept any vote by mail ballot |
returned, including ballots returned with insufficient or no |
postage. Election authorities may maintain one or more secure |
collection sites for the postage-free return of vote by mail |
ballots. Any election authority with collection sites shall |
collect all ballots returned each day at close of business and |
process them as required by this Code, including noting the |
day on which the ballot was collected returned . Ballots |
returned to such collection sites after close of business |
shall be dated as delivered the next day, with the exception of |
ballots delivered on election day, which shall be dated as |
received on election day. Election authorities shall permit |
|
electors to return vote by mail ballots at any collection site |
it has established through the close of polls on election day. |
All collection sites shall be secured by locks that may be |
opened only by election authority personnel. The State Board |
of Elections shall establish additional guidelines for the |
security of collection sites. |
It shall be unlawful for any person not the voter or a |
person authorized by the voter
to take the ballot and ballot |
envelope of a
voter for deposit into the mail unless the ballot |
has been issued pursuant to
application by a physically |
incapacitated elector under Section
3-3 or a hospitalized |
voter under Section 19-13, in which case any
employee or |
person under the direction of the facility in which the |
elector or
voter is located may deposit the ballot and ballot |
envelope into the mail. If the voter authorized a person to |
deliver the ballot to the election authority, the voter and |
the person authorized to deliver the ballot shall complete the |
authorization printed on the exterior envelope supplied by an |
election authority for the return of the vote by mail ballot. |
The exterior of the envelope supplied by an election authority |
for the return of the vote by mail ballot shall include an |
authorization in substantially the following form:
|
I ............ (voter) authorize ............... to take |
the necessary steps to have this ballot delivered promptly to |
the office of the election authority.
|
|
....................... ........................
|
Date Signature of voter
|
...............................................
|
Printed Name of Authorized Delivery Agent
|
...............................................
|
Signature of Authorized Delivery Agency
|
...............................................
|
Date Delivered to the Election Authority
|
(Source: P.A. 102-1, eff. 4-2-21.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-5 rep.)
|
Section 10. The Election Code is amended by repealing |
Section 11-5. |
Section 15. The Legislative Commission Reorganization Act |
of 1984 is amended by changing Section 9-2.5 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 130/9-2.5)
|
Sec. 9-2.5. Newsletters and brochures. The Legislative |
Printing Unit may
not print for any member of the General |
Assembly any newsletters or brochures
during the period |
beginning February 1 of the
year of a general primary |
|
election , except that in 2022 the period shall begin on May 15, |
2022, and ending the day after the general primary
election |
and during a period beginning September 1 of the year of a |
general
election and ending the day after the general |
election.
A member of the General Assembly may not mail, |
during a period beginning
February 1 of the year of a general |
primary election and ending the day after
the general primary |
election and during a period beginning September 1 of the
year |
of a general election and ending the day after the general |
election, any
newsletters or brochures
that were printed, at |
any time, by the Legislative
Printing Unit, except that such a |
newsletter or brochure may be mailed during
those times if it |
is mailed to a constituent in response to that constituent's
|
inquiry concerning the needs of that constituent or questions |
raised by that
constituent.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-6, eff. 6-20-07; 96-886, eff. 1-1-11 .)
|
Section 20. The Counties Code is amended by changing |
Section 2-3004 as follows:
|
(55 ILCS 5/2-3004) (from Ch. 34, par. 2-3004)
|
Sec. 2-3004. Failure to complete reapportionment. If any |
county board fails to complete the reapportionment of its |
county
by July 1 in 2011 or any 10 years thereafter or by the |
day after the county board's regularly scheduled July meeting |
in 2011 or any 10 years thereafter, or for the reapportionment |
|
of 2021, by December 31 the third Wednesday in November in the |
year after a federal decennial census year, whichever is |
later, the county clerk of that
county shall convene the |
county apportionment commission. Three members of
the |
commission shall constitute a quorum, but a majority of all |
the members
must vote affirmatively on any determination made |
by the commission. The
commission shall adopt rules for its |
procedure.
|
The commission shall develop an apportionment plan for the |
county in the
manner provided by Section 2-3003, dividing the |
county into the same number of
districts as determined by the |
county board. If the county board has failed
to determine the |
size of the county board to be elected, then the number of
|
districts and the number of members to be elected shall be the |
largest
number to which the county is entitled under Section |
2-3002.
|
The commission shall submit its apportionment plan by |
October 1 in the
year that it is convened, or for the |
reapportionment of 2021, by February 1, 2022, except that the |
circuit court, for good cause
shown, may grant an extension of |
time, not exceeding a total of 60 days,
within which such a |
plan may be submitted.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.)
|
Section 25. The Downstate Forest Preserve District Act is |
amended by changing Section 3c and by adding Section 3c-1 as |
|
follows:
|
(70 ILCS 805/3c)
|
Sec. 3c. Elected board of commissioners in certain |
counties. If the boundaries of a district are co-extensive |
with the boundaries of a
county having a population of more |
than 800,000 but less than 3,000,000,
all commissioners of the |
forest preserve district shall be elected from the number of |
districts as determined by the forest preserve district board |
of commissioners. Such a forest preserve district is a |
separate and distinct legal entity, and its board members are |
elected separate and apart from the elected county |
commissioners. Upon its formation, or as a result of decennial |
reapportionment, such a forest preserve district shall adopt a |
district map determining the boundary lines of each district. |
That map shall be adjusted and reapportioned subject to the |
same decennial reapportionment process stated in Section 3c-1. |
No more than one commissioner shall be elected from each |
district. The the
same
districts as members of the county |
board beginning with the general election
held in 2002 and |
each succeeding general election. One commissioner shall be
|
elected from each district. At their first meeting after their |
election in
2002 and following each subsequent decennial |
reapportionment of the county
under Division 2-3 of the
|
Counties Code, the elected commissioners shall publicly by lot |
divide
themselves
into 2 groups, as equal in size as possible. |
|
Commissioners from the
first
group
shall serve for terms of 2, |
4, and 4 years; and commissioners from the second
group
shall |
serve terms of 4, 4, and 2 years. Beginning with the general |
election in 2002, the
president of the board of commissioners |
of the forest
preserve district shall be elected by the voters |
of the county, rather than by
the commissioners. The president |
shall be a resident of the county and shall
be elected |
throughout the county for a
4-year term without having been |
first elected as commissioner of the forest
preserve
district.
|
Each commissioner shall be a resident of the forest preserve |
county board district from which
he or she was elected not |
later than the date of the commencement of the term
of office. |
The term of office for the president and commissioners elected
|
under this
Section shall commence on the first Monday
of the |
month following the month of election.
Neither a commissioner |
nor the president of the board of
commissioners of that forest |
preserve
district
shall serve simultaneously as member or |
chairman of the county board. No
person shall seek election to |
both the forest preserve commission and the
county board at |
the same election , nor shall they be eligible to hold both |
offices at the same time .
The president, with the advice and |
consent of the
board of commissioners shall appoint a |
secretary,
treasurer, and such other officers as deemed |
necessary by the board of
commissioners, which officers need |
not be members of the board of
commissioners. The president |
shall have the powers and duties as specified in
Section 12 of |
|
this Act.
|
Candidates for president and commissioner shall be |
candidates of
established political
parties.
|
If a vacancy in the office of president or commissioner |
occurs, other
than by expiration
of the president's or |
commissioner's term, the
forest preserve district board of |
commissioners shall declare that a vacancy
exists and |
notification of the vacancy shall be given to the county |
central
committee of each established political party within 3 |
business days after the
occurrence of the vacancy. If the |
vacancy occurs in the office of forest
preserve
district |
commissioner, the
president of the board
of commissioners |
shall,
within 60 days after the date of the vacancy,
with the |
advice and consent of other commissioners then serving, |
appoint a
person to serve for the remainder of the unexpired |
term.
The appointee
shall be affiliated with the same |
political party as the commissioner in whose
office the |
vacancy occurred and be a resident of such district. If a |
vacancy
in the office of president occurs, other than by |
expiration of the president's
term, the remaining members of
|
the board of commissioners shall, within 60 days after the |
vacancy,
appoint one of the commissioners to serve as
|
president for the remainder of
the unexpired term.
In that |
case, the office of the commissioner who is appointed to serve
|
as president shall be deemed vacant and shall be filled within |
60 days by
appointment of the president with the advice and |
|
consent of the other forest
preserve district commissioners. |
The commissioner who is appointed to fill a
vacancy in
the |
office of president shall be affiliated with the same |
political party as
the person who occupied the office of |
president prior to the vacancy. A person
appointed to fill a |
vacancy in the office of president or commissioner shall
|
establish his or her party affiliation by his or her record of |
voting in
primary elections or by holding or having held an |
office in an established
political party organization before |
the appointment. If the appointee has not
voted in a party |
primary election or is not holding or has not held an office
in |
an established political party organization before the |
appointment, the
appointee shall establish his or her |
political party affiliation by his or her
record of |
participating in an established political party's nomination |
or
election caucus.
If, however, more than 28 months remain in |
the unexpired
term of a commissioner or the president, the
|
appointment shall be until the next general election, at
which |
time the
vacated office of commissioner or president shall be |
filled by election for the
remainder of the term.
|
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, if a vacancy occurs |
after
the last day provided in Section 7-12 of the Election |
Code for filing
nomination papers for the office of president |
of a forest
preserve district where that office is elected as |
provided for in this
Section, or as set forth in Section 7-61 |
of the Election Code, a vacancy in
nomination shall be filled |
|
by the passage of a resolution by the nominating
committee of |
the affected political party within the time periods specified |
in
the Election Code. The nominating committee shall consist |
of the chairman of
the county central committee and the |
township chairmen of the affected
political party. All other |
vacancies in nomination shall be filled in
accordance with the |
provisions of the Election Code.
|
The president and commissioners elected under this Section |
may be reimbursed
for their reasonable expenses actually |
incurred in performing their official
duties under this Act in |
accordance with the provisions of Section 3a. The
|
reimbursement paid under this Section shall be paid by the |
forest preserve
district.
|
Compensation for the president and the forest preserve |
commissioners elected under this Section
shall be established |
by the board of commissioners of the forest preserve district.
|
This Section does not apply to a forest preserve district |
created under Section 18.5 of the Conservation District Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-617, eff. 8-18-05; 94-900, eff. 6-22-06.)
|
(70 ILCS 805/3c-1 new) |
Sec. 3c-1. Reapportionment plan for forest preserve |
districts under Section 3c. |
(a) The Downstate Forest Preserve District board of |
commissioners shall develop an apportionment plan and specify |
the number of districts. Each district shall have one |
|
commissioner. Each such district: |
(1) shall be substantially equal in population to each |
other district; and |
(2) shall be comprised of contiguous territory, as |
nearly compact as practicable; and |
(3) shall be created in such a manner so that no |
precinct shall be divided between 2 or more districts, |
insofar as is practicable. |
(b) The president of the board of commissioners of a |
Downstate Forest Preserve District may develop a reappointment |
plan and that plan, as presented or as amended, shall be |
presented to the board by the third Wednesday in May in the |
year after a federal decennial census year for approval in |
accordance with the provisions of subsection (a) of this |
Section. If the president presents a plan to the board by the |
third Wednesday in May, the board shall conduct at least one |
public hearing to receive comments and to discuss the |
apportionment plan. That hearing shall be held at least 6 days |
but not more than 21 days before the board may consider |
adopting the plan, and the public shall be given notice by |
publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the |
district of the hearing at least 6 days in advance of the |
hearing. The president of the board of commissioners shall |
have access to the federal decennial census available to the |
board. |
(c) For the reapportionment in calendar year 2021, the |
|
president of the board of commissioners may develop and |
present (or redevelop and represent) to the board by the third |
Wednesday in November of 2021 an apportionment plan. If a plan |
is presented, the Board shall conduct at least one hearing on |
the proposed plan before it may be adopted. That hearing shall |
be held at least 6 days but not more than 21 days before the |
board may consider adopting the plan, and the public shall be |
given notice by publication in a newspaper of general |
circulation in the district of the hearing at least 6 days in |
advance of the hearing. |
(d) After each decennial census, the Downstate Forest |
Preserve District board is not obligated to reapportion the |
districts if existing districts are within a 10% population |
deviation from each other based on the results of the |
decennial census. |
(e) As used in this Section, "Downstate Forest Preserve |
District" means a district described in Section 3c. |
Section 30. The Circuit Courts Act is amended by changing |
Sections 2f, 2f-2, 2f-4, 2f-5, 2f-6, and 2f-9 as follows:
|
(705 ILCS 35/2f) (from Ch. 37, par. 72.2f)
|
Sec. 2f. (a) The Circuit of Cook County shall be divided |
into 15
units to be known as subcircuits. The subcircuits |
shall be compact,
contiguous, and substantially equal in |
population.
The General Assembly
shall create the subcircuits |
|
by law on or before
July 1, 1991, using population data as |
determined by the 1990 Federal census.
|
(a-5) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. In accordance with |
subsection (d), a resident judgeship assigned to a subcircuit |
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit. Any vacancy |
in a resident judgeship existing on or occurring after the |
effective date of a law redrawing the boundaries of the |
subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of the redrawn |
subcircuit. |
(b) The 165 resident judges to be elected from the Circuit |
of Cook
County shall be determined under paragraph (4) of |
subsection (a) of Section 2 of the
Judicial Vacancies Act.
|
(c) The Supreme Court shall allot (i) the additional |
resident judgeships
provided by paragraph (4) of subsection |
(a) of Section 2 of the Judicial Vacancies Act
and (ii) all |
vacancies in
resident judgeships existing on or occurring on |
or after the effective date
of this amendatory Act of 1990,
|
with respect to the other resident judgeships of the Circuit
|
of Cook County, for election from the various subcircuits |
until there are
11 resident judges to be
elected from each of |
the 15 subcircuits (for a total of 165). A resident
judgeship |
|
authorized before the effective date of this amendatory Act of
|
1990 that became vacant and was filled by appointment by the |
Supreme Court
before that effective date shall be filled by |
election at the general
election in November of 1992 from the |
unit of the Circuit of Cook County
within Chicago or the unit |
of that Circuit outside Chicago, as the case may
be, in which |
the vacancy occurred.
|
(d) As soon as practicable after the subcircuits are |
created by law, the
Supreme Court shall determine by lot a |
numerical order for the 15
subcircuits. That numerical order |
shall be the basis for the order in which resident
judgeships |
are assigned to the subcircuits. After the first round of
|
assignments, the second and all later rounds shall be based on |
the same
numerical order. Once a resident judgeship is |
assigned to a subcircuit,
it shall continue to be assigned to |
that subcircuit for all purposes.
|
(e) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside
in that subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office. A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at large thereafter.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20 .)
|
(705 ILCS 35/2f-2)
|
Sec. 2f-2. 19th judicial circuit; subcircuits; additional |
|
judges.
|
(a) Prior to the boundaries of the subcircuits being |
redrawn under subsection (a-3), the 19th circuit shall be |
divided into 6 subcircuits. The
subcircuits shall be
compact, |
contiguous, and substantially equal in population. The General
|
Assembly by law shall
create the subcircuits, using population
|
data as
determined by the 2000 federal census, and
shall |
determine a numerical order for the 6 subcircuits. That
|
numerical order shall be the basis for the order in which |
resident judgeships
are assigned to
the subcircuits. The 6 |
resident judgeships to be assigned that are not added by or |
converted from at-large judgeships as provided in this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall be assigned |
to the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th subcircuits, in that |
order. The 6 resident judgeships to be assigned that are added |
by or converted from at-large judgeships as provided in this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall be assigned |
to the 6th, 5th, 4th, 3rd, 2nd, and 1st subcircuits, in that |
order. Once a resident judgeship is assigned to a subcircuit, |
it
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit for all |
purposes.
|
(a-3) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census and divide the 19th circuit |
into at least 10 subcircuits. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
|
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. Upon the division of |
subcircuits pursuant to this Section: (i) each resident |
judgeship shall be assigned to the newly drawn subcircuit in |
which the judge of the resident judgeship in question resides; |
and (ii) each at-large judgeship shall be converted to a |
resident judgeship and assigned to the subcircuit in which the |
judge of the converted judgeship in question resides. Once a |
resident judgeship is assigned to a subcircuit or an at-large |
judgeship is converted to a resident judgeship and assigned to |
a subcircuit, it shall be assigned to that subcircuit for all |
purposes. Any vacancy in a resident judgeship existing on or |
occurring after the effective date of a law redrawing the |
boundaries of the subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of |
the redrawn subcircuit. When a vacancy occurs in a resident |
judgeship, the resident judgeship shall be allotted by the |
Supreme Court under subsection (c) and filled by election. |
Notwithstanding the preceding 2 sentences, the resident |
judgeship shall not be allotted by the Supreme Court and |
filled by election if, after the vacancy arises, there are |
still 2 or more nonvacant resident judgeships in the |
subcircuit of the vacant resident judgeship in question. |
(a-5) Of the at-large judgeships of the 19th judicial |
circuit, the first 3 that are or become vacant on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly shall become resident judgeships of the 19th judicial |
|
circuit to be allotted by the Supreme Court under subsection |
(c) and filled by election, except that the Supreme Court may |
fill those judgeships by appointment for any remainder of a |
vacated term until the resident judgeships are filled |
initially by election. As used in this subsection, a vacancy |
does not include the expiration of a term of an at-large judge |
who seeks retention in that office at the next term. |
(a-10) The 19th judicial circuit shall have 3 additional |
resident judgeships to be allotted by the Supreme Court under |
subsection (c). One of the additional resident judgeships |
shall be filled by election beginning at the 2010 general |
election. Two of the additional resident judgeships shall be |
filled by election beginning at the 2012 general election. |
(a-15) The 19th judicial circuit shall have additional |
resident judgeships as provided by subsection (a-3) to be |
allotted by the Supreme Court under subsection (c). The |
resident judgeships shall be allotted by the Supreme Court in |
numerical order as provided by the General Assembly upon the |
redrawing of boundaries and the division of subcircuits |
pursuant to subsection (a-3). Two additional resident |
judgeships allotted by the Supreme Court pursuant to this |
subsection, in numerical order as provided by the General |
Assembly, shall be filled by election beginning at the 2022 |
general election. The remainder of the additional resident |
judgeships shall be filled by election at the 2024 election. |
(a-20) In addition to the 2 judgeships filled by election |
|
at the 2022 election as provided by subsection (a-15), any |
judgeship that became vacant after January 1, 2020 and on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly is held by an individual appointed by the Supreme |
Court also shall be filled by election at the 2022 general |
election. This subsection is subject to the requirement of |
subsection (a-3) that no judgeship shall be allotted by the |
Supreme Court and filled by election if, after the vacancy |
arises, there are still 2 or more nonvacant resident |
judgeships in the subcircuit of the vacant resident judgeship |
in question. |
(b) The 19th circuit shall have a total of 12 resident |
judgeships (6 resident judgeships existing on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, 3 |
formerly at-large judgeships as provided in subsection (a-5), |
and 3 resident judgeships added by subsection (a-10)). The |
number of resident judgeships allotted to subcircuits of the |
19th judicial circuit pursuant to this Section shall |
constitute all the resident judgeships of the 19th judicial |
circuit.
|
(c) The Supreme Court shall allot (i)
all vacancies in
|
resident
judgeships of the 19th circuit existing on or |
occurring on or after the
effective date of this
amendatory |
Act
of the 93rd General Assembly and not filled at the 2004 |
general election,
(ii) the resident judgeships of the 19th
|
circuit filled at the 2004
general election as those |
|
judgeships thereafter become vacant,
(iii) the 3 formerly |
at-large judgeships described in subsection (a-5) as they |
become available, (iv) the 3 resident judgeships added by |
subsection (a-10), and (v) the additional resident judgeships |
provided for by subsection (a-3), for election from the
|
various
subcircuits until there are 2 resident judges to be |
elected from each
subcircuit.
No resident judge of the 19th |
circuit serving on
the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 93rd General Assembly shall be
required to change his or |
her residency in order to continue serving in office
or
to seek |
retention in office as resident judgeships are allotted by the
|
Supreme Court in accordance with this Section.
|
(d) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside in
that
subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office. A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at-large thereafter.
|
(e) Vacancies in resident judgeships of the 19th circuit |
shall be
filled
in the manner provided in Article VI of the |
Illinois Constitution.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20; 102-380, eff. 8-13-21.)
|
(705 ILCS 35/2f-4)
|
Sec. 2f-4. 12th circuit; subcircuits; additional judges.
|
(a) The 12th circuit shall be divided into 5 subcircuits. |
|
The
subcircuits shall be
compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. The General
Assembly by law |
shall
create the subcircuits, using population
data as
|
determined by the 2000 federal census, and
shall determine a |
numerical order for the 5 subcircuits. That numerical
order |
shall
be the basis for the order in which resident judgeships |
are assigned to the
subcircuits.
The 5 resident judgeships to |
be assigned after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 96th General Assembly shall be assigned to the 3rd, 4th, |
5th, 1st, and 2nd subcircuits, in that order. Once a resident |
judgeship is
assigned to a subcircuit, it shall continue to be
|
assigned to
that subcircuit for all purposes.
|
(a-5) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. In accordance with |
subsection (a), a resident judgeship assigned to a subcircuit |
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit. Any vacancy |
in a resident judgeship existing on or occurring after the |
effective date of a law redrawing the boundaries of the |
subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of the redrawn |
subcircuit. |
(a-10) The first vacancy in the 12th judicial circuit's 10 |
existing circuit judgeships (8 at large and 2 resident), but |
|
not in the additional judgeships described in subsections (b) |
and (b-5), that exists on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall not be |
filled, by appointment or election, and that judgeship is |
eliminated. Of the 12th judicial circuit's 10 existing circuit |
judgeships (8 at large and 2 resident), but not the additional |
judgeships described in subsections (b) and (b-5), the second |
to be vacant or become vacant on or after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall be |
allotted as a 12th circuit resident judgeship under subsection |
(c). |
(a-15) Of the at large judgeships of the 12th judicial |
circuit not affected by subsection (a-10), the first 2 that |
are or become vacant on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall become |
resident judgeships of the 12th judicial circuit to be |
allotted by the Supreme Court under subsection (c) and filled |
by election, except that the Supreme Court may fill those |
judgeships by appointment for any remainder of a vacated term |
until the resident judgeships are filled initially by |
election. |
(a-20) As used in subsections (a-10) and (a-15), a vacancy |
does not include the
expiration of a term of an at large or |
resident judge who seeks
retention in that office at the next |
term.
|
(b) The 12th circuit shall have 6 additional resident |
|
judgeships, as well
as
its existing resident judgeship as |
established in subsection (a-10), and existing at large |
judgeships, for a
total of 15 judgeships available to be |
allotted under subsection (c)
to the 10 subcircuit resident
|
judgeships. The
additional resident
judgeship created
by |
Public Act 93-541 shall be filled by election beginning at the
|
general
election in
2006. The 2 additional resident judgeships |
created by this amendatory Act of 2004 shall be filled by |
election beginning at the general election in 2008. The |
additional resident judgeships created by this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly shall be filled by election |
beginning at the general election in 2010. After the |
subcircuits are created by
law, the Supreme Court may fill by |
appointment the additional resident judgeships created by |
Public Act 93-541,
this
amendatory Act of 2004, and this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly until the 2006, |
2008, or 2010
general
election, as the case may be.
|
(b-5) In addition to the number of circuit judges and |
resident judges otherwise authorized by law, and |
notwithstanding any other provision of law, beginning on April |
1, 2006 there shall be one additional resident judge who is a |
resident of and elected from the fourth judicial subcircuit of |
the 12th judicial circuit. That additional resident judgeship |
may be filled by appointment by the Supreme Court until filled |
by election at the general election in 2008, regardless of |
whether the judgeships for subcircuits 1, 2, and 3 have been |
|
filled. |
(c) The Supreme Court shall allot (i) the additional |
resident judgeships
of the 12th circuit created by Public Act |
93-541, this amendatory Act of 2004, and this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly, (ii)
the second vacancy in the at |
large and resident judgeships of the 12th
circuit as provided |
in subsection (a-10),
and (iii) the 2 formerly at large |
judgeships described in subsection (a-15) as they become |
available, for election from the
various
subcircuits until, |
with the additional judge of the fourth subcircuit described |
in subsection (b-5), there are 2 resident judges to be elected |
from each
subcircuit. No at large or resident judge of the 12th |
circuit serving on
August 18, 2003 shall be
required to change |
his or her residency in order to continue serving in office
or
|
to seek retention in office as at large or resident judgeships |
are allotted by
the
Supreme Court in accordance with this |
Section.
|
(d) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside in
that
subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office. A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at large thereafter.
|
(e) Vacancies in resident judgeships of the 12th circuit |
shall be filled
in the manner provided in Article VI of the |
Illinois Constitution, except as otherwise provided in this |
|
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20 .)
|
(705 ILCS 35/2f-5)
|
Sec. 2f-5. 22nd circuit; subcircuits; additional resident |
judgeship.
|
(a) The 22nd circuit shall be divided into 4 subcircuits. |
The
subcircuits shall be
compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. The General
Assembly by law |
shall
create the subcircuits, using population
data as
|
determined by the 2000 federal census, and
shall determine a |
numerical order for the 4 subcircuits. That numerical
order |
shall
be the basis for the order in which resident judgeships |
are assigned to the
subcircuits.
Once a resident judgeship is
|
assigned to a subcircuit, it shall continue to be
assigned to
|
that subcircuit for all purposes.
|
(a-5) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. In accordance with |
subsection (a), a resident judgeship assigned to a subcircuit |
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit. Any vacancy |
in a resident judgeship existing on or occurring after the |
effective date of a law redrawing the boundaries of the |
|
subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of the redrawn |
subcircuit. |
(b) Other than the resident judgeship added by this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the 22nd circuit |
shall have one additional resident judgeship, as well as its 3 |
existing resident judgeships, for a total of 4 resident |
judgeships to be allotted to the 4 subcircuit resident |
judgeships. The additional resident judgeship created by this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly shall be filled by |
election beginning at the general election in 2006 and shall |
not be filled by appointment before the general election in |
2006.
The number of resident judgeships allotted to |
subcircuits of the 22nd judicial circuit pursuant to this |
Section, and the resident judgeship added by this amendatory |
Act of the 96th General Assembly, shall constitute all the |
resident judgeships of the 22nd judicial circuit.
|
(c) The Supreme Court shall allot (i)
all eligible |
vacancies in
resident
judgeships of the 22nd circuit existing |
on or occurring on or after August 18, 2003 and not filled at |
the 2004 general election, (ii) the resident
judgeships of the |
22nd circuit filled at the 2004 general election as
those |
judgeships thereafter become vacant,
and (iii) the additional |
resident judgeship of the 22nd circuit created by this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, for election from |
the
various
subcircuits until there is one resident judge to |
be elected from each
subcircuit.
No resident judge of the 22nd |
|
circuit serving on
August 18, 2003 shall be
required to change |
his or her residency in order to continue serving in office
or
|
to seek retention in office as resident judgeships are |
allotted by the
Supreme Court in accordance with this Section.
|
(d) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside in
that
subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office. A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at large thereafter.
|
(e) Vacancies in resident judgeships of the 22nd circuit |
shall be
filled
in the manner provided in Article VI of the |
Illinois Constitution.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20 .)
|
(705 ILCS 35/2f-6) |
Sec. 2f-6. 17th judicial circuit; subcircuits. |
(a) The 17th circuit shall be divided into 4 subcircuits. |
The
subcircuits shall be
compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. The General
Assembly by law |
shall
create the subcircuits, using population
data as
|
determined by the 2000 federal census, and
shall determine a |
numerical order for the 4 subcircuits. That
numerical order |
shall be the basis for the order in which resident judgeships
|
are assigned to
the subcircuits. Once a resident judgeship is |
assigned to a subcircuit, it
shall continue to be assigned to |
|
that subcircuit for all purposes.
|
(a-5) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. In accordance with |
subsection (a), a resident judgeship assigned to a subcircuit |
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit. Any vacancy |
in a resident judgeship existing on or occurring after the |
effective date of a law redrawing the boundaries of the |
subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of the redrawn |
subcircuit. |
(a-10) Of the 17th circuit's 9 circuit judgeships existing |
on April 7, 2005 (6 at large and
3 resident), but not including |
the one resident judgeship added by this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly, the 3 resident judgeships shall be |
allotted as 17th circuit resident judgeships under
subsection |
(c) as those resident judgeships
are or become vacant on or |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly. Of the 17th circuit's associate judgeships, |
the first associate judgeship that is or becomes vacant on or |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly shall become a resident judgeship of the 17th |
circuit to be allotted by the Supreme Court under subsection |
(c) as a resident subcircuit judgeship. These resident |
|
judgeships, and the one resident judgeship added by this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, shall constitute |
all of the resident judgeships of the 17th circuit. As used in |
this subsection, a vacancy does not include the
expiration of |
a term of a resident judge who seeks
retention in that office |
at the next term. A vacancy does not exist or occur at the |
expiration of an associate judge's term if the associate judge |
is reappointed.
|
(b) The 17th circuit shall have a total of 4 judgeships (3 |
resident judgeships existing on April 7, 2005 and one |
associate judgeship), but not including the one resident |
judgeship added by this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly, available to be allotted to the 4 subcircuit |
resident judgeships.
|
(c) The Supreme Court shall allot (i) the 3 resident
|
judgeships of the 17th circuit existing on April 7, 2005 as |
they are or become vacant as provided in subsection (a-10) and |
(ii) the one associate judgeship converted into a resident |
judgeship of the 17th circuit as it is or becomes vacant as |
provided in subsection (a-10),
for election from the
various
|
subcircuits until there is one resident judge to be elected |
from each
subcircuit.
No resident or associate judge of the |
17th circuit serving on
the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 93rd General Assembly shall be
required to change |
his or her residency in order to continue serving in office
or
|
to seek retention or reappointment in office as resident |
|
judgeships are allotted by the
Supreme Court in accordance |
with this Section.
|
(d) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside in
that
subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office.
A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at large thereafter.
|
(e) Vacancies in resident judgeships of the 17th circuit |
shall be
filled
in the manner provided in Article VI of the |
Illinois Constitution.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20 .) |
(705 ILCS 35/2f-9) |
Sec. 2f-9. 16th judicial circuit; subcircuits. |
(a) The 16th circuit shall be divided into 4 subcircuits. |
Subcircuits 1, 2, and 4 of the 16th circuit in existence on |
April 15, 2011 shall continue to use their established |
boundaries in the new 16th circuit as of December 3, 2012. |
Subcircuit 3 in existence on April 15, 2011 shall continue to |
use its established boundary until December 3, 2012. For a |
judge elected to subcircuit 3 as of April 15, 2011, the current |
boundaries in existence as of April 15, 2011 shall continue |
until the conclusion of the existing term of office, following |
the 2012 general election, and upon the conclusion of the |
existing term of office, the new boundary shall go into |
|
effect. The new boundary for subcircuit 3 shall contain and be |
made up of the following townships in the County of Kane, |
excluding the portions of the townships currently served by |
subcircuit 1, 2, or 4: Aurora, Blackberry, Big Rock, |
Burlington, Campton, Dundee, Elgin, Hampshire, Kaneville, |
Plato, Rutland, Sugar Grove, and Virgil. The
subcircuits shall |
be
compact, contiguous, and substantially equal in population. |
The General
Assembly by law shall
create the subcircuits, |
using population
data as
determined by the 2000 federal |
census, and
shall determine a numerical order for the 4 |
subcircuits. That
numerical order shall be the basis for the |
order in which resident judgeships
are assigned to
the |
subcircuits. Once a resident judgeship is assigned to a |
subcircuit, it
shall continue to be assigned to that |
subcircuit for all purposes.
|
(a-5) In 2022 In 2021 , the General Assembly shall redraw |
the boundaries of the subcircuits to reflect the results of |
the 2020 federal decennial census. The General Assembly shall |
redraw the subcircuit boundaries after every federal decennial |
census. The subcircuits shall be compact, contiguous, and |
substantially equal in population. In accordance with |
subsection (a), a resident judgeship assigned to a subcircuit |
shall continue to be assigned to that subcircuit. Any vacancy |
in a resident judgeship existing on or occurring after the |
effective date of a law redrawing the boundaries of the |
subcircuits shall be filled by a resident of the redrawn |
|
subcircuit. |
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) No resident judge of the 16th circuit serving on
the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly shall be
required to change his or her residency in |
order to continue serving in office
or
to seek retention in |
office as judgeships are allotted by the
Supreme Court in |
accordance with this Section.
No resident judge elected from a |
subcircuit serving on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 97th General Assembly shall be required to change |
his or her residency in order to continue serving in or to seek |
retention in office until the 2012 general election, or until |
the conclusion of the existing term. |
(d) A resident judge elected from a subcircuit shall |
continue to reside in
that
subcircuit as long as he or she |
holds that office.
A resident judge elected from a subcircuit |
after January 1, 2008, must retain residency as a registered |
voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from the circuit |
at large thereafter.
A resident judge elected from a |
subcircuit after January 1, 2011, must retain residency as a |
registered voter in the subcircuit to run for retention from |
the circuit at large thereafter. |
(e) Vacancies in resident judgeships of the 16th circuit |
shall be
filled
in the manner provided in Article VI of the |
Illinois Constitution.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-477, eff. 6-1-20 .) |
|
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act. |
Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|