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Public Act 096-1008 |
SB3012 Enrolled |
LRB096 19629 JAM 35025 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 7-11, 7-12, 7-13, 7-13.1, 7-14, 7-60, 7-60.1, 8-9, |
8-17, 8-17.1, 10-6, 10-9, 10-10, 10-10.1, 10-11.1, 10-11.2, |
10-14, 10-15, 19-2.1, 19-3, and 28-2 and by adding Section 1-20 |
as follows: |
(10 ILCS 5/1-20 new) |
Sec. 1-20. Public university registration and voting pilot |
project. For the 2010 general election, each appropriate |
election authority shall conduct grace period registration and |
early voting in a high traffic location on the main campus of |
each public university within the election authority's |
jurisdiction. For the purposes of this Section, "public |
university" means the University of Illinois, Southern |
Illinois University, Chicago State University, Eastern |
Illinois University, Governors State University, Illinois |
State University, Northeastern Illinois University, Northern |
Illinois University, and Western Illinois University.
The |
registration conducted under this Section shall be available to |
any qualified resident of this State. |
The registration and voting required by this Section to be |
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conducted on campus must be conducted as otherwise required by |
this Code. |
Each public university shall make the space available in a |
high traffic area for, and cooperate and coordinate with the |
appropriate election authority in, the implementation of this |
Section. |
By March 1, 2011, the election authorities affected by this |
pilot project shall report to the State Board of Elections the |
following information: (i) the total number of individuals that |
engaged in grace period registration or early voting at the |
campus site and (ii) how grace period registration or early |
voting at the campus site was conducted. |
This Section is repealed March 2, 2011.
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(10 ILCS 5/7-11) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-11)
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Sec. 7-11.
Any candidate for President of the United States |
may have his name
printed upon the primary ballot of his |
political party by filing in the
office of the State Board of |
Elections not more than 113 99 and not less
than 106 92 days |
prior to the date of the general primary, in any year in which |
a
Presidential election is to be held, a petition signed by not |
less than
3000 or more than 5000 primary electors, members of |
and affiliated with the
party of which he is a candidate, and |
no candidate for President of the
United States, who fails to |
comply with the provisions of this Article
shall have his name |
printed upon any primary ballot: Provided, however,
that if the |
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rules or policies of a national political
party conflict with |
such requirements for filing petitions for President of
the |
United States in a presidential preference primary, the |
Chairman of the
State central committee of such national |
political party shall notify the
State Board of Elections in |
writing, citing by reference the rules or
policies of the |
national political party in conflict, and in such case the
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Board shall direct such petitions to be filed not more than 69 |
and not less
than 62 days prior to the date of the general |
primary, in any year in which
a Presidential election is to be |
held. Provided, further, unless rules
or policies of a national |
political party otherwise provide, the
vote for President of |
the United States, as herein provided for, shall be
for the |
sole purpose of securing an expression of the sentiment and |
will of
the party voters with respect to candidates for |
nomination for said office,
and the vote of the state at large |
shall be taken and considered as
advisory to the delegates and |
alternates at large to the national
conventions of respective |
political parties; and the vote of the respective
congressional |
districts shall be taken and considered as advisory to the
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delegates and alternates of said congressional districts to the |
national
conventions of the respective political parties.
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(Source: P.A. 86-873; 86-1089.)
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(10 ILCS 5/7-12) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-12)
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Sec. 7-12.
All petitions for nomination shall be filed by |
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mail or
in person as follows:
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(1) Where the nomination is to be made for a State, |
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, then,
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except as otherwise provided in this Section, such petition for |
nomination
shall be filed in the principal office of the State |
Board of Elections not
more than 113 99 and not less than 106 |
92 days prior to the date of the primary,
but, in the case of |
petitions for nomination to fill a vacancy by special
election |
in the office of representative in Congress from this State, |
such
petition for nomination shall be filed in the principal |
office of the State
Board of Elections not more than 57 days |
and not less than 50 days prior to
the date of the primary.
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Where a vacancy occurs in the office of Supreme, Appellate |
or Circuit
Court Judge within the 3-week period preceding the |
106th 92nd day before a
general primary election, petitions for |
nomination for the office in which
the vacancy has occurred |
shall be filed in the principal office of the
State Board of |
Elections not more than 92 78 nor less than 85 71 days prior to
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the date of the general primary election.
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Where the nomination is to be made for delegates or |
alternate
delegates to a national nominating convention, then |
such petition for
nomination shall be filed in the principal |
office of the State Board of
Elections not more than 113 99 and |
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not less than 106 92 days prior to the date of
the primary; |
provided, however, that if the rules or policies of a national
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political party conflict with such requirements for filing |
petitions for
nomination for delegates or alternate delegates |
to a national nominating
convention, the chairman of the State |
central committee of such national
political party shall notify |
the Board in writing, citing by reference the
rules or policies |
of the national political party in conflict, and in such
case |
the Board shall direct such petitions to be filed not more than |
83 69 and
not less than 76 62 days prior to the date of the |
primary.
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(2) Where the nomination is to be made for a county office |
or trustee
of a sanitary district then such petition shall be |
filed in the office
of the county clerk not more than 113 99 |
nor less than 106 92 days prior to the
date of the primary.
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(3) Where the nomination is to be made for a municipal or |
township
office, such petitions for nomination shall be filed |
in the office of
the local election official, not more than 99 |
78 nor less than 92 71 days
prior to the date of the primary; |
provided, where a municipality's or
township's boundaries are |
coextensive with or are entirely within the
jurisdiction of a |
municipal board of election commissioners, the petitions
shall |
be filed in the office of such board; and provided, that |
petitions
for the office of multi-township assessor shall be |
filed with the election
authority.
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(4) The petitions of candidates for State central |
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committeeman shall
be filed in the principal office of the |
State Board of Elections not
more than 113 99 nor less than 106 |
92 days prior to the date of the primary.
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(5) Petitions of candidates for precinct, township or ward
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committeemen shall be filed in the office of the county clerk |
not more
than 113 99 nor less than 106 92 days prior to the date |
of the primary.
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(6) The State Board of Elections and the various election |
authorities
and local election officials with whom such |
petitions for nominations
are filed shall specify the place |
where filings shall be made and upon
receipt shall endorse |
thereon the day and hour on which each petition
was filed. All |
petitions filed by persons waiting in line as of 8:00
a.m. on |
the first day for filing, or as of the normal opening hour of
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the office involved on such day, shall be deemed filed as of |
8:00 a.m.
or the normal opening hour, as the case may be. |
Petitions filed by mail
and received after midnight of the |
first day for filing and in the first
mail delivery or pickup |
of that day shall be deemed as filed as of 8:00
a.m. of that day |
or as of the normal opening hour of such day, as the
case may |
be. All petitions received thereafter shall be deemed as filed
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in the order of actual receipt. Where 2 or more petitions are |
received
simultaneously, the State Board of Elections or the |
various election
authorities or local election officials with |
whom such petitions are
filed shall break ties and determine |
the order of filing, by means of a
lottery or other fair and |
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impartial method of random selection approved
by the State |
Board of Elections. Such lottery shall be conducted within
9 |
days following the last day for petition filing and shall be |
open to the
public. Seven days written notice of the time and |
place of conducting such
random selection shall be given by the |
State Board of Elections to the
chairman of the State central |
committee of each established political
party, and by each |
election authority or local election official, to the
County |
Chairman of each established political party, and to each
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organization of citizens within the election jurisdiction |
which was
entitled, under this Article, at the next preceding |
election, to have
pollwatchers present on the day of election. |
The State Board of Elections,
election authority or local |
election official shall post in a conspicuous,
open and public |
place, at the entrance of the office, notice of the time
and |
place of such lottery. The State Board of Elections shall adopt |
rules
and regulations governing the procedures for the conduct |
of such lottery.
All candidates shall be certified in the order |
in which their petitions
have been filed. Where candidates have |
filed simultaneously, they shall be
certified in the order |
determined by lot and prior to candidates who filed
for the |
same office at a later time.
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(7) The State Board of Elections or the appropriate |
election
authority or local election official with whom such a |
petition for
nomination is filed shall notify the person for |
whom a petition for
nomination has been filed of the obligation |
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to file statements of
organization, reports of campaign |
contributions, and annual reports of
campaign contributions |
and expenditures under Article 9 of this Act.
Such notice shall |
be given in the manner prescribed by paragraph (7) of
Section |
9-16 of this Code.
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(8) Nomination papers filed under this Section are not |
valid if the
candidate named therein fails to file a statement |
of economic interests
as required by the Illinois Governmental |
Ethics Act in relation to his
candidacy with the appropriate |
officer by the end of the period for the
filing of nomination |
papers unless he has filed a statement of economic
interests in |
relation to the same governmental unit with that officer
within |
a year preceding the date on which such nomination papers were
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filed. If the nomination papers of any candidate and the |
statement of
economic interest of that candidate are not |
required to be filed with
the same officer, the candidate must |
file with the officer with whom the
nomination papers are filed |
a receipt from the officer with whom the
statement of economic |
interests is filed showing the date on which such
statement was |
filed. Such receipt shall be so filed not later than the
last |
day on which nomination papers may be filed.
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(9) Any person for whom a petition for nomination, or for |
committeeman or
for delegate or alternate delegate to a |
national nominating convention has
been filed may cause his |
name to be withdrawn by request in writing, signed
by him and |
duly acknowledged before an officer qualified to take
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acknowledgments of deeds, and filed in the principal or |
permanent branch
office of the State Board of Elections or with |
the appropriate election
authority or local election official, |
not later than the date of
certification of candidates for the |
consolidated primary or general primary
ballot. No names so |
withdrawn shall be certified or printed on the
primary ballot. |
If petitions for nomination have been filed for the
same person |
with respect to more than one political party, his name
shall |
not be certified nor printed on the primary ballot of any |
party.
If petitions for nomination have been filed for the same |
person for 2 or
more offices which are incompatible so that the |
same person could not
serve in more than one of such offices if |
elected, that person must
withdraw as a candidate for all but |
one of such offices within the
5 business days following the |
last day for petition filing. If he fails to
withdraw as a |
candidate for all but one of such offices within such time
his |
name shall not be certified, nor printed on the primary ballot, |
for any
office. For the purpose of the foregoing provisions, an |
office in a
political party is not incompatible with any other |
office.
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(10) (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of any other |
statute, no primary
shall be held for an established |
political party in any township,
municipality, or ward |
thereof, where the nomination of such
party for every |
office to be voted upon by the electors of such
township, |
municipality, or ward thereof, is uncontested. Whenever a
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political party's nomination of candidates is uncontested |
as to one or
more, but not all, of the offices to be voted |
upon by the electors of a
township, municipality, or ward |
thereof, then a primary shall
be held for that party in |
such township, municipality, or ward thereof;
provided |
that the primary ballot shall not include those offices
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within such township, municipality, or ward thereof, for |
which the
nomination is uncontested. For purposes of this |
Article, the nomination
of an established political party |
of a candidate for election to an office
shall be deemed to |
be uncontested where not more than the number of persons
to |
be nominated have timely filed valid nomination papers |
seeking the
nomination of such party for election to such |
office.
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(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of any other |
statute, no primary
election shall be held for an |
established political party for any special
primary |
election called for the purpose of filling a vacancy in the |
office
of representative in the United States Congress |
where the nomination of
such political party for said |
office is uncontested. For the purposes of
this Article, |
the nomination of an established political party of a
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candidate for election to said office shall be deemed to be |
uncontested
where not more than the number of persons to be |
nominated have timely filed
valid nomination papers |
seeking the nomination of such established party
for |
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election to said office. This subsection (b) shall not |
apply if such
primary election is conducted on a regularly |
scheduled election day.
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(c) Notwithstanding the provisions in subparagraph (a) |
and (b) of this
paragraph (10), whenever a person who has |
not timely filed valid nomination
papers and who intends to |
become a write-in candidate for a political
party's |
nomination for any office for which the nomination is |
uncontested
files a written statement or notice of that |
intent with the State Board of
Elections or the local |
election official with whom nomination papers for
such |
office are filed, a primary ballot shall be prepared and a |
primary
shall be held for that office. Such statement or |
notice shall be filed on
or before the date established in |
this Article for certifying candidates
for the primary |
ballot. Such statement or notice shall contain (i) the
name |
and address of the person intending to become a write-in |
candidate,
(ii) a statement that the person is a qualified |
primary elector of the
political party from whom the |
nomination is sought, (iii) a statement that
the person |
intends to become a write-in candidate for the party's
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nomination, and (iv) the office the person is seeking as a |
write-in
candidate. An election authority shall have no |
duty to conduct a primary
and prepare a primary ballot for |
any office for which the nomination is
uncontested unless a |
statement or notice meeting the requirements of this
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Section is filed in a timely manner.
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(11) If multiple sets of nomination papers are filed for a |
candidate to
the same office, the State Board of Elections, |
appropriate election
authority or local election official |
where the petitions are filed shall
within 2 business days |
notify the candidate of his or her multiple petition
filings |
and that the candidate has 3 business days after receipt of the
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notice to notify the State Board of Elections, appropriate |
election
authority or local election official that he or she |
may cancel prior sets
of petitions. If the candidate notifies |
the State Board of Elections,
appropriate election authority or |
local election official, the last set of
petitions filed shall |
be the only petitions to be considered valid by the
State Board |
of Elections, election authority or local election official. If
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the candidate fails to notify the State Board of Elections, |
election authority
or local
election official then only the |
first set of petitions filed shall be valid
and all subsequent |
petitions shall be void.
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(12) All nominating petitions shall be available for public |
inspection
and shall be preserved for a period of not less than |
6 months.
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(Source: P.A. 86-867; 86-873; 86-875; 86-1028; 86-1089; |
87-1052.)
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(10 ILCS 5/7-13) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-13)
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Sec. 7-13.
The board of election commissioners in cities of |
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500,000 or more
population having such board, shall constitute |
an electoral board for the
hearing and passing upon objections |
to nomination petitions for ward
committeemen.
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Such objections shall be filed in the office of the county |
clerk within 5 business days after the last day for filing |
nomination papers not
less than 81 days prior to the primary . |
The objection shall state the name
and address of the objector, |
who may be any qualified elector in the ward,
the specific |
grounds of objection and the relief requested of the electoral
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board. Upon the receipt of the objection, the county clerk |
shall forthwith
transmit such objection and the petition of the |
candidate to the board of
election commissioners. The board of |
election commissioners shall forthwith
notify the objector and |
candidate objected to of the time and place for
hearing hereon. |
After a hearing upon the validity of such objections, the
board |
shall , not less than 74 days prior to the date of the primary,
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certify to the county clerk , its decision stating whether or |
not the name
of the candidate shall be printed on the ballot |
and the county clerk in his
or her certificate to the board of |
election commissioners shall leave off
of the certificate the |
name of the candidate for ward committeeman that the
election |
commissioners order not to be printed on the ballot. However, |
the
decision of the board of election commissioners is subject |
to judicial
review as provided in Section 10-10.1.
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The county electoral board composed as provided in Section |
10-9 shall
constitute an electoral board for the hearing and |
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passing upon objections
to nomination petitions for precinct |
and township committeemen. Such
objections shall be filed in |
the office of the county clerk within 5 business days after the |
last day for filing nomination papers not less than
81 days |
prior to the primary . The objection shall state the name and
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address of the objector who may be any qualified elector in the |
precinct or
in the township or part of a township that lies |
outside of a city having a
population of 500,000 or more, the |
specific grounds of objection and the
relief requested of the |
electoral board. Upon the receipt of the objection
the county |
clerk shall forthwith transmit such objection and the petition
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of the candidate to the chairman of the county electoral board. |
The
chairman of the county electoral board shall forthwith |
notify the objector,
the candidate whose petition is objected |
to and the other members of the
electoral board of the time and |
place for hearing thereon. After hearing
upon the validity of |
such objections the board shall , not less than 74 days
prior to |
the date of the primary, certify its decision to the county |
clerk
stating whether or not the name of the candidate shall be |
printed on the
ballot, and the county clerk, in his or her |
certificate to the board of
election commissioners, shall leave |
off of the certificate the name of the
candidate ordered by the |
board not to be printed on the ballot, and the
county clerk |
shall also refrain from printing on the official primary
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ballot, the name of any candidate whose name has been ordered |
by the
electoral board not to be printed on the ballot. |
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However, the decision of
the board is subject to judicial |
review as provided in Section 10-10.1.
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In such proceedings the electoral boards have the same |
powers as other
electoral boards under the provisions of |
Section 10-10 of this Act and
their decisions are subject to |
judicial review under Section 10-10.1.
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(Source: P.A. 84-1308.)
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(10 ILCS 5/7-13.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-13.1)
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Sec. 7-13.1. Certification of Candidates-Consolidated
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primary. Not less than 68 61 days
before the date of the |
consolidated primary, each local election
official of each |
political subdivision required to nominate candidates
for the |
respective offices by primary shall certify to each election
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authority whose duty it is to prepare the official ballot for |
the
consolidated primary in such political subdivision the |
names of all
candidates in whose behalf nomination papers have |
been filed in the
office of such local election official
and |
direct the election authority to place upon the official ballot |
for
the consolidated primary election the names of such |
candidates in the same
manner and in the same order as shown |
upon the certification. However,
subject to appeal, the names |
of candidates whose
nomination papers have been held invalid by |
the appropriate electoral board
provided in Section 10-9 of |
this Code shall not be so
certified. The certification
shall be |
modified as necessary to comply with the requirements of any |
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other
statute or any ordinance adopted pursuant to Article VII |
of the Constitution
prescribing specific provisions for |
nonpartisan elections, including without
limitation Articles |
3, 4 and 5 of "The Municipal Code".
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The names of candidates shall be listed on the |
certification for the
respective offices in the order in which |
the candidates have filed their
nomination papers, or as |
determined by lot, or as otherwise specified by statute.
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In every instance where applicable, the following shall |
also be indicated
in the certification:
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(1) Where there is to be more than one candidate elected to |
an office
from a political subdivision or district;
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(2) Where a voter has the right to vote for more than one |
candidate for an office;
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(3) The terms of the office to be on the ballot, when a |
vacancy is to
be filled for less than a full term, or when |
offices of a particular subdivision
to be on the ballot at the |
same election are to be filled for different terms;
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(4) The territory in which a candidate is required by law |
to reside, when
such residency requirement is not identical to |
the territory of the political
subdivision from which the |
candidate is to be elected or nominated;
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(5) Where a candidate's nominating papers or petitions have |
been objected to and the objection has been sustained by the |
electoral board established in Section 10-10, the words |
"OBJECTION SUSTAINED" shall be placed under the title of the |
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office being sought by the candidate and the name of the |
aggrieved candidate shall not appear; and
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(6) Where a candidate's nominating papers or petitions have |
been objected to and the decision of the electoral board |
established in Section 10-10 is either unknown or known to be |
in judicial review, the words "OBJECTION PENDING" shall be |
placed under the title of the office being sought by the |
candidate and next to the name of the candidate.
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The local election official shall issue an amended |
certification
whenever it is discovered that the original |
certification is in error.
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(Source: P.A. 95-699, eff. 11-9-07.)
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(10 ILCS 5/7-14) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-14)
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Sec. 7-14.
Not less than 68 61 days before the date of the |
general primary the
State Board of Elections shall meet and |
shall examine all petitions
filed under this Article 7, in the |
office of the State Board of
Elections. The State Board of |
Elections shall then certify to the county
clerk of each |
county, the names of all candidates whose nomination papers
or |
certificates of nomination have been filed with the Board and |
direct the
county clerk to place upon the official ballot for |
the general primary
election the names of such candidates in |
the same manner and in the same
order as shown upon the |
certification.
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The State Board of Elections shall, in its certificate to |
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the county
clerk, certify the names of the offices, and the |
names of the candidates
in the order in which the offices and |
names
shall appear upon the primary ballot;
such names
to |
appear
in the order in which petitions have been filed in the |
office of the
State Board of Elections except as otherwise |
provided in this Article.
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Not less than 62 55 days before the date of the general |
primary, each
county clerk shall certify the names of all |
candidates whose nomination
papers have been filed with such |
clerk and declare that the names of such
candidates for the |
respective offices shall be placed upon the official
ballot for |
the general primary in the order in which such nomination |
papers
were filed with the clerk, or as determined by lot, or |
as otherwise
specified by statute. Each county clerk shall |
place a copy of the
certification on file in his or her office |
and at the same time issue to
the board of election |
commissioners a copy of the certification that has been
filed |
in the county clerk's office, together with a copy of the
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certification that has been issued to the clerk by the State |
Board of
Elections, with directions to the board of election |
commissioners to place
upon the official ballot for the general |
primary in that election
jurisdiction the names of all |
candidates that are listed on such
certification in the same |
manner and in the same order as shown upon such
certifications.
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The certification shall indicate, where applicable, the |
following:
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(1) The political party affiliation of the candidates for |
the respective offices;
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(2) If there is to be more than one candidate elected or |
nominated to an
office from the State, political subdivision or |
district;
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(3) If the voter has the right to vote for more than one |
candidate for an office;
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(4) The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled for |
less than a
full term or if the offices to be filled in a |
political subdivision or
district are for different terms.
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The State Board of Elections or the county clerk, as the |
case may be,
shall issue an amended certification whenever it |
is discovered that the
original certification is in error.
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Subject to appeal, the names of candidates whose nomination |
papers have
been held invalid by the appropriate electoral |
board provided in Section
10-9 of this Code shall not be |
certified.
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(Source: P.A. 86-867.)
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(10 ILCS 5/7-60) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-60)
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Sec. 7-60. Not less than 74 67 days before the date of the |
general
election, the State Board of Elections shall certify to |
the county clerks
the names of each of the candidates who have |
been nominated as shown by the
proclamation of the State Board |
of Elections as a canvassing board or who
have been nominated |
to fill a vacancy in nomination and direct the election
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authority to place upon the official ballot for the general |
election the
names of such candidates in the same manner and in |
the same order as shown
upon the certification, except as |
otherwise provided in this Section.
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Not less than 68 61 days before the date of the general |
election, each
county clerk shall certify the names of each of |
the candidates for county
offices who have been nominated as |
shown by the proclamation of the county
election authority or |
who have been nominated to fill a vacancy in nomination
and |
declare that the names of such candidates for the respective |
offices
shall be placed upon the official ballot for the |
general election in the
same manner and in the same order as |
shown upon the certification, except
as otherwise provided by |
this Section. Each county clerk shall place a
copy of the |
certification on file in his or her office and at the same
time |
issue to the State Board of Elections a copy of such |
certification.
In addition, each county clerk in whose county |
there is a board of election
commissioners shall, not less than |
68 61 days before the date of the general
election, issue to |
such board a copy of the certification that has been
filed in |
the county clerk's office, together with a copy of the
|
certification that has been issued to the clerk by the State |
Board of
Elections, with directions to the board of election |
commissioners to place
upon the official ballot for the general |
election in that election
jurisdiction the names of all |
candidates that are listed on such
certifications, in the same |
|
manner and in the same order as shown upon such
certifications, |
except as otherwise provided in this Section.
|
Whenever there are two or more persons nominated by the |
same political
party for multiple offices for any board, the |
name of the candidate of such
party receiving the highest |
number of votes in the primary election as a
candidate for such |
office, as shown by the official election returns of the
|
primary, shall be certified first under the name of such |
offices, and the
names of the remaining candidates of such |
party for such offices shall
follow in the order of the number |
of votes received by them respectively at
the primary election |
as shown by the official election results.
|
No person who is shown by the final
proclamation to have
|
been nominated or elected at the primary as a write-in |
candidate shall have his or her
name certified unless such |
person shall have filed with the certifying
office or board |
within 10 days after the election authority's proclamation
a |
statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10, a statement |
pursuant
to Section 7-10.1, and a receipt for the filing of a |
statement of economic interests in relation to the unit of |
government to which he or she has been elected or nominated.
|
Each county clerk and board of election commissioners shall |
determine
by a fair and impartial method of random selection |
the order of placement
of established political party |
candidates for the general election ballot.
Such determination |
shall be made within 30 days following the canvass and |
|
proclamation
of the results of the general primary
in the |
office of the county clerk or board of election commissioners |
and
shall be open to the public. Seven days written notice of |
the time and place
of conducting such random selection shall be |
given, by each such election
authority, to the County Chairman |
of each established political party, and
to each organization |
of citizens within the election jurisdiction which
was |
entitled, under this Article, at the next preceding election, |
to have
pollwatchers present on the day of election. Each |
election authority shall
post in a conspicuous, open and public |
place, at the entrance of the election
authority office, notice |
of the time and place of such lottery. However,
a board of |
election commissioners may elect to place established |
political
party candidates on the general election ballot in |
the same order determined
by the county clerk of the county in |
which the city under the jurisdiction
of such board is located.
|
Each certification shall indicate, where applicable, the |
following:
|
(1) The political party affiliation of the candidates |
for the respective offices;
|
(2) If there is to be more than one candidate elected |
to an office from
the State, political subdivision or |
district;
|
(3) If the voter has the right to vote for more than |
one candidate for an office;
|
(4) The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled |
|
for less than a
full term or if the offices to be filled in |
a political subdivision are for
different terms.
|
The State Board of Elections or the county clerk, as the |
case may be,
shall issue an amended certification whenever it |
is discovered that the
original certification is in error.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-645, eff. 8-22-05; 94-647, eff. 1-1-06; |
94-1000, eff. 7-3-06.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-60.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-60.1)
|
Sec. 7-60.1. Certification of Candidates - Consolidated |
Election.
Each local election official of a political |
subdivision in which candidates
for the respective local |
offices are nominated at the consolidated primary
shall, no |
later than 5 days following the canvass and proclamation of the
|
results of the consolidated primary, certify to each election |
authority
whose duty it is to prepare the official ballot for |
the consolidated
election in that political subdivision the |
names of each of the candidates
who have been nominated as |
shown by the proclamation of the appropriate election authority |
or who have been nominated to fill a vacancy in nomination
and |
direct the election authority to place upon the official ballot |
for the
consolidated election the names of such candidates in |
the same manner and
in the same order as shown upon the |
certification, except as otherwise
provided by this Section.
|
Whenever there are two or more persons nominated by the |
same political
party for multiple offices for any board, the |
|
name of the candidate of such
party receiving the highest |
number of votes in the consolidated primary
election as a |
candidate for such consolidated primary, shall be certified
|
first under the name of such office, and the names of the |
remaining
candidates of such party for such offices shall |
follow in the order of the
number of votes received by them |
respectively at the consolidated primary
election as shown by |
the official election results.
|
No person who is shown by the election authority's |
proclamation to have
been nominated at the consolidated primary |
as a write-in candidate shall
have his or her name certified |
unless such person shall have filed with the
certifying office |
or board within 5 days after the election authority's
|
proclamation a statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10 |
and a
statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1.
|
Each board of election commissioners of the cities in which |
established
political party candidates for city offices are |
nominated at the
consolidated primary shall determine by a fair |
and impartial method of
random selection the order of placement |
of the established political party
candidates for the |
consolidated ballot. Such determination shall be made
within 5 |
days following the canvass and proclamation of the results of |
the
consolidated primary and shall be open to the public. Three |
days written
notice of the time and place of conducting such |
random selection shall be
given, by each such election |
authority, to the County Chairman of each
established political |
|
party, and to each organization of citizens within
the election |
jurisdiction which was entitled, under this Article, at the
|
next preceding election, to have pollwatchers present on the |
day of
election. Each election authority shall post in a |
conspicuous, open and
public place, at the entrance of the |
election authority office, notice of
the time and place of such |
lottery.
|
Each local election official of a political subdivision in |
which
established political party candidates for the |
respective local offices are
nominated by primary shall |
determine by a fair and impartial method of
random selection |
the order of placement of the established political party
|
candidates for the consolidated election ballot and, in the |
case of certain
municipalities having annual elections, on the |
general primary ballot for
election. Such determination shall |
be made prior to the canvass and
proclamation of results of the |
consolidated primary or special municipal
primary, as the case |
may be, in the office of the local election official and
shall |
be open to the public. Three days written notice of the time |
and
place of conducting such random selection shall be given, |
by each such
local election official, to the County Chairman of |
each established
political party, and to each organization of |
citizens within the election
jurisdiction which was entitled, |
under this Article, at the next preceding
election, to have |
pollwatchers present on the day of election. Each local
|
election official shall post in a conspicuous, open and public |
|
place notice of
such lottery. Immediately thereafter, the local |
election official shall
certify the ballot placement order so |
determined to the proper election
authorities charged with the |
preparation of the consolidated election, or
general primary,
|
ballot for that political subdivision.
|
Not less than 68 61 days before the date of the |
consolidated election, each
local election official of a |
political subdivision in which established
political party |
candidates for the respective local offices have been
nominated |
by caucus or have been nominated because no primary was |
required
to be held shall certify to each election authority |
whose duty it is to
prepare the official ballot for the |
consolidated election in that political
subdivision the names |
of each of the candidates whose certificates of
nomination or |
nomination papers have been filed in his or her office and
|
direct the election authority to place upon the official ballot |
for the
consolidated election the names of such candidates in |
the same manner and
in the same order as shown upon the |
certification. Such local election
official shall, prior to |
certification, determine by a fair and impartial
method of |
random selection the order of placement of the established
|
political party candidates for the consolidated election |
ballot. Such
determination shall be made in the office of the |
local election official
and shall be open to the public. Three |
days written notice of the time and
place of conducting such |
random selection shall be given by each such local
election |
|
official to the county chairman of each established political
|
party, and to each organization of citizens within the election
|
jurisdiction which was entitled, under this Article, at the |
next preceding
election, to have pollwatchers present on the |
day of election. Each local
election official shall post in a |
conspicuous, open and public place, at the
entrance of the |
office, notice of the time and place of such lottery. The
local |
election official shall certify the ballot placement order so
|
determined as part of his official certification of candidates |
to the
election authorities whose duty it is to prepare the |
official ballot for
the consolidated election in that political |
subdivision.
|
The certification shall indicate, where applicable, the |
following:
|
(1) The political party affiliation of the candidates |
for the respective offices;
|
(2) If there is to be more than one candidate elected |
or nominated to an
office from the State, political |
subdivision or district;
|
(3) If the voter has the right to vote for more than |
one candidate for an office;
|
(4) The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled |
for less than a
full term or if the offices to be filled in |
a political subdivision or
district are for different |
terms.
|
The local election official shall issue an amended |
|
certification whenever
it is discovered that the original |
certification is in error.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-647, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/8-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 8-9)
|
Sec. 8-9.
All petitions for nomination shall be filed by |
mail or in
person as follows:
|
(1) Where the nomination is made for a legislative office, |
such
petition for nomination shall be filed in the principal |
office of the
State Board of Elections not more than 113 99 and |
not less than 106 92 days
prior to the date of the primary.
|
(2) The State Board of Elections shall, upon receipt of |
each
petition, endorse thereon the day and hour on which it was |
filed.
Petitions filed by mail and received after midnight on |
the first day for
filing and in the first mail delivery or |
pickup of that day, shall be deemed
as filed as of 8:00 a.m. of |
that day or as of the normal opening hour of
such day as the |
case may be, and all petitions received thereafter shall be
|
deemed as filed in the order of actual receipt. Where 2 or more |
petitions
are received simultaneously, the State Board of |
Elections shall break ties
and determine the order of filing, |
by means of a lottery as provided in
Section 7-12 of this Code.
|
(3) Any person for whom a petition for nomination has been |
filed,
may cause his name to be withdrawn by a request in |
writing, signed by
him, duly acknowledged before an officer |
qualified to take
acknowledgments of deeds, and filed in the |
|
principal or permanent branch
office of the State Board of |
Elections not later than the date of
certification of |
candidates for the general primary ballot, and no names so
|
withdrawn shall be certified by the State Board
of Elections to |
the county clerk, or printed on the primary ballot. If
|
petitions for nomination have been filed for the same person |
with
respect to more than one political party, his name shall |
not be
certified nor printed on the primary ballot of any |
party. If petitions
for nomination have been filed for the same |
person for 2 or more offices
which are incompatible so that the |
same person could not serve in more
than one of such offices if |
elected, that person must withdraw as a
candidate for all but |
one of such offices within the 5 business days following
the |
last day for petition filing. If he fails to withdraw as a |
candidate for
all but one of such offices within such time, his |
name shall not be
certified, nor printed on the primary ballot, |
for any office. For the
purpose of the foregoing provisions, an |
office in a political party is
not incompatible with any other |
office.
|
(4) If multiple sets of nomination papers are filed for a |
candidate to
the same office, the State Board of Elections |
shall within 2 business days
notify the candidate of his or her |
multiple petition filings and that the
candidate has 3 business |
days after receipt of the notice to notify the
State Board of |
Elections that he or she may cancel prior sets of petitions.
If |
the candidate notifies the State Board of Elections the last |
|
set of
petitions filed shall be the only petitions to be |
considered valid by the State
Board of Elections. If the |
candidate fails to notify the State Board then
only the first |
set of petitions filed shall be valid and all subsequent
|
petitions shall be void.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-875; 87-1052.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/8-17) (from Ch. 46, par. 8-17) |
Sec. 8-17. The death of any candidate prior to, or on, the |
date of the primary
shall not affect the canvass of the |
ballots. If the result of such
canvass discloses that such |
candidate, if he had lived, would have been
nominated, such |
candidate shall be declared nominated. |
In the event that a candidate of a party who has been |
nominated under
the provisions of this Article shall die before |
election (whether death
occurs prior to, or on, or after, the |
date of the primary) or decline
the nomination or should the |
nomination for any other reason become
vacant, the legislative |
or representative committee of such party for
such district |
shall
nominate a candidate of such party to fill such vacancy.
|
However, if there
was no candidate for the nomination of the |
party in the primary,
no candidate of that party for that
|
office may be listed on the ballot at the general election, |
unless the
legislative or representative committee of the party |
nominates a candidate
to fill the vacancy in nomination within |
75 60 days after the date of the
general primary election.
|
|
Vacancies in
nomination occurring under this Article shall be |
filled by the appropriate
legislative or representative |
committee in accordance with the provisions
of Section 7-61 of |
this Code. In proceedings to fill the vacancy in
nomination, |
the voting strength of the members of the legislative or
|
representative committee shall be as provided in Section 8-6. |
(Source: P.A. 84-757; 84-790; 84-928; 84-1026.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/8-17.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 8-17.1)
|
Sec. 8-17.1.
Whenever a vacancy in the office of State |
Senator is to be
filled by election pursuant to Article IV, |
Section 2(d) of the Constitution
and Section 25-6 of this Code, |
nominations shall be made and any vacancy in
nomination shall |
be filled pursuant to this Section:
|
(1) If the vacancy in office occurs before the first date |
provided in
Section 8-9 for filing nomination papers for the |
primary in the next
even-numbered year following the |
commencement of the term, the nominations
for the election for |
filling such vacancy shall be made as otherwise
provided in |
Article 8.
|
(2) If the vacancy in office occurs during the time |
provided in Section
8-9 for filing nomination papers for the |
office of State Senator for the
primary in the next |
even-numbered year following commencement of the term
of office |
in which such vacancy occurs, the time for filing nomination
|
papers for such office for the primary shall be not more than |
|
105 91 days and
not less than 99 85 days prior to the date of |
the primary election.
|
(3) If the vacancy in office occurs after the last day |
provided in Section
8-9 for filing nomination papers for the |
office of State Senator, a vacancy
in nomination shall be |
deemed to have occurred and the legislative
committee of each |
established political party shall nominate, by
resolution, a |
candidate to fill such vacancy in nomination for the election
|
to such office at such general election. In the proceedings to |
fill the
vacancy in nomination the voting strength of the |
members of the legislative
committee shall be as provided in |
Section 8-6. The name of the candidate
so nominated shall not |
appear on the ballot at the general primary election.
Such |
vacancy in nomination shall be filled prior to the date of
|
certification of candidates for the general election.
|
(4) The resolution to fill the vacancy shall be duly |
acknowledged before
an officer qualified to take |
acknowledgments of deeds and shall include,
upon its face, the |
following information;
|
(a) the names of the original nominee and the office |
vacated;
|
(b) the date on which the vacancy occurred;
|
(c) the name and address of the nominee selected to fill |
the vacancy and
the date of selection.
|
The resolution to fill the vacancy shall be accompanied by |
a Statement
of Candidacy, as prescribed in Section 7-10, |
|
completed by the selected
nominee and a receipt indicating that |
such nominee has filed a statement of
economic interests as |
required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act.
|
The provisions of Sections 10-8 through 10-10.1 relating to |
objections to
nomination papers, hearings on objections and |
judicial review, shall also
apply to and govern objections to |
nomination papers and resolutions for filling
vacancies in |
nomination filed pursuant to this Section.
|
Unless otherwise specified herein, the nomination and |
election provided
for in this Section shall be governed by this |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-790.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-6) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-6)
|
Sec. 10-6. Time and manner of filing. Certificates
of
|
nomination and nomination papers for the nomination of |
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 not more than 141 nor less than 134
days previous
to |
the day of election for which the candidates are nominated. The
|
State Board of Elections shall endorse the certificates of |
nomination or
nomination papers, as the case may be, and the |
date and hour of
presentment to it. Except as otherwise |
provided in this section, all
other certificates for the |
|
nomination of candidates shall be filed with
the county clerk |
of the respective counties not more than 141 but at
least 134 |
days previous to the day of such election. Certificates
of
|
nomination and nomination papers for the nomination of |
candidates for
the offices of political subdivisions to be |
filled at regular elections
other than the general election |
shall be filed with the local election
official of such |
subdivision:
|
(1) (Blank);
|
(2) not more than 113 78 nor less than 106 71 days |
prior to the
consolidated
election; or
|
(3) not more than 113 78 nor less than 106 71 days |
prior to the general
primary in the case of municipal |
offices to be filled at the general
primary election; or
|
(4) not more than 99 78 nor less than 92 71 days before |
the
consolidated
primary in the case of municipal offices |
to be elected on a nonpartisan
basis pursuant to law |
(including without limitation, those municipal
offices |
subject to Articles 4 and 5 of the Municipal Code); or
|
(5) not more than 113 78 nor less than 106 71 days |
before the municipal
primary in even numbered years for |
such nonpartisan municipal offices
where annual elections |
are provided; or
|
(6) in the case of petitions for the office of |
multi-township assessor,
such petitions shall be filed |
with the election authority not more than
113 78 nor less |
|
than 106 71 days before the consolidated election.
|
However, where a political subdivision's boundaries are |
co-extensive
with or are entirely within the jurisdiction of a |
municipal board of
election commissioners, the certificates of |
nomination and nomination
papers for candidates for such |
political subdivision offices shall be filed
in the office of |
such Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-699, eff. 11-9-07.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-9)
|
Sec. 10-9. The following electoral boards are designated |
for the
purpose of hearing and passing upon the objector's |
petition described in
Section 10-8.
|
1. The State Board of Elections will hear and pass upon |
objections
to the nominations of candidates for State offices,
|
nominations of candidates for congressional, legislative and |
judicial
offices of districts, subcircuits, or circuits |
situated in more than one county, nominations
of candidates for |
the offices of State's attorney or regional superintendent
of |
schools to be elected from more than one county, and petitions |
for
proposed amendments to the Constitution of the State of |
Illinois as
provided for in Section 3 of Article XIV of the |
Constitution.
|
2. The county officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for county |
offices,
for congressional, legislative and judicial offices |
|
of a district, subcircuit, or
circuit coterminous with or less |
than a county, for school trustees to be
voted for by the |
electors of the county or by the electors of a township of
the |
county, for the office of multi-township assessor where |
candidates for
such office are nominated in accordance with |
this Code, and for all special
district offices, shall be |
composed of the county clerk, or an assistant
designated by the |
county clerk, the State's attorney of the county or
an |
Assistant State's Attorney designated by the State's Attorney, |
and the
clerk of the circuit court, or an assistant designated |
by the clerk of
the circuit court, of the county, of whom the |
county clerk or his designee
shall be the chairman, except that |
in any county which has established a
county board of election |
commissioners that board
shall constitute the county officers |
electoral board ex-officio.
|
3. The municipal officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for officers |
of
municipalities shall be composed of the mayor or president |
of the board
of trustees of the city, village or incorporated |
town, and the city,
village or incorporated town clerk, and one |
member of the city council
or board of trustees, that member |
being designated who is eligible to
serve on the electoral |
board and has served the
greatest number of years as a member |
of the city council or board of
trustees, of whom the mayor or |
president of the board of trustees shall
be the chairman.
|
4. The township officers electoral board to pass upon |
|
objections to
the nominations of township officers shall be |
composed of the township
supervisor, the town clerk, and that |
eligible town trustee elected in the
township who has had the |
longest term of continuous service as town
trustee, of whom the |
township supervisor shall be the chairman.
|
5. The education officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for offices in |
school or
community college districts shall be composed of the |
presiding officer of
the school or community college district |
board, who shall be the chairman,
the secretary of the school |
or community college district board and the
eligible elected |
school or community college board member who has the
longest |
term of continuous service as a board member.
|
6. In all cases, however, where the Congressional , or |
Legislative , or Representative
district is wholly or partially |
within the jurisdiction of a single municipal board of election
|
commissioners in Cook County and in all cases where the school |
district or special
district is wholly within the jurisdiction |
of a municipal board of
election commissioners and in all cases |
where the municipality or
township is wholly or partially |
within the jurisdiction of a municipal
board of election |
commissioners, the board of election commissioners
shall |
ex-officio constitute the electoral board.
|
For special districts situated in more than one county, the |
county officers
electoral board of the county in which the |
principal office of the district
is located has jurisdiction to |
|
hear and pass upon objections. For purposes
of this Section, |
"special districts" means all political subdivisions other
|
than counties, municipalities, townships and school and |
community college
districts.
|
In the event that any member of the appropriate board is a |
candidate
for the office with relation to which the objector's |
petition is filed,
he shall not be eligible to serve on that |
board and shall not act as
a member of the board and his place |
shall be filled as follows:
|
a. In the county officers electoral board by the county
|
treasurer, and if he or she is ineligible to serve, by the |
sheriff of the
county.
|
b. In the municipal officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected city council or board of trustees member |
who has served the second
greatest number of years as a |
city council or board of trustees member.
|
c. In the township officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected town trustee who has had the second |
longest term of continuous service
as a town trustee.
|
d. In the education officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected school or community college district |
board member who has had the
second longest term of |
continuous service as a board member.
|
In the event that the chairman of the electoral board is |
ineligible
to act because of the fact that he is a candidate |
for the office with
relation to which the objector's petition |
|
is filed, then the substitute
chosen under the provisions of |
this Section shall be the chairman; In
this case, the officer |
or board with whom the objector's petition is
filed, shall |
transmit the certificate of nomination or nomination papers
as |
the case may be, and the objector's petition to the substitute
|
chairman of the electoral board.
|
When 2 or more eligible individuals, by reason of their |
terms of service
on a city council or board of trustees, |
township board of
trustees, or school or community college |
district board, qualify to serve
on an electoral board, the one |
to serve shall be chosen by lot.
|
Any vacancies on an electoral board not otherwise filled |
pursuant to this
Section shall be filled by public members |
appointed by the Chief Judge of
the Circuit Court for the |
county wherein the electoral board hearing is
being held upon |
notification to the Chief Judge of such
vacancies. The Chief |
Judge shall be so notified by a member of the electoral
board |
or the officer or board with whom the objector's petition was |
filed.
In the event that none of the individuals designated by |
this Section to
serve on the electoral board are eligible, the |
chairman of an electoral
board shall be designated by the Chief |
Judge.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-645, eff. 8-22-05.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-10)
|
Sec. 10-10. Within 24 hours after the receipt of the |
|
certificate of
nomination or nomination papers or proposed |
question of public
policy, as the case may be, and the |
objector's petition, the chairman
of the electoral board other |
than the State Board of Elections shall
send a call by |
registered or certified mail to each of the members of the
|
electoral board, and to the objector who filed the objector's |
petition, and
either to the candidate whose certificate of |
nomination or nomination
papers are objected to or to the |
principal proponent or attorney for
proponents of a question of |
public policy, as the case may be, whose
petitions are objected |
to, and shall also cause the sheriff of the county
or counties |
in which such officers and persons reside to serve a copy of
|
such call upon each of such officers and persons, which call |
shall set out
the fact that the electoral board is required to |
meet to hear and pass upon
the objections to nominations made |
for the office, designating it, and
shall state the day, hour |
and place at which the electoral board shall meet
for the |
purpose, which place shall be in the
county court house in the |
county in the case of the County Officers
Electoral Board, the |
Municipal Officers Electoral Board, the Township
Officers |
Electoral Board or the Education Officers Electoral Board, |
except that the Municipal Officers Electoral Board, the |
Township Officers Electoral Board, and the Education Officers |
Electoral Board may meet at the location where the governing |
body of the municipality, township, or school or community |
college district, respectively, holds its regularly scheduled |
|
meetings, if that location is available; provided that voter |
records may be removed from the offices of an election |
authority only at the discretion and under the supervision of |
the election authority.
In
those cases where the State Board of |
Elections is the electoral board
designated under Section 10-9, |
the chairman of the State Board of Elections
shall, within 24 |
hours after the receipt of the certificate of nomination
or |
nomination papers or petitions for a proposed amendment to |
Article IV of
the Constitution or proposed statewide question |
of public policy, send a
call by registered or certified mail |
to the objector who files the
objector's petition, and either |
to the candidate whose certificate of
nomination or nomination |
papers are objected to or to the principal
proponent or |
attorney for proponents of the proposed Constitutional
|
amendment or statewide question of public policy and shall |
state the day,
hour and place at which the electoral board |
shall meet for the purpose,
which place may be in the Capitol |
Building or in the principal or permanent
branch office of the |
State Board. The day of the meeting shall not be less
than 3 |
nor more than 5 days after the receipt of the certificate of
|
nomination or nomination papers and the objector's petition by |
the chairman
of the electoral board.
|
The electoral board shall have the power to administer |
oaths and to
subpoena and examine witnesses and at the request |
of either party the
chairman may issue subpoenas requiring the |
attendance of witnesses and
subpoenas duces tecum requiring the |
|
production of such books, papers,
records and documents as may |
be evidence of any matter under inquiry
before the electoral |
board, in the same manner as witnesses are
subpoenaed in the |
Circuit Court.
|
Service of such subpoenas shall be made by any sheriff or |
other
person in the same manner as in cases in such court and |
the fees of such
sheriff shall be the same as is provided by |
law, and shall be paid by
the objector or candidate who causes |
the issuance of the subpoena. In
case any person so served |
shall knowingly neglect or refuse to obey any
such subpoena, or |
to testify, the electoral board shall at once file a
petition |
in the circuit court of the county in which such hearing is to
|
be heard, or has been attempted to be heard, setting forth the |
facts, of
such knowing refusal or neglect, and accompanying the |
petition with a
copy of the citation and the answer, if one has |
been filed, together
with a copy of the subpoena and the return |
of service thereon, and shall
apply for an order of court |
requiring such person to attend and testify,
and forthwith |
produce books and papers, before the electoral board. Any
|
circuit court of the state, excluding the judge who is sitting |
on the electoral
board, upon such showing shall order such |
person to appear and testify,
and to forthwith produce such |
books and papers, before the electoral board
at a place to be |
fixed by the court. If such person shall knowingly fail
or |
refuse to obey such order of the court without lawful excuse, |
the court
shall punish him or her by fine and imprisonment, as |
|
the nature of the case
may require and may be lawful in cases |
of contempt of court.
|
The electoral board on the first day of its meeting shall |
adopt rules
of procedure for the introduction of evidence and |
the presentation of
arguments and may, in its discretion, |
provide for the filing of briefs
by the parties to the |
objection or by other interested persons.
|
In the event of a State Electoral Board hearing on |
objections to a
petition for an amendment to Article IV of the |
Constitution
pursuant to Section 3 of Article XIV of the |
Constitution, or to a
petition for a question of public policy |
to be submitted to the
voters of the entire State, the |
certificates of the county clerks and boards
of election |
commissioners showing the results of the random sample of
|
signatures on the petition shall be prima facie valid and |
accurate, and
shall be presumed to establish the number of |
valid and invalid
signatures on the petition sheets reviewed in |
the random sample, as prescribed
in Section 28-11 and 28-12 of |
this Code. Either party, however, may introduce
evidence at |
such hearing to dispute the findings as to particular |
signatures.
In addition to the foregoing, in the absence of |
competent evidence presented
at such hearing by a party |
substantially challenging the results of a random
sample, or |
showing a different result obtained by an additional sample,
|
this certificate of a county clerk or board of election |
commissioners shall
be presumed to establish the ratio of valid |
|
to invalid signatures within
the particular election |
jurisdiction.
|
The electoral board shall take up the question as to |
whether or not
the certificate of nomination or nomination |
papers or petitions are in
proper form, and whether or not they |
were filed within the time and
under the conditions required by |
law, and whether or not they are the
genuine certificate of |
nomination or nomination papers or petitions
which they purport |
to be, and whether or not in the case of the
certificate of |
nomination in question it represents accurately the
decision of |
the caucus or convention issuing it, and in general shall
|
decide whether or not the certificate of nomination or |
nominating papers
or petitions on file are valid or whether the |
objections thereto should
be sustained and the decision of a |
majority of the electoral board shall
be final subject to |
judicial review as provided in Section 10-10.1. The
electoral |
board must state its findings in writing and must state in
|
writing which objections, if any, it has sustained. A copy of |
the decision shall be served upon the parties to the |
proceedings in open proceedings before the electoral board. If |
a party does not appear for receipt of the decision, the |
decision shall be deemed to have been served on the absent |
party on the date when a copy of the decision is personally |
delivered or on the date when a copy of the decision is |
deposited in the Unites States mail, in a sealed envelope or |
package, with postage prepaid, addressed to each party affected |
|
by the decision or to such party's attorney of record, if any, |
at the address on record for such person in the files of the |
electoral board.
|
Upon the expiration of the period within which a proceeding |
for
judicial review must be commenced under Section 10--10.1, |
the electoral
board shall, unless a proceeding for judicial |
review has been commenced
within such period, transmit, by |
registered or certified mail, a
certified copy of its ruling, |
together with the original certificate of
nomination or |
nomination papers or petitions and the original objector's
|
petition, to the officer or board with whom the certificate of
|
nomination or nomination papers or petitions, as objected to, |
were on
file, and such officer or board shall abide by and |
comply with the
ruling so made to all intents and purposes.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-872, eff. 1-1-09.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-10.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-10.1)
|
Sec. 10-10.1.
|
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, a
|
candidate or objector aggrieved by the decision of an
electoral |
board may secure judicial review of such decision in the |
circuit
court of the county in which the hearing of the |
electoral board was held.
The party seeking judicial review |
must file a petition with the clerk of
the court and must serve |
a copy of the petition upon the electoral board and other |
parties to the proceeding by registered or certified mail |
|
within 5 10 days after service of the decision of the electoral |
board as provided in Section 10-10 . The
petition shall contain |
a brief statement of the reasons why the decision of
the board |
should be reversed. The petitioner shall serve a copy of the
|
petition upon the electoral board and other parties to the |
proceeding by
registered or certified mail and shall file proof |
of service with the clerk
of the court. No answer to the |
petition need be filed, but the electoral board shall cause the |
record of proceedings before the electoral board to be filed |
with the clerk of the court on or before the date of the |
hearing on the petition or as ordered by the court any answer |
must
be filed within 10 days after the filing of the petition .
|
The court shall set the matter for hearing to be held |
within 30 days
after the filing of the petition and shall make |
its decision promptly after
such hearing.
|
(b) An objector or proponent aggrieved by the decision of |
an electoral board
regarding a petition filed pursuant to |
Section 18-120 of the Property Tax
Code
may secure a review of |
such decision by the State Board of Elections. The
party |
seeking such review must file a petition therefor with the |
State Board of
Elections within 10 days after the decision of |
the electoral board. Any such
objector or proponent may apply |
for and obtain judicial review of a decision of
the State Board |
of Elections entered under this amendatory Act of 1985, in
|
accordance with the provisions of the Administrative Review |
Law, as amended.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-11.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-11.1)
|
Sec. 10-11.1.
Whenever a vacancy in the office of State |
Senator is to
be filled by election pursuant to Article IV, |
Section 2(d) of the
Constitution and Section 25-6 of this Code, |
nominations shall be made
pursuant to this Section:
|
(1) If the vacancy in office occurs before the first date |
provided in
Section 10-3 for filing nomination papers for the |
general election in the
next even-numbered year following the |
commencement of the term, the
nomination of independent |
candidates for such office shall be made as
otherwise provided |
in this Article.
|
(2) If the vacancy occurs in office after the first day for |
filing
nomination papers for independent candidates as |
provided in Section 10-3 but
before the first day provided in |
Section 10-6 for filing nomination papers
for the general |
election in the next even-numbered year following the
|
commencement of the term, independent candidates for such |
office shall
file their nomination papers during the filing |
period set forth in Section
10-6 for new political party |
candidates.
|
(3) If a vacancy in office occurs prior to the first day |
provided in
Section 10-6 for filing nomination papers for new |
political party
candidates for the next ensuing general |
election, new political party
candidates for such office shall |
|
file their nomination papers during the
filing period as set |
forth in Section 10-6 as otherwise provided in this
Article.
|
(4) If the vacancy in office occurs during the time |
provided in Section
10-6 for filing nomination papers for new |
political party candidates for
the next ensuing general |
election, the time for independent and new
political party |
candidates to file nomination papers for such office shall
be |
not more than 92 78 days nor less than 85 71 days prior to the |
date of the general
election.
|
(5) If the vacancy in office occurs after the last day |
provided in
Section 10-6 for filing nomination papers for new |
political party
candidates, independent and new political |
party candidates shall be
nominated as provided by rules and |
regulations of the State Board of Elections.
|
The provisions of Sections 10-8 and 10-10.1 relating to |
objections to
nomination papers, hearings on objections and |
judicial review, shall also
apply to and govern objections to |
nomination papers filed pursuant to this
Section.
|
Unless otherwise specified herein, the nomination and |
election provided for
in this Section shall be governed by this |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-790 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-11.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-11.2)
|
Sec. 10-11.2.
Whenever a vacancy in any elective county |
office is to be
filled by election pursuant to Section 25-11 of |
|
this Code, nominations
shall be made and any vacancy in |
nomination shall be filled pursuant to this
Section:
|
(1) If the vacancy in office occurs before the first date |
provided in
Section 10-3 for filing nomination papers for the |
general election in the
next even-numbered year following the |
commencement of the term, the
nomination of independent |
candidates for such office shall be made as
otherwise provided |
in this Article.
|
(2) If the vacancy in office occurs after the first day for |
filing
nomination papers for independent candidates as |
provided in Section 10-3
but before the first day provided in |
Section 10-6 for filing nomination
papers for new political |
party candidates for the general election in the next
|
even-numbered year following the commencement of the term, |
independent
candidates for such office shall file their |
nomination papers during the
filing period set forth in Section |
10-6 for new political party candidates.
|
(3) If the vacancy in office occurs prior to the first date |
provided in
Section 10-6 for filing nomination papers for new |
political party
candidates for the next ensuing general |
election, new political party
candidates for such office shall |
file their nomination papers during the
filing period as set |
forth in Section 10-6 for new political party candidates.
|
(4) If the vacancy in office occurs during the time |
provided in Section
10-6 for filing nomination papers for new |
political party candidates for
the next ensuing general |
|
election the time for independent and new
political party |
candidates to file nomination papers for such office shall be
|
not more than 92 78 days nor less than 85 71 days prior to the |
date of the general
election.
|
The provisions of Sections 10-8 through 10-10.1 relating to |
objections to
nomination papers, hearings on objections and |
judicial review, shall also
apply to and govern objections to |
nomination papers filed pursuant to this Section.
|
Unless otherwise specified herein, the nomination and |
election provided
for in this Section shall be governed by this |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-790.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-14) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-14)
|
Sec. 10-14. Not less than 74 67 days before the date of the |
general election
the State Board of Elections shall certify to |
the county clerk of each
county the name of each candidate |
whose nomination papers,
certificate of nomination or |
resolution to fill a vacancy in nomination
has been filed with
|
the State Board of Elections and direct the county clerk to |
place upon
the official ballot for the general election the |
names of such candidates
in the same manner and in the same |
order as shown upon the certification. The name of no
candidate |
for an office to
be filled by the electors of the entire state |
shall be placed upon the
official ballot unless his name is |
duly certified to the county clerk
upon a certificate signed by |
|
the members of the State Board of
Elections. The names of group |
candidates on petitions shall be certified
to the several |
county clerks in the order
in which such names appear on such |
petitions filed with
the State Board of Elections.
|
Not less than 68 61 days before the date of the general |
election, each
county clerk shall certify the names of each of |
the candidates for county
offices whose nomination papers, |
certificates of nomination or resolutions
to fill a vacancy in |
nomination have been filed with such clerk and declare
that the |
names of such candidates for the respective offices shall be
|
placed upon the official ballot for the general election in the |
same manner
and in the same order as shown upon the |
certification. Each county clerk
shall place a copy of the |
certification on file in his or her office and at
the same time |
issue to the State Board of Elections a copy of such
|
certification. In addition, each county clerk in whose county |
there is a
board of election commissioners
shall, not
less than |
69 55 days before the election, certify to the board of |
election
commissioners the name of the person or persons |
nominated for such
office as shown by the certificate of the |
State Board of Elections,
together with the names of all other |
candidates as shown
by the certification of county officers on |
file in the clerk's office, and
in the order so certified. The |
county clerk or board of election commissioners
shall print
the |
names of the nominees on the ballot for each office in the |
order in
which they are certified to or filed with the county |
|
clerk; provided,
that in printing the name of nominees for any |
office, if any of such
nominees have also been nominated by one |
or more political parties
pursuant to this Act, the location of |
the name of such candidate on the
ballot for nominations made |
under this Article shall be precisely in the
same order in |
which it appears on the certification of the State Board
of |
Elections to the county clerk.
|
For the general election,
the candidates of new political |
parties shall be placed on the ballot for
said election after |
the established political party candidates
and in the order of |
new political party petition filings.
|
Each certification shall indicate, where applicable, the |
following:
|
(1) The political party affiliation if any, of the |
candidates for the
respective offices;
|
(2) If there is to be more than one candidate elected |
to an office from
the State, political subdivision or |
district;
|
(3) If the voter has the right to vote for more than |
one candidate for an office;
|
(4) The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled |
for less than a
full term or if the offices to be filled in |
a political subdivision are for
different terms.
|
The State Board of Elections or the county clerk, as the |
case may be,
shall issue an amended certification whenever it |
is discovered that the
original certification is in error.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-15) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-15)
|
Sec. 10-15. Not less than 68 61 days before the date of the |
consolidated and
nonpartisan elections, each local election |
official with whom
certificates of nomination or nominating |
petitions have been filed shall
certify to each election |
authority having jurisdiction over any of the
territory of his |
political subdivision the names of all candidates
entitled to |
be printed on the ballot for offices of that political
|
subdivision to be voted upon at such election and direct the |
election
authority to place upon the official ballot for such |
election the names of
such candidates in the same manner and in |
the same order as shown upon the
certification.
|
The local election officials shall certify such candidates |
for each
office in the order in which such candidates' |
certificates of nomination
or nominating petitions were filed |
in his office. However, subject to appeal,
the names of |
candidates whose petitions have been held invalid by the |
appropriate
electoral board provided in Section 10-9 of this |
Act shall not be so certified. The
certification shall be |
modified as necessary to comply with the
requirements of any |
other statute or any ordinance adopted pursuant to
Article VII |
of the Constitution prescribing specific provisions for
|
nonpartisan elections, including without limitation Articles 4 |
and 5 of
"The Municipal Code" or Article 9 of The School Code.
|
|
In every instance where applicable, the following shall |
also be indicated
in the certification:
|
(1) The political party affiliation, if any, of the |
candidates for the
respective offices;
|
(2) Where there is to be more than one candidate elected to |
an office
from a political subdivision or district;
|
(3) Where a voter has the right to vote for more than one
|
candidate for an office;
|
(4) The terms of the office to be on the ballot, when a |
vacancy is to
be filled for less than a full term, or when |
offices of a particular subdivision
to be on the ballot at the |
same election are to be filled for different terms;
|
(5) The territory in which a candidate is required by law |
to reside, when
such residency requirement is not identical to |
the territory of the political
subdivision from which the |
candidate is to be elected or nominated;
|
(6) Where a candidate's nominating papers or petitions have |
been objected to and the objection has been sustained by the |
electoral board established in Section 10-10, the words |
"OBJECTION SUSTAINED" shall be placed under the title of the |
office being sought by the candidate and the name of the |
aggrieved candidate shall not appear; and
|
(7) Where a candidate's nominating papers or petitions have |
been objected to and the decision of the electoral board |
established in Section 10-10 is either unknown or known to be |
in judicial review, the words "OBJECTION PENDING" shall be |
|
placed under the title of the office being sought by the |
candidate and next to the name of the candidate.
|
For the consolidated election, and for the general primary |
in the case
of certain municipalities having annual elections, |
the candidates of new
political parties shall be placed on the |
ballot for such elections after
the established political party |
candidates and in the order of new political
party petition |
filings.
|
The local election official shall issue an amended |
certification
whenever it is discovered that the original |
certification is in error.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-699, eff. 11-9-07.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-2.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-2.1) |
Sec. 19-2.1. At the consolidated primary, general primary,
|
consolidated, and general elections, electors entitled
to vote
|
by absentee ballot under the provisions of Section 19-1
may |
vote in person at the office of the municipal clerk, if the |
elector
is a resident of a municipality not having a board of |
election commissioners,
or at the office of the township clerk |
or, in counties not under township
organization, at the office |
of the road district clerk if the elector is
not a resident of |
a municipality; provided, in each case that the municipal,
|
township or road district clerk, as the case may be, is |
authorized to conduct
in-person absentee voting pursuant to |
this Section. Absentee voting in such
municipal and township |
|
clerk's offices under this Section shall be
conducted from the |
22nd day through the day before the election. |
Municipal and township clerks (or road district clerks) who |
have regularly
scheduled working hours at regularly designated |
offices other than a place
of residence and whose offices are |
open for business during the same hours
as the office of the |
election authority shall conduct in-person absentee
voting for |
said elections. Municipal and township clerks (or road district
|
clerks) who have no regularly scheduled working hours but who |
have regularly
designated offices other than a place of |
residence shall conduct in-person
absentee voting for said |
elections during the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. or 9:00 |
a.m. to 5:00 p.m., weekdays, and 9:00 a.m. to 12:00
noon on |
Saturdays, but not during such hours as the office of the |
election
authority is closed, unless the clerk files a written |
waiver with the
election authority not later than July 1 of |
each year stating that he or
she is unable to conduct such |
voting and the reasons therefor. Such clerks
who conduct |
in-person absentee voting may extend their hours for that
|
purpose to include any hours in which the election authority's |
office is
open. Municipal and township clerks (or
road district |
clerks) who have no regularly scheduled office hours and no
|
regularly designated offices other than a place of residence |
may not conduct
in-person absentee voting for said elections. |
The election authority may
devise alternative methods for |
in-person absentee voting before said elections
for those |
|
precincts located within the territorial area of a municipality
|
or township (or road district) wherein the clerk of such |
municipality or
township (or road district) has waived or is |
not entitled to conduct such
voting.
In addition, electors may |
vote by absentee ballot under the provisions of
Section 19-1 at |
the office of the election authority having jurisdiction
over |
their residence. Unless specifically authorized by the |
election authority, municipal,
township, and road district |
clerks shall not conduct in-person absentee
voting. No less |
than 45 days
before the date of an election, the election |
authority shall notify the
municipal, township, and road |
district clerks within its jurisdiction if
they are to conduct |
in-person absentee voting. Election authorities, however, may |
conduct in-person absentee voting in one or more designated
|
appropriate public buildings from the fourth
day before the |
election through
the day before the election.
|
In conducting in-person absentee voting under this |
Section, the respective
clerks shall be required to verify the |
signature of the absentee
voter by comparison with the |
signature on the official registration
record card. The clerk |
also shall reasonably ascertain the identity
of such applicant, |
shall verify that each such applicant is a registered
voter, |
and shall verify the precinct in which he or she is registered
|
and the proper ballots of the political subdivisions in which |
the
applicant resides and is entitled to vote, prior to |
providing any
absentee ballot to such applicant. The clerk |
|
shall verify the
applicant's registration and from the most |
recent poll list provided by
the county clerk, and if the |
applicant is not listed on that poll list
then by telephoning |
the office of the county clerk. |
Absentee voting procedures in the office of the municipal, |
township
and road district clerks shall be subject to all of |
the applicable
provisions of this Article 19.
Pollwatchers may |
be appointed to observe in-person absentee voting
procedures |
and view all reasonably requested records relating to the |
conduct of the election, provided the secrecy of the ballot is |
not impinged, at the office of the municipal, township or road |
district
clerks' offices where such absentee voting is |
conducted. Such pollwatchers
shall qualify and be appointed in |
the same manner as provided in Sections
7-34 and 17-23, except |
each candidate, political party or
organization of citizens may |
appoint only one pollwatcher for each location
where in-person |
absentee voting is conducted. Pollwatchers must
be registered |
to vote in Illinois and possess
valid pollwatcher credentials.
|
All requirements in this Article
applicable to election |
authorities shall apply to the respective local
clerks, except |
where inconsistent with this Section. |
The sealed absentee ballots in their carrier envelope shall |
be
delivered by the respective clerks, or by the election |
authority on behalf of
a clerk if the clerk and the election
|
authority agree, to the election authority's central ballot |
counting location
before the close of the polls on the day of |
|
the general primary,
consolidated primary, consolidated, or |
general election. |
Not more than 23 days before the general and consolidated
|
elections, the county clerk shall make available to those
|
municipal, township and road district clerks conducting |
in-person absentee
voting within such county, a sufficient
|
number of applications, absentee ballots, envelopes, and |
printed voting
instruction slips for use by absentee voters in |
the offices of such
clerks. The respective clerks shall receipt |
for all ballots received,
shall return all unused or spoiled |
ballots to the county clerk on the
day of the election and |
shall strictly account for all ballots received. |
The ballots delivered to the respective clerks shall |
include absentee
ballots for each precinct in the municipality, |
township or road
district, or shall include such separate |
ballots for each political
subdivision conducting an election |
of officers or a referendum on that
election day as will permit |
any resident of the municipality, township
or road district to |
vote absentee in the office of the proper clerk. |
The clerks of all municipalities, townships and road |
districts may
distribute applications for absentee ballot for |
the use of voters who
wish to mail such applications to the |
appropriate election authority. Any person may reproduce, |
distribute, or return to an election authority the application |
for absentee ballot. Upon receipt, the appropriate election |
authority shall accept and promptly process any application for |
|
absentee ballot.
Such applications for absentee ballots shall |
be made on forms provided
by the election authority. |
Duplication of such forms by the municipal,
township or road |
district clerk is prohibited. |
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; 94-645, eff. 8-22-05; |
94-1000, eff. 7-3-06.) |
(10 ILCS 5/19-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-3) |
Sec. 19-3. Application for such ballot shall be made on |
blanks to be
furnished by the election authority and |
duplication of such application
for ballot is prohibited, |
except by the election authority. The
application for absentee |
ballot shall be substantially in the
following form: |
APPLICATION FOR ABSENTEE BALLOT |
To be voted at the .... election in the County of .... and |
State of
Illinois, in the .... precinct of the (1) *township of |
.... (2) *City of
.... or (3) *.... ward in the City of .... |
I state that I am a resident of the .... precinct of the |
(1)
*township of .... (2) *City of .... or (3) *.... ward in |
the city of
.... residing at .... in such city or town in the |
county of .... and
State of Illinois; that I have lived at such |
address for .... month(s)
last past; that I am lawfully |
entitled to vote in such precinct at the
.... election to be |
held therein on ....; and that I wish to vote by absentee |
ballot. |
I hereby make application for an official ballot or ballots |
|
to be
voted by me at such election, and I agree that I shall |
return such ballot or ballots to the
official issuing the same |
prior to the closing of the polls on the date
of the election |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day. |
Under penalties as provided by law pursuant to Section |
29-10 of The
Election Code, the undersigned certifies that the |
statements set forth
in this application are true and correct. |
.... |
*fill in either (1), (2) or (3). |
Post office address to which ballot is mailed: |
............... |
However, if application is made for a primary election |
ballot, such
application shall require the applicant to |
designate the name of the political party with which
the |
applicant is affiliated. |
Any person may reproduce, distribute, or return to an |
election authority the application for absentee ballot. Upon |
receipt, the appropriate election authority shall accept and |
promptly process any application for absentee ballot. |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
|
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
or, if returned by mail, postmarked no later than midnight |
preceding election day, for counting no later than during the |
period for counting provisional ballots, the last day of which |
is the 14th day following election day |
(Source: P.A. 95-440, eff. 8-27-07; 96-312, eff. 1-1-10; |
96-553, eff. 8-17-09; revised 9-15-09.)
|
|
(10 ILCS 5/28-2) (from Ch. 46, par. 28-2)
|
Sec. 28-2. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this |
Section, petitions
for the submission of public questions to |
referendum must be filed with the
appropriate officer or board |
not less than 92 78 days prior to a regular
election to be |
eligible for submission on the ballot at such election; and
|
petitions for the submission of a question under Section 18-120 |
of the
Property Tax Code must be filed with the appropriate |
officer or board not more
than 10 months nor less than 6 months |
prior to the election at which such
question is to be submitted |
to the voters.
|
(b) However, petitions for the submission of a public |
question to
referendum which proposes the creation or formation |
of a political
subdivision must be filed with the appropriate |
officer or board not less
than 122 108 days prior to a regular |
election to be eligible for submission on
the ballot at such |
election.
|
(c) Resolutions or ordinances of governing boards of |
political
subdivisions which initiate the submission of public |
questions pursuant
to law must be adopted not less than 79 65 |
days before a regularly scheduled
election to be eligible for |
submission on the ballot at such election.
|
(d) A petition, resolution or ordinance initiating the |
submission of a
public question may specify a regular election |
at which the question is
to be submitted, and must so specify |
|
if the statute authorizing the
public question requires |
submission at a particular election. However,
no petition, |
resolution or ordinance initiating the submission of a
public |
question, other than a legislative resolution initiating an
|
amendment to the Constitution, may specify such submission at |
an
election more than one year, or 15 months in the case of a |
back door referendum as defined in subsection (f), after the |
date on which it is filed or
adopted, as the case may be. A |
petition, resolution or ordinance
initiating a public question |
which specifies a particular election at
which the question is |
to be submitted shall be so limited, and shall not
be valid as |
to any other election, other than an emergency referendum
|
ordered pursuant to Section 2A-1.4.
|
(e) If a petition initiating a public question does not |
specify a
regularly scheduled election, the public question |
shall be submitted to
referendum at the next regular election |
occurring not less than 92 78 days
after the filing of the |
petition, or not less than 122 108 days after the
filing of a |
petition for referendum to create a political subdivision. If
a |
resolution or ordinance initiating a public question does not |
specify a
regularly scheduled election, the public question |
shall be submitted to
referendum at the next regular election |
occurring not less than 79 65 days
after the adoption of the |
resolution or ordinance.
|
(f) In the case of back door referenda, any limitations in |
another
statute authorizing such a referendum which restrict |
|
the time in which
the initiating petition may be validly filed |
shall apply to such
petition, in addition to the filing |
deadlines specified in this Section
for submission at a |
particular election. In the case of any back door
referendum, |
the publication of the ordinance or resolution of the political
|
subdivision shall include a notice of (1) the specific number |
of voters
required to sign a petition requesting that a public |
question be submitted
to the voters of the subdivision; (2) the |
time within which the petition must
be filed; and (3) the date |
of the prospective referendum. The secretary or
clerk of the |
political subdivision shall provide a petition form to any
|
individual requesting one. The legal sufficiency of that form, |
if provided by the secretary or clerk of the political |
subdivision, cannot be the basis of a challenge to placing the |
back door referendum on the ballot. As used herein, a "back |
door
referendum" is the submission of a public question to the |
voters of a
political subdivision, initiated by a petition of |
voters or residents of
such political subdivision, to determine |
whether an action by the
governing body of such subdivision |
shall be adopted or rejected.
|
(g) A petition for the incorporation or formation of a new
|
political subdivision whose officers are to be elected rather |
than appointed
must have attached to it an affidavit attesting |
that at least 122 108 days and
no more than 152 138 days prior |
to such election notice of intention to file
such petition was |
published in a newspaper published within the proposed
|
|
political subdivision, or if none, in a newspaper of general |
circulation
within the territory of the proposed political |
subdivision in substantially
the following form:
|
NOTICE OF PETITION TO FORM A NEW........
|
Residents of the territory described below are notified |
that a petition
will or has been filed in the Office |
of............requesting a referendum
to establish a |
new........, to be called the............
|
*The officers of the new...........will be elected on the |
same day as the
referendum. Candidates for the governing board |
of the new......may file
nominating petitions with the officer |
named above until...........
|
The territory proposed to comprise the new........is |
described as follows:
|
(description of territory included in petition)
|
(signature)....................................
|
Name and address of person or persons proposing
|
the new political subdivision.
|
* Where applicable.
|
Failure to file such affidavit, or failure to publish the |
required notice
with the correct information contained therein |
shall render the petition,
and any referendum held pursuant to |
such petition, null and void.
|
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this |
subsection (g) or any
other provisions of this Code, the |
publication of notice and affidavit
requirements of this |
|
subsection (g) shall not apply to any petition filed
under |
Article 7 or 11E of the School Code nor to any
referendum
held |
pursuant to any such petition, and neither any petition filed |
under
any of those Articles nor any referendum held pursuant to |
any such petition
shall be rendered null and void because of |
the failure to file an affidavit
or publish a notice with |
respect to the petition or referendum as required
under this |
subsection (g) for petitions that are not filed under any of
|
those Articles of the School Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-30, eff. 6-14-05; 94-578, eff. 8-12-05; |
94-1019, eff. 7-10-06.)
|
Section 10. The Revised Cities and Villages Act of 1941 is |
amended by changing Section 21-29 as follows:
|
(65 ILCS 20/21-29) (from Ch. 24, par. 21-29)
|
Sec. 21-29. Withdrawals and substitution of candidates.
|
Any candidate for alderman under the provisions of this |
article may
withdraw his name as a candidate by filing with the |
board of election
commissioners of the city of Chicago not |
later than the date of certification of the ballot twenty days |
before the
holding of the election his written request signed |
by him and duly
acknowledged before an officer qualified to |
take acknowledgements of
deeds, whereupon his name shall not be |
printed as a candidate upon the
official ballot.
|
If any candidate at an aldermanic election who was not |
|
elected as
provided for in this article but who shall have |
received sufficient votes
to entitle him to a place on the |
official ballot at the ensuing
supplementary election shall die |
or withdraw his candidacy before such
supplementary election, |
the name of the candidate who shall receive the
next highest |
number of votes shall be printed on the ballot in lieu of the
|
name of the candidate who shall have died or withdrawn his |
candidacy.
|
(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19 .)
|
Section 15. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by |
changing Sections 9-2 and 9-4 as follows:
|
(235 ILCS 5/9-2) (from Ch. 43, par. 167)
|
Sec. 9-2.
When any legal voters of a precinct in any city, |
village or
incorporated town of more than 200,000 inhabitants, |
as determined by the
last preceding Federal census, desire to |
pass upon the question of
whether the sale at retail of |
alcoholic liquor shall be prohibited in
the precinct or at a |
particular street address
within the
precinct, they shall, at |
least 104 90 days before an election, file in
the office of the |
clerk of such city, village or incorporated town, a
petition |
directed to the clerk, containing the signatures of not less
|
than 25% of the legal voters registered with the board of |
election
commissioners or county clerk, as the case may be, |
from the precinct.
Provided, however, that when the petition |
|
seeks to prohibit the sale at
retail of alcoholic liquor at a |
particular street address of a licensed
establishment within
|
the precinct the petition shall contain the signatures of not |
less than 40%
of the legal voters requested from that precinct.
|
The petition shall request that the proposition "Shall the sale |
at
retail of alcoholic liquor be prohibited in (or at) ....?" |
be submitted to the
voters of the precinct at the next ensuing |
election at which such
proposition may be voted upon. The |
submission of the question to the
voters of such precinct at |
such election shall be mandatory when the
petition has been |
filed in proper form with the clerk. If more than one
set of |
petitions are presented to the clerk for submission at the same
|
election, the petition
presented first shall be given
|
preference; however, the clerk shall provisionally accept any |
other set of petitions setting forth the same (or
substantially |
the same) proposition. If the first set of petitions for a
|
proposition is found to be in proper form and is not found to |
be invalid, it
shall be accepted by the clerk and all |
provisionally accepted sets of
petitions setting forth the same |
(or substantially the same) proposition shall
be rejected by |
the clerk. If the first set of petitions for a proposition is
|
found not to be in proper form or is found to be invalid, the |
clerk shall (i)
reject the first set of
petitions, (ii) accept |
the first provisionally accepted set of petitions that
is in |
proper form and is not found to be invalid, and (iii) reject |
all other
provisionally accepted sets of
petitions setting |
|
forth the same (or substantially the same) proposition.
Notice |
of the filing of the petition
and the result of the election |
shall be given to the Secretary of State
at his offices in |
both, Chicago and Springfield, Illinois. A return of
the result |
of the election shall be made to the clerk of the city,
village |
or incorporated town in which the precinct is located. If a
|
majority of the voters voting upon such proposition vote "YES", |
the sale
at retail of alcoholic liquor shall be prohibited in |
the precinct or at
the street address.
If the sale at retail of |
alcoholic liquor at a particular street address is prohibited |
pursuant to this Section, the license for any
establishment at |
that street address shall be void, and no person may apply
for |
a license for the
sale at retail of alcoholic liquor at an |
establishment at that
street address unless such
prohibition is |
discontinued pursuant to Section 9-10.
|
In cities, villages and incorporated towns of 200,000 or |
less
population, as determined by the last preceding Federal |
census, the vote
upon the question of prohibiting the sale at |
retail of alcoholic liquor,
or alcoholic liquor other than beer |
containing not more than 4% of
alcohol by volume, or alcoholic |
liquor containing more than 4% of
alcohol by weight in the |
original package and not for consumption on the
premises, shall |
be by the voters of the political subdivision as a unit.
When |
any legal voters of such a city, village or incorporated town
|
desire to pass upon the question of whether the sale at retail |
of
alcoholic liquor shall be prohibited in the municipality, |
|
they shall, at
least 104 90 days before an election, file in |
the office of the clerk of the
municipality, a petition |
directed to the clerk, containing the
signatures of not less |
than 25% of the legal voters registered with the
board of |
election commissioners or county clerk, as the case may be,
|
from the municipality.
The petition shall request that the |
proposition,
"Shall the sale at retail of alcoholic liquor be |
prohibited in....?" be
submitted to the voters of the |
municipality at the next ensuing election
at which the |
proposition may be voted upon. The submission of the
question |
to the voters of the municipality at such election shall be
|
mandatory when the petition has been filed in proper form with |
the
clerk. If more than one set of petitions are presented to |
the clerk for
submission at the same election, setting forth |
the same or different
propositions, the petition presented |
first shall be given preference and
the clerk shall refuse to |
accept any other set of petitions. Notice of
the filing of the |
petition and the result of the election shall be given
to the |
Secretary of State at his offices in both Chicago and
|
Springfield, Illinois. A return of the result of the election |
shall be
made to the clerk of the city, village or incorporated |
town. If a
majority of the voters voting upon the proposition |
vote "Yes", the sale
at retail of alcoholic liquor shall be |
prohibited in the municipality.
|
In the event a municipality does not vote to prohibit the |
sale at
retail of alcoholic liquor, the council or governing |
|
body shall
ascertain and determine what portions of the |
municipality are
predominantly residence districts. No license |
permitting the sale of
alcoholic liquors shall be issued by the |
local liquor commissioner or
licensing officer permitting the |
sale of alcoholic liquors at any place
within the residence |
district so determined, unless the owner or owners
of at least |
two-thirds of the frontage, 200 feet in each direction along
|
the street and streets adjacent to the place of business for |
which a
license is sought, file with the local liquor |
commissioner or licensing
officer, his or their written consent |
to the use of such place for the
sale of alcoholic liquors.
|
In each township or road district lying outside the |
corporate limits
of a city, village or incorporated town, or in |
a part of a township or
road district lying partly within and |
partly outside a city, village or
incorporated town, the vote |
of such township, road district or part
thereof, shall be as a |
unit. When any legal voters of any such township,
or part |
thereof, in counties under township organization, or any legal
|
voters of such road district or part thereof, in counties not |
under
township organization, desire to vote upon the |
proposition as to whether
the sale at retail of alcoholic |
liquor shall be prohibited in such
township or road district or |
part thereof, they shall, at least 90 days
before an election, |
file in the office of the township or road district
clerk, of |
the township or road district within which the election is to
|
be held, a petition directed to the clerk and containing the |
|
signatures
of not less than 25% of the legal voters registered |
with the county
clerk from such township or road district or |
part thereof.
The submission of the question to the voters of |
the township, road district
or part thereof, at the next |
ensuing election shall be mandatory when
the petition has been |
filed in proper form with the clerk. If more than
one set of |
petitions are presented to the clerk for submission at the
same |
election, setting forth the same or different propositions, the
|
petition presented first shall be given preference and the |
clerk shall
refuse to accept any other set of petitions. A |
return of the result of
such election shall be made to the |
clerk of the township or road
district in which the territory |
is situated, and shall also be made to
the Secretary of State |
at his offices in both Chicago and Springfield,
Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-613, eff. 1-1-95.)
|
(235 ILCS 5/9-4) (from Ch. 43, par. 169)
|
Sec. 9-4.
A petition for submission of the proposition |
shall be in
substantially the following form:
|
To the .... clerk of the (here insert the corporate or |
legal name of
the county, township, road district, city, |
village or incorporated
town):
|
The undersigned, residents and legal voters of the .... |
(insert the
legal name or correct designation of the political |
subdivision or
precinct, as the case may be), respectfully |
petition that you cause to
be submitted, in the manner provided |
|
by law, to the voters thereof, at
the next election, the |
proposition "Shall the sale at retail of
alcoholic liquor (or |
alcoholic liquor other than beer containing not
more than 4% of |
alcohol by weight) (or alcoholic liquor containing more
than 4% |
of alcohol by weight except in the original package and not for
|
consumption on the premises) be prohibited in this .... (or at |
the
following address ....)?"
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
Name of P. O. address Description of precinct Date of
|
signer (including township, road district signing
|
street no., or part thereof, as of
|
if any). the last general
|
election
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
A petition for a proposition to be submitted to the voters |
of a precinct
shall also contain in plain and nonlegal language |
a description of the
precinct to which the proposition is to be |
submitted at the election.
The description shall describe the |
territory of the precinct by reference
to streets, natural or |
artificial landmarks, addresses, or by any other
method which |
would enable a voter signing such petition to be informed of
|
the territory of the precinct. Each such petition for a |
precinct
referendum shall also contain a list of the names and |
addresses of all
licensees in the precinct.
|
Such petition shall conform to the requirements of the |
general election
law, as to form and signature requirements. |
|
The circulator's statement
shall include an attestation of: (1) |
that none of the signatures on this
petition sheet were signed |
more than 4 months before the filing of this
petition, or (2) |
the dates on which the petitioners signed the petition,
and |
shall be sworn to before an officer residing in the county |
where such
legal voters reside and authorized to administer |
oaths therein. No
signature shall be revoked except by a |
revocation filed within 20 days from
the filing of the petition |
with the clerk with whom the petition is
required to be filed. |
Upon request of any citizen for a photostatic copy of
the |
petition and paying or tendering to the clerk the costs of |
making the
photostatic copy, the clerk shall immediately make, |
or cause to be made a
photostatic copy of such petition. The |
clerk shall also deliver to such
person, his official |
certification that such copy is a true copy of the
original, |
stating the day when such original was filed in his office. Any
|
5 legal voters or any affected licensee of any political |
subdivision,
district or precinct in which a proposed election |
is about to be held as
provided for in this Act, within any |
time up to 72 30 days immediately prior
to the date of such |
proposed election and upon filing a bond for costs, may
contest |
the validity of the petitions for such election by filing a
|
verified petition in the Circuit Court for the county in which |
the
political subdivision, district or precinct is situated, |
setting forth
the grounds for contesting the validity of such |
petitions. Upon the
filing of the petition, a summons shall be |
|
issued by the Court,
addressed to the appropriate city, |
village, town, township or road
district clerk, notifying the |
clerk of the filing of the petition and
directing him to appear |
before the Court on behalf of the political
subdivision or |
district at the time named in the summons; provided, the
time |
shall not be less than 5 days nor more than 15 days after the
|
filing of the petition. The procedure in these cases, as far as |
may be
applicable, shall be the same as that provided for the |
objections to
petitions in the general election law. Any legal |
voter in the political
subdivision or precinct in which such |
election is to be held may appear in
person or by counsel, in |
any such contest to defend or oppose the validity
of the |
petition for election.
|
The municipal, town or road district clerk shall certify |
the proposition
to be submitted at the election to the |
appropriate election officials, in
accordance with the general |
election law, unless the petition has been
determined to be |
invalid. If the court determines the petitions to be
invalid |
subsequent to the certification by the clerk, the court's order
|
shall be transmitted to the election officials and shall |
nullify such
certification.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-861; 87-347 .)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|