|
Public Act 103-0467 |
SB2123 Enrolled | LRB103 26875 AWJ 53239 b |
|
|
AN ACT concerning government.
|
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
|
represented in the General Assembly:
|
Section 5. The Illinois Constitutional Amendment Act is |
amended by changing Sections 2 and 4 as follows:
|
(5 ILCS 20/2) (from Ch. 1, par. 103)
|
Sec. 2.
(a) The General Assembly in submitting an |
amendment to the
Constitution to the electors, or the |
proponents of an amendment to Article
IV of the Constitution |
submitted by petition, shall prepare a brief explanation of |
such
amendment, a brief argument in favor of the same, and the |
form in which
such amendment will appear on the separate |
ballot as provided by Section
16-6 of the Election Code, as
|
amended. The minority of the General Assembly, or if there is |
no minority,
anyone designated by the General Assembly shall |
prepare a brief argument
against such amendment. The |
explanation, the arguments for and against each constitutional |
amendment, and the form in which the amendment will appear on |
the separate ballot shall be approved by a joint resolution of |
the General Assembly and filed in the office of the Secretary |
of State with the proposed amendment. |
(b) In the case of an
amendment to Article IV of the |
Constitution initiated pursuant to Section
3 of Article XIV of |
|
the Constitution, the proponents shall be those persons
so |
designated at the time of the filing of the petition as |
provided in Section
10-8 of the Election Code, and the |
opponents shall be those members of the
General Assembly |
opposing such amendment, or if there are none, anyone
|
designated by the General Assembly and such opponents shall |
prepare a brief
argument against such amendment. The |
proponent's explanation and
argument in favor of and the |
opponent's opponents argument against an amendment
to Article |
IV initiated by petition must
be submitted to the Attorney |
General, who may rewrite them for accuracy
and fairness. The |
explanation,
the arguments for and against each constitutional |
amendment, and the form in which the
amendment will appear on |
the separate ballot shall be filed in the
office of the |
Secretary of State with the proposed amendment. |
(c) At least 2 months before the next election of members |
of the General Assembly,
following the passage of the proposed |
amendment, the Secretary of State
shall publish the amendment, |
in full in 8 point type, or the equivalent
thereto, in at least |
one secular newspaper of general circulation in
every county |
in this State in which a newspaper is published and its digital |
equivalent . In
counties in which 2 or more newspapers are |
published, the Secretary of
State shall cause such amendment |
to be published in 2 newspapers and their digital equivalent . |
In
counties having a population of 500,000 or more, such |
amendment shall be
published in not less than 6 newspapers of |
|
general circulation and their digital equivalent . After
the |
first publication, the publication of such amendment shall be
|
repeated once each week for 2 consecutive weeks. In selecting |
newspapers
in which to publish such amendment the Secretary of |
State shall have
regard solely to the circulation of such |
newspapers, selecting secular
newspapers in every case having |
the largest circulation. The proposed
amendment shall have a |
notice prefixed thereto in said publications,
that at such |
election the proposed amendment will be submitted to the
|
electors for adoption or rejection, and at the end of the |
official
publication, he shall also publish the form in which |
the proposed
amendment will appear on the separate ballot. The |
Secretary of State
shall fix the publication fees to be paid to |
newspapers for making such
publication, but in no case shall |
such publication fee exceed the amount
charged by such |
newspapers to private individuals for a like
publication. |
(d) In addition to the notice hereby required to be |
published,
the Secretary of State shall also cause the |
existing form of the
constitutional provision proposed to be |
amended, the proposed amendment,
the explanation of the same, |
the arguments for and against the same, and
the form in which |
such amendment will appear on the separate ballot, to
be |
published in pamphlet form in 8 point type or the equivalent |
thereto in English, in additional languages as required by |
Section 203 of Title III of the federal Voting Rights Act of |
1965, and in braille. The Secretary of State shall publish the |
|
pamphlet on the Secretary's website in a downloadable, |
printable format and maintain a reasonable supply of printed |
pamphlets to be available upon request. The Secretary of State |
shall publish an audio version of the pamphlet, which shall be |
available for playback on the Secretary's website and made |
available to any individual or entity upon request. |
(e) Except as provided in subsection (f), the Secretary of |
State shall mail such pamphlet to every mailing
address in the |
State, addressed to the attention of the Postal Patron. He
|
shall also maintain a reasonable supply of such pamphlets so |
as to make
them available to any person requesting one.
|
(f) For any proposed constitutional amendment appearing on |
the ballot for the general election on November 8, 2022, the |
Secretary of State, in lieu of the requirement in subsection |
(e) of this Act, shall mail a postcard to every mailing address |
in the State advising that a proposed constitutional amendment |
will be considered at the general election. The postcard shall |
include a URL to the Secretary of State's website that |
contains the information required in subsection (d). |
(Source: P.A. 102-699, eff. 4-19-22.)
|
(5 ILCS 20/4) (from Ch. 1, par. 106)
|
Sec. 4.
At the election, the proposed amendment and |
explanation shall
be printed on the top of the "Official |
Ballot" preceding all nominations of any political party upon |
a single the separate ballot in accordance with the provisions |
|
of
Section 16-6 of the Election Code "An Act concerning |
elections," approved May 11, 1943, as
amended .
|
(Source: Laws 1949, p. 18.)
|
Section 10. The Election Code is amended by changing |
Sections 1-19, 1-21, 1A-25, 3-6, 4-6.2, 5-16.2, 6-50.2, 7-8, |
7-9, 9-3, 10-9, 10-10, 11-4, 11-8, 12-4, 16-3, 16-6, 19-2.5, |
19-3, 19-5, 19-8, 22-9.1, and 23-23 and by adding Sections |
1-23, 1-24, 1-25 as follows: |
(10 ILCS 5/1-19) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024) |
Sec. 1-19. Access to Voting for Persons with Disabilities |
Advisory Task Force. |
(a) The Access to Voting for Persons with Disabilities |
Advisory Task Force is hereby created to review current laws |
and make recommendations to improve access to voting for |
persons with disabilities. Members of the Task Force shall be |
appointed as follows: |
(1) Three members appointed by the Governor, one of |
whom shall serve as chair, and at least one with |
experience representing or working with persons with |
physical disabilities and one with experience representing |
or working with person with neurological or mental |
disabilities; |
(2) Three members appointed by the President of the |
|
Senate, including at least one attorney with election law |
experience; |
(3) Three members appointed by the Senate Minority |
Leader, including at least one attorney with election law |
experience; |
(4) Three members appointed by the Speaker of the |
House of Representatives, including at least one attorney |
with election law experience; |
(5) Three members appointed by the Minority Leader of |
the House of Representatives, including at least one |
attorney with election law experience. |
(b) The Task Force shall hold a minimum of 4 meetings. No |
later than August 1, 2022, the Task Force shall produce and the |
State Board of Elections shall publish on its website a report |
with a summary of the laws and resources available for persons |
with disabilities seeking to exercise their right to vote. The |
Task Force shall produce a report with recommendations for |
changes to current law or recommendations for election |
authorities submit the report to the Governor and General |
Assembly no later than December 15, 2022. |
(c) The Members shall serve without compensation. If a |
vacancy occurs on the Task Force, it shall be filled according |
to the guidelines of the initial appointment. At the |
discretion of the chair, additional individuals may |
participate as non-voting members in the meetings of the Task |
Force. |
|
(d) The State Board of Elections shall provide staff and |
administrative support to the Task Force. |
(e) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2025 January 1, |
2024 .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-668, eff. 11-15-21.) |
(10 ILCS 5/1-21) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2024) |
Sec. 1-21. Public Financing of Judicial Elections Task |
Force. |
(a) The Public Financing of Judicial Elections Task Force |
is hereby created for the purposes described in subsection |
(b). Members of the Task Force shall be appointed as follows: |
(1) one member appointed by the Governor; |
(2) one member appointed by the Attorney General; |
(3) 2 members appointed by the President of the |
Senate; |
(4) 2 members appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives; |
(5) 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate; and |
(6) 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives. |
(b) The Task Force shall study the feasibility of |
implementing a system of campaign finance that would allow |
public funds to be used to subsidize campaigns for candidates |
|
for judicial office in exchange for voluntary adherence by |
those campaigns to specified expenditure limitations. In |
conducting its study, the Task Force shall consider whether |
implementing such a system of public financing is in the best |
interest of the State. The Task Force may propose one or more |
funding sources for the public financing of judicial |
elections, including, but not limited to, fines, voluntary |
contributions, surcharges on lobbying activities, and a |
whistleblower fund. The Task Force shall consider the |
following factors: |
(1) the amount of funds raised by past candidates for |
judicial office; |
(2) the amount of funds expended by past candidates |
for judicial office; |
(3) the disparity in the amount of funds raised by |
candidates for judicial office of different political |
parties; |
(4) the amount of funds expended with respect to |
campaigns for judicial office by entities not affiliated |
with a candidate; |
(5) the amount of money contributed to or expended by |
a committee of a political party to promote a candidate |
for judicial office; |
(6) jurisprudence concerning campaign finance and |
public financing of political campaigns, both for judicial |
office and generally; and |
|
(7) any other factors that the Task Force determines |
are related to the public financing of elections in this |
State. |
The Task Force shall also suggest changes to current law |
that would be necessary to facilitate public financing of |
candidates for judicial office. |
(c) The Task Force shall complete its study no later than |
June 30, 2024 2023 and shall report its findings to the |
Governor and the General Assembly as soon as possible after |
the study is complete. |
(d) The members shall serve without compensation but may |
be reimbursed for their expenses incurred in performing their |
duties . If a vacancy occurs on the Task Force, it shall be |
filled according to the guidelines of the initial appointment. |
(e) The State Board of Elections shall provide staff and |
administrative support to the Task Force. |
(f) As used in this Section, "judicial office" means |
nomination, election, or retention to the Supreme Court, the |
Appellate Court, or the Circuit Court. |
(g) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2025 2024 .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-909, eff. 5-27-22.) |
(10 ILCS 5/1-23 new) |
Sec. 1-23. Ranked-Choice and Voting Systems Task Force. |
(a) The Ranked-Choice and Voting Systems Task Force is |
created. The purpose of the Task Force is to review voting |
|
systems and the methods of voting, including ranked-choice |
voting, that could be authorized by law. The Task Force shall |
have the following duties: |
(1) Engage election officials, interested groups, and |
members of the public for the purpose of assessing the |
adoption and implementation of ranked-choice voting in |
presidential primary elections beginning in 2028. |
(2) Review standards used to certify or approve the |
use of a voting system, including the standards adopted by |
the U.S. Election Assistance Commission and the State |
Board of Elections. |
(3) Advise whether the voting system used by Illinois |
election authorities would be able to accommodate |
alternative methods of voting, including, but not limited |
to, ranked-choice voting. |
(4) Make recommendations or suggestions for changes to |
the Election Code or administrative rules for |
certification of voting systems in Illinois to accommodate |
alternative methods of voting, including ranked-choice |
voting. |
(b) On or before March 1, 2024, the Task Force shall |
publish a final report of its findings and recommendations. |
The report shall, at a minimum, detail findings and |
recommendations related to the duties of the Task Force and |
the following: |
(1) the process used in Illinois to certify voting |
|
systems, including which systems can conduct ranked-choice |
voting; and |
(2) information about the voting system used by |
election authorities, including which election authorities |
rely on legacy hardware and software for voting and which |
counties and election authorities rely on equipment for |
voting that has not exceeded its usable life span but |
require a software upgrade to accommodate ranked-choice |
voting. In this paragraph, "legacy hardware and software" |
means equipment that has exceeded its usable life span. |
(c) The Task Force shall consist of the following members: |
(1) 4 members, appointed by the Senate President, |
including 2 members of the Senate and 2 members of the |
public; |
(2) 4 members, appointed by the Speaker of the House |
of Representatives, including 2 members of the House of |
Representatives and 2 members of the public; |
(3) 4 members, appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate, including 2 members of the Senate and 2 members of |
the public; |
(4) 4 members, appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, including 2 members of the House |
of Representatives and 2 members of the public; |
(5) 4 members, appointed by the Governor, including at |
least 2 members with knowledge and experience |
administering elections. |
|
(d) Appointments to the Task Force shall be made within 30 |
days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
103rd General Assembly. Members shall serve without |
compensation. |
(e) The Task Force shall meet at the call of a co-chair at |
least quarterly to fulfill its duties. At the first meeting of |
the Task Force, the Task Force shall elect one co-chair from |
the members appointed by the Senate President and one co-chair |
from the members appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives. |
(f) The State Board of Elections shall provide |
administrative support for the Task Force. |
(g) This Section is repealed, and the Task Force is |
dissolved, on June 1, 2024. |
(10 ILCS 5/1-24 new) |
Sec. 1-24. 2024 Election Day State holiday. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the
|
contrary, the 2024 general election shall be a State holiday |
known as
2024 General Election Day and shall be observed |
throughout this
State. The 2024 general election shall be |
deemed a legal school holiday
for purposes of the School Code. |
Any school closed under this amendatory Act of
the 103rd |
General Assembly and Section 24-2 of the School Code
shall be |
made available to an election authority as a polling
place for |
2024 General Election Day. This Section is repealed on January |
|
1, 2025.
|
(10 ILCS 5/1-25 new) |
Sec. 1-25. The Security of Remote Vote by Mail Task Force. |
(a) The Security of Remote Vote by Mail Task Force is |
hereby created for the purposes described in subsection (b). |
Members of the Task Force shall be appointed as follows: |
(1) 2 members who identify as a voter with a print |
disability appointed by the Governor; |
(2) 2 members who have experience with absent military |
and naval service voting appointed by the Governor; |
(3) one member with expertise in cybersecurity |
appointed by the Governor; |
(4) one member with expertise in election security |
appointed by the Governor; |
(5) one member with expertise in administering |
elections appointed by the Governor; |
(6) 2 members appointed by the President of the |
Senate; |
(7) 2 members appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives; |
(8) 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate; and |
(9) 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives. |
(b) The Task Force shall study the feasibility of |
|
implementing a remote vote by mail system that would allow an |
election authority to transmit a vote by mail ballot |
electronically to a voter, and allow the voter to mark, |
verify, and return the ballot to the election authority |
electronically. In conducting its study, the Task Force shall |
consider whether implementing such a system of remote vote by |
mail is a safe and secure way to vote; what methods of remote |
voting exist within the United States; and what factors, if |
any, mitigate security related concerns in relation to |
implementing a remote vote by mail system. The Task Force |
shall also suggest changes to current law that would be |
necessary to implement a remote vote by mail system that would |
allow an election authority to transmit a vote by mail ballot |
electronically to a voter, and allow the voter to mark, |
verify, and return the ballot to the election authority |
electronically. |
(c) The Task Force shall complete its study no later than |
June 30, 2025 and shall report its findings to the Governor and |
the General Assembly as soon as possible after the study is |
complete. |
(d) The members shall serve without compensation. If a |
vacancy occurs on the Task Force, it shall be filled according |
to the guidelines of the initial appointment. |
(e) The State Board of Elections shall provide staff and |
administrative support to the Task Force. |
(f) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026. |
|
(10 ILCS 5/1A-25) |
Sec. 1A-25. Centralized statewide voter registration list. |
The centralized statewide voter registration list required by |
Title III, Subtitle A, Section 303 of the Help America Vote Act |
of 2002 shall be created and maintained by the State Board of |
Elections as provided in this Section. |
(1) The centralized statewide voter registration list |
shall be compiled from the voter registration data bases |
of each election authority in this State.
|
(2) With the exception of voter registration forms |
submitted electronically through an online voter |
registration system, all new voter registration forms and |
applications to register to vote, including those reviewed |
by the Secretary of State at a driver services facility, |
shall be transmitted only to the appropriate election |
authority as required by Articles 4, 5, and 6 of this Code |
and not to the State Board of Elections. All voter |
registration forms submitted electronically to the State |
Board of Elections through an online voter registration |
system shall be transmitted to the appropriate election |
authority as required by Section 1A-16.5. The election |
authority shall process and verify each voter registration |
form and electronically enter verified registrations on an |
expedited basis onto the statewide voter registration |
list. All original registration cards shall remain |
|
permanently in the office of the election authority as |
required by this Code.
|
(3) The centralized statewide voter registration list |
shall:
|
(i) Be designed to allow election authorities to |
utilize the registration data on the statewide voter |
registration list pertinent to voters registered in |
their election jurisdiction on locally maintained |
software programs that are unique to each |
jurisdiction.
|
(ii) Allow each election authority to perform |
essential election management functions, including but |
not limited to production of voter lists, processing |
of vote by mail voters, production of individual, |
pre-printed applications to vote, administration of |
election judges, and polling place administration, but |
shall not prevent any election authority from using |
information from that election authority's own |
systems.
|
(4) The registration information maintained by each |
election authority shall be synchronized with that |
authority's information on the statewide list at least |
once every 24 hours.
|
(5) The vote by mail, early vote, and rejected ballot |
information maintained by each election authority shall be |
synchronized with the election authority's information on |
|
the statewide list at least once every 24 hours. The State |
Board of Elections shall maintain the information required |
by this paragraph in an electronic format on its website, |
arranged by county and accessible to State and local |
political committees. |
(i) Within one day after receipt of a vote by mail |
voter's ballot, the election authority shall transmit |
by electronic means the voter's name, street address, |
email address and precinct, ward, township, and |
district numbers, as the case may be, to the State |
Board of Elections. |
(ii) Within one day after receipt of an early |
voter's ballot, the election authority shall transmit |
by electronic means the voter's name, street address, |
email address and precinct, ward, township, and |
district numbers, as the case may be, to the State |
Board of Elections. |
(iii) If a vote by mail ballot is rejected for any |
reason, within one day after the rejection the |
election authority shall transmit by electronic means |
the voter's name, street address, email address and |
precinct, ward, township, and district numbers, as the |
case may be, to the State Board of Elections. If a |
rejected vote by mail ballot is determined to be |
valid, the election authority shall, within one day |
after the determination, remove the name of the voter |
|
from the list transmitted to the State Board of |
Election. |
(6) Beginning no later than January 1, 2024, the |
statewide voter registration list shall be updated on a |
monthly basis by no sooner than the first of every month; |
however, the information required in paragraph (5) shall |
be updated at least every 24 hours and made available upon |
request to permitted entities as described in this |
Section. |
To protect the privacy and confidentiality of voter |
registration information, the disclosure of any portion of the |
centralized statewide voter registration list to any person or |
entity other than to a State or local political committee and |
other than to a governmental entity for a governmental purpose |
is specifically prohibited except as follows: (1) subject to |
security measures adopted by the State Board of Elections |
which, at a minimum, shall include the keeping of a catalog or |
database, available for public view, including the name, |
address, and telephone number of the person viewing the list |
as well as the time of that viewing, any person may view the |
list on a computer screen at the Springfield office of the |
State Board of Elections, during normal business hours other |
than during the 27 days before an election, but the person |
viewing the list under this exception may not print, |
duplicate, transmit, or alter the list; or (2) as may be |
required by an agreement the State Board of Elections has |
|
entered into with a multi-state voter registration list |
maintenance system.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13; 98-1171, eff. 6-1-15 .) |
(10 ILCS 5/3-6) |
Sec. 3-6. Voting and registration age. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a person |
who is 17 years old on the date of a caucus, general primary |
election, or consolidated primary election and who is |
otherwise qualified to vote is qualified to vote at that |
caucus, general primary, or consolidated primary, including |
voting a vote by mail, grace period, or early voting ballot |
with respect to that general primary or consolidated primary, |
if that person will be 18 years old on the date of the |
immediately following general election or consolidated |
election for which candidates are nominated at that primary. |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a person |
who is otherwise qualified to vote may preregister to vote on |
or after that person's 16th birthday, with the registration |
application held in abeyance by the State Board of Elections |
until that individual attains the required age to vote, at |
which time the State Board of Elections shall transmit the |
registration application to the applicable election authority. |
Preregistration under this subsection (b) shall be completed |
using the online voter registration system, as provided in |
Section 1A-16.5, or an electronic voter registration portal |
|
with an automatic voter registration agency, as provided in |
Section 1A-16.7. |
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an |
individual who is 17 years of age, will be 18 years of age on |
the date of the immediately following general or consolidated |
election, and is otherwise qualified to vote shall be deemed |
eligible to circulate a nominating petition or a petition |
proposing a public question. |
(d) For the purposes of this Code, a person who is 16 years |
of age or older shall be deemed competent to execute and attest |
to any voter registration forms. |
(e) References in this Code and elsewhere to the |
requirement that a person must be 18 years old to vote shall be |
interpreted in accordance with this Section. |
For the purposes of this Code, an individual who is 17 |
years of age and who will be 18 years of age on the date of the |
general or consolidated election shall be deemed competent to |
execute and attest to any voter registration forms. An |
individual who is 17 years of age, will be 18 years of age on |
the date of the immediately following general or consolidated |
election, and is otherwise qualified to vote shall be deemed |
eligible to circulate a nominating petition or a petition |
proposing a public question.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-722, eff. 8-5-16; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/4-6.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 4-6.2)
|
|
Sec. 4-6.2. (a) The county clerk shall appoint all |
municipal and township
or road district clerks or their duly |
authorized deputies as deputy registrars
who may accept the |
registration of all qualified residents of the State.
|
The county clerk shall appoint all precinct |
committeepersons in the county
as deputy registrars who may |
accept the registration of any qualified resident
of the |
State, except during the 27 days preceding an election.
|
The county clerk shall appoint each of the following named |
persons as deputy
registrars upon the written request of such |
persons:
|
1. The chief librarian, or a qualified person |
designated by the chief
librarian, of any public library |
situated within the election jurisdiction,
who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident of the State,
|
at such library.
|
2. The principal, or a qualified person designated by |
the principal, of
any high school, elementary school, or |
vocational school situated
within the election |
jurisdiction, who may accept the registrations of any
|
qualified resident of the State, at such school. The |
county clerk shall notify
every principal and |
vice-principal of each high school, elementary school, and
|
vocational school situated within the election |
jurisdiction of their
eligibility to serve as deputy |
registrars and offer training courses for
service as |
|
deputy registrars at conveniently located facilities at |
least 4
months prior to every election.
|
3. The president, or a qualified person designated by |
the president, of
any university, college, community |
college, academy or other institution of
learning situated |
within the election jurisdiction, who may accept the
|
registrations of any resident of the State, at such |
university, college,
community college, academy or |
institution.
|
4. A duly elected or appointed official of a bona fide |
labor organization,
or a reasonable number of qualified |
members designated by such official,
who may accept the |
registrations of any qualified resident of the State.
|
5. A duly elected or appointed official of a bonafide |
State civic
organization, as defined and determined by |
rule of the State Board of
Elections, or qualified members |
designated by such official, who may accept
the |
registration of any qualified resident of the State.
In |
determining the number of deputy registrars that shall be |
appointed,
the county clerk shall consider the population |
of the jurisdiction, the
size of the organization, the |
geographic size of the jurisdiction,
convenience for the |
public, the existing number of deputy registrars in the
|
jurisdiction and their location, the registration |
activities of the
organization and the need to appoint |
deputy registrars to assist and
facilitate the |
|
registration of non-English speaking individuals. In no
|
event shall a county clerk fix an arbitrary number |
applicable to every
civic organization requesting |
appointment of its members as deputy
registrars. The State |
Board of Elections shall by rule provide for
certification |
of bonafide State civic organizations. Such appointments
|
shall be made for a period not to exceed 2 years, |
terminating on the first
business day of the month |
following the month of the general election, and
shall be |
valid for all periods of voter registration as provided by |
this
Code during the terms of such appointments.
|
6.
The Director of Healthcare and Family Services, or |
a
reasonable number of employees designated by the |
Director and located at
public aid offices, who may accept |
the registration of any qualified
resident of the county |
at any such public aid office.
|
7.
The Director of the Illinois Department of |
Employment Security, or a
reasonable number of employees |
designated by the Director and located at
unemployment |
offices, who may accept the registration of any qualified
|
resident of the county at any such unemployment office.
|
8. The president of any corporation as defined by the |
Business
Corporation Act of 1983, or a reasonable number |
of employees designated by
such president, who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident
of the State.
|
If the request to be appointed as deputy registrar is |
|
denied, the
county clerk shall, within 10 days after the date |
the request is submitted,
provide the affected individual or |
organization with written notice setting
forth the specific |
reasons or criteria relied upon to deny the request to
be |
appointed as deputy registrar.
|
The county clerk may appoint as many additional deputy |
registrars as he
considers necessary. The county clerk shall |
appoint such additional deputy
registrars in such manner that |
the convenience of the public is served,
giving due |
consideration to both population concentration and area. Some
|
of the additional deputy registrars shall be selected so that |
there are an
equal number from each of the 2 major political |
parties in the election
jurisdiction. The county clerk, in |
appointing an additional deputy
registrar, shall make the |
appointment from a list of applicants submitted
by the Chair |
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's
political |
party. A Chair of a County Central Committee shall submit a
|
list of applicants to the county clerk by November 30 of each |
year. The
county clerk may require a Chair of a County Central |
Committee to
furnish a supplemental list of applicants.
|
Deputy registrars may accept registrations at any time |
other than the 27-day 27
day period preceding an election. All |
persons appointed as deputy
registrars shall be registered |
voters within the county and shall take and
subscribe to the |
following oath or affirmation:
|
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be) that I |
|
will support
the Constitution of the United States, and the |
Constitution of the State
of Illinois, and that I will |
faithfully discharge the duties of the office
of deputy |
registrar to the best of my ability and that I will register no
|
person nor cause the registration of any person except upon |
his personal
application before me.
|
............................
|
(Signature Deputy Registrar)"
|
This oath shall be administered by the county clerk, or by |
one of his
deputies, or by any person qualified to take |
acknowledgement of deeds and
shall immediately thereafter be |
filed with the county clerk.
|
Appointments of deputy registrars under this Section, |
except precinct committeepersons, shall be for 2-year terms, |
commencing on December 1 following
the general election of |
each even-numbered year; except that the terms of
the initial |
appointments shall be until December 1st following the next
|
general election. Appointments of precinct committeepersons |
shall be for 2-year
terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the general
primary at which they were |
elected and ending on the date immediately preceding the date |
of the next county convention, which may be held by audio or |
video conference . The county clerk shall issue a
certificate |
of appointment to each deputy registrar, and shall maintain in
|
his office for public inspection a list of the names of all |
appointees.
|
|
(b) The county clerk shall be responsible for training all |
deputy registrars
appointed pursuant to subsection (a), at |
times and locations reasonably
convenient for both the county |
clerk and such appointees. The county clerk
shall be |
responsible for certifying and supervising all deputy |
registrars
appointed pursuant to subsection (a). Deputy |
registrars appointed under
subsection (a) shall be subject to |
removal for cause.
|
(c)
Completed registration materials under the control of |
deputy registrars,
appointed pursuant to subsection (a), shall |
be returned to the appointing election
authority by |
first-class mail within 2 business days or personal delivery |
within 7 days, except that completed registration materials
|
received by the deputy registrars during the period between |
the 35th and
28th day preceding an election shall be returned |
by the deputy
registrars to
the appointing election authority |
within 48 hours after receipt thereof. The
completed |
registration materials received by the deputy registrars on |
the
28th day preceding an election shall be returned by the |
deputy
registrars
within 24 hours after receipt thereof. |
Unused materials shall be returned
by deputy registrars |
appointed pursuant to paragraph 4 of subsection (a),
not later |
than the next working day following the close of registration.
|
(d) The county clerk or board of election commissioners, |
as the case may
be, must provide any additional forms |
requested by any deputy registrar
regardless of the number of |
|
unaccounted registration forms the deputy registrar
may have |
in his or her possession.
|
(e) No deputy registrar shall engage in any electioneering |
or the promotion
of any cause during the performance of his or |
her duties.
|
(f) The county clerk shall not be criminally or civilly |
liable for the
acts or omissions of any deputy registrar. Such |
deputy registrars shall
not be deemed to be employees of the |
county clerk.
|
(g) Completed registration materials returned by deputy |
registrars for persons residing outside the county shall be |
transmitted by the county clerk within 2 days after receipt to |
the election authority of the person's election jurisdiction |
of residence. |
(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/5-16.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 5-16.2)
|
Sec. 5-16.2. (a) The county clerk shall appoint all |
municipal and
township clerks or their duly authorized |
deputies as deputy registrars who
may accept the registration |
of all qualified residents of the State.
|
The county clerk shall appoint all precinct |
committeepersons in the county
as deputy registrars who may |
accept the registration of any qualified resident
of the |
State, except during the 27 days preceding an election.
|
The county clerk shall appoint each of the following named |
|
persons as deputy
registrars upon the written request of such |
persons:
|
1. The chief librarian, or a qualified person |
designated by the chief
librarian, of any public library |
situated within the election jurisdiction,
who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident of the State,
|
at such library.
|
2. The principal, or a qualified person designated by |
the principal, of
any high school, elementary school, or |
vocational school situated
within the election |
jurisdiction, who may accept the registrations of any
|
resident of the State, at such school. The county clerk |
shall notify every
principal and vice-principal of each |
high school, elementary school, and
vocational school |
situated within the election jurisdiction of their
|
eligibility to serve as deputy registrars and offer |
training courses for
service as deputy registrars at |
conveniently located facilities at least 4
months prior to |
every election.
|
3. The president, or a qualified person designated by |
the president, of
any university, college, community |
college, academy or other institution
of learning situated |
within the election jurisdiction, who may accept the
|
registrations of any resident of the State, at such |
university, college,
community college, academy or |
institution.
|
|
4. A duly elected or appointed official of a bona fide |
labor organization,
or a reasonable number of qualified |
members designated by such official,
who may accept the |
registrations of any qualified resident of the State.
|
5. A duly elected or appointed official of a bona fide |
State civic
organization, as defined and determined by |
rule of the State Board of
Elections, or qualified members |
designated by such official, who may accept
the |
registration of any qualified resident of the State.
In |
determining the number of deputy registrars that shall be |
appointed,
the county clerk shall consider the population |
of the jurisdiction, the
size of the organization, the |
geographic size of the jurisdiction,
convenience for the |
public, the existing number of deputy registrars in the
|
jurisdiction and their location, the registration |
activities of the
organization and the need to appoint |
deputy registrars to assist and
facilitate the |
registration of non-English speaking individuals. In no
|
event shall a county clerk fix an arbitrary number |
applicable to every
civic organization requesting |
appointment of its members as deputy registrars.
The State |
Board of Elections shall by rule provide for
certification |
of bona fide State civic organizations.
Such appointments |
shall be made for a period not to exceed 2 years,
|
terminating on the first business day of the month |
following the month of
the general election, and shall be |
|
valid for all periods of voter
registration as provided by |
this Code during the terms of such appointments.
|
6.
The Director of Healthcare and Family Services, or |
a
reasonable number of employees designated by the |
Director and located at
public aid offices, who may accept |
the registration of any qualified
resident of the county |
at any such public aid office.
|
7.
The Director of the Illinois Department of |
Employment Security, or a
reasonable number of employees |
designated by the Director and located at
unemployment |
offices, who may accept the registration of any qualified
|
resident of the county at any such unemployment office.
|
8. The president of any corporation as defined by the |
Business
Corporation Act of 1983, or a reasonable number |
of employees designated by
such president, who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident
of the State.
|
If the request to be appointed as deputy registrar is |
denied, the
county clerk shall, within 10 days after the date |
the request is submitted,
provide the affected individual or |
organization with written notice setting
forth the specific |
reasons or criteria relied upon to deny the request to
be |
appointed as deputy registrar.
|
The county clerk may appoint as many additional deputy |
registrars as he
considers necessary. The county clerk shall |
appoint such additional deputy
registrars in such manner that |
the convenience of the public is served,
giving due |
|
consideration to both population concentration and area. Some
|
of the additional deputy registrars shall be selected so that |
there are an
equal number from each of the 2 major political |
parties in the election
jurisdiction. The county clerk, in |
appointing an additional deputy
registrar, shall make the |
appointment from a list of applicants submitted
by the Chair |
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's
political |
party. A Chair of a County Central Committee shall submit a
|
list of applicants to the county clerk by November 30 of each |
year. The
county clerk may require a Chair of a County Central |
Committee to
furnish a supplemental list of applicants.
|
Deputy registrars may accept registrations at any time |
other than the 27-day 27
day period preceding an election. All |
persons appointed as deputy
registrars shall be registered |
voters within the county and shall take and
subscribe to the |
following oath or affirmation:
|
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be) that I |
will support
the Constitution of the United States, and the |
Constitution of the State
of Illinois, and that I will |
faithfully discharge the duties of the office
of deputy |
registrar to the best of my ability and that I will register
no |
person nor cause the registration of any person except upon |
his personal
application before me.
|
...............................
|
(Signature of Deputy Registrar)"
|
This oath shall be administered by the county clerk, or by |
|
one of his
deputies, or by any person qualified to take |
acknowledgement of deeds and
shall immediately thereafter be |
filed with the county clerk.
|
Appointments of deputy registrars under this Section, |
except precinct committeepersons, shall be for 2-year terms, |
commencing on December 1 following
the general election of |
each even-numbered year, except that the terms of
the initial |
appointments shall be until December 1st following the next
|
general election. Appointments of precinct committeepersons |
shall be for
2-year terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the
general primary at which they were |
elected and ending on the date immediately preceding the date |
of the next county convention, which may be held by audio or |
video conference . The county clerk shall issue a
certificate |
of appointment to each deputy registrar, and shall maintain in
|
his office for public inspection a list of the names of all |
appointees.
|
(b) The county clerk shall be responsible for training all |
deputy registrars
appointed pursuant to subsection (a), at |
times and locations reasonably
convenient for both the county |
clerk and such appointees. The county clerk
shall be |
responsible for certifying and supervising all deputy |
registrars
appointed pursuant to subsection (a). Deputy |
registrars appointed under
subsection (a) shall be subject to |
removal for cause.
|
(c)
Completed registration materials under the control of |
|
deputy registrars,
appointed pursuant to subsection (a), shall |
be returned to the appointing election
authority by |
first-class mail within 2 business days or personal delivery |
within 7 days, except that completed registration materials
|
received by the deputy registrars during the period between |
the 35th and
28th day preceding an election shall be returned |
by the deputy
registrars to
the appointing election authority |
within 48 hours after receipt thereof. The
completed |
registration materials received by the deputy registrars on |
the
28th day preceding an election shall be returned by the |
deputy
registrars within 24 hours after receipt thereof.
|
Unused materials shall be returned by deputy
registrars |
appointed pursuant to paragraph 4 of subsection (a), not later
|
than the next working day following the close of registration.
|
(d) The county clerk or board of election commissioners, |
as the case may
be, must provide any additional forms |
requested by any deputy registrar
regardless of the number of |
unaccounted registration forms the deputy registrar
may have |
in his or her possession.
|
(e) No deputy registrar shall engage in any electioneering |
or the promotion
of any cause during the performance of his or |
her duties.
|
(f) The county clerk shall not be criminally or civilly |
liable for the
acts or omissions of any deputy registrar. Such |
deputy registers shall not
be deemed to be employees of the |
county clerk.
|
|
(g) Completed registration materials returned by deputy |
registrars for persons residing outside the county shall be |
transmitted by the county clerk within 2 days after receipt to |
the election authority of the person's election jurisdiction |
of residence.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/6-50.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 6-50.2)
|
Sec. 6-50.2. (a) The board of election commissioners shall |
appoint all
precinct committeepersons in the election |
jurisdiction as deputy registrars
who may accept the |
registration of any qualified resident of the State, except |
during the 27 days preceding an election.
|
The board of election commissioners shall appoint each of |
the following
named persons as deputy registrars upon the |
written request of such persons:
|
1. The chief librarian, or a qualified person |
designated by the chief
librarian, of any public library |
situated within the election jurisdiction,
who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident of the State, |
at such library.
|
2. The principal, or a qualified person designated by |
the principal, of
any high school, elementary school, or |
vocational school situated
within the election |
jurisdiction, who may accept the registrations of any
|
resident of the State, at such school. The board of |
|
election
commissioners shall notify every principal and |
vice-principal of each high
school, elementary school, and |
vocational school situated in the election
jurisdiction of |
their eligibility to serve as deputy registrars and offer
|
training courses for service as deputy registrars at |
conveniently located
facilities at least 4 months prior to |
every election.
|
3. The president, or a qualified person designated by |
the president, of
any university, college, community |
college, academy, or other institution
of learning |
situated within the State, who may accept the
|
registrations of any resident of the election |
jurisdiction, at such university,
college, community |
college, academy, or institution.
|
4. A duly elected or appointed official of a bona fide |
labor
organization, or a reasonable number of qualified |
members designated
by such official, who may accept the |
registrations of any qualified
resident of the State.
|
5. A duly elected or appointed official of a bona fide |
State civic
organization, as defined and determined by |
rule of the State Board of
Elections, or qualified members |
designated by such official, who may accept
the |
registration of any qualified resident of the State.
In |
determining the number of deputy registrars that shall be |
appointed,
the board of election commissioners shall |
consider the population of the
jurisdiction, the size of |
|
the organization, the geographic size of the
jurisdiction, |
convenience for the public, the existing number of deputy
|
registrars in the jurisdiction and their location, the |
registration
activities of the organization and the need |
to appoint deputy registrars to
assist and facilitate the |
registration of non-English speaking individuals.
In no |
event shall a board of election commissioners fix an |
arbitrary
number applicable to every civic organization |
requesting appointment of its
members as deputy |
registrars. The State Board of Elections shall by rule
|
provide for certification of bona fide State civic |
organizations. Such
appointments shall be made for a |
period not to exceed 2 years, terminating
on the first |
business day of the month following the month of the |
general
election, and shall be valid for all periods of |
voter registration as
provided by this Code during the |
terms of such appointments.
|
6.
The Director of Healthcare and Family Services, or |
a
reasonable number of employees designated by the |
Director and located at
public aid offices, who may accept |
the registration of any qualified
resident of the election |
jurisdiction at any such public aid office.
|
7.
The Director of the Illinois Department of |
Employment Security, or a
reasonable number of employees |
designated by the Director and located at
unemployment |
offices, who may accept the registration of any qualified
|
|
resident of the election jurisdiction at any such |
unemployment office.
If the request to be appointed as |
deputy registrar is denied, the board
of election |
commissioners shall, within 10 days after the date the |
request
is submitted, provide the affected individual or |
organization with written
notice setting forth the |
specific reasons or criteria relied upon to deny
the |
request to be appointed as deputy registrar.
|
8. The president of any corporation, as defined by the |
Business
Corporation Act of 1983, or a reasonable number |
of employees designated by
such president, who may accept |
the registrations of any qualified resident
of the State.
|
The board of election commissioners may appoint as many |
additional deputy
registrars as it considers necessary. The |
board of election commissioners
shall appoint such additional |
deputy registrars in such manner that the
convenience of the |
public is served, giving due consideration to both
population |
concentration and area. Some of the additional deputy
|
registrars shall be selected so that there are an equal number |
from
each of the 2 major political parties in the election |
jurisdiction. The
board of election commissioners, in |
appointing an additional deputy registrar,
shall make the |
appointment from a list of applicants submitted by the Chair
|
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's political |
party. A Chair
of a County Central Committee shall submit a |
list of applicants to the board
by November 30 of each year. |
|
The board may require a Chair of a County
Central Committee to |
furnish a supplemental list of applicants.
|
Deputy registrars may accept registrations at any time |
other than the 27-day period preceding an election. All |
persons appointed as deputy
registrars shall be registered |
voters within the election jurisdiction and
shall take and |
subscribe to the following oath or affirmation:
|
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be) that I |
will support
the Constitution of the United States, and the |
Constitution of the State
of Illinois, and that I will |
faithfully discharge the duties of the office
of registration |
officer to the best of my ability and that I will register
no |
person nor cause the registration of any person except upon |
his personal
application before me.
|
....................................
|
(Signature of Registration Officer)"
|
This oath shall be administered and certified to by one of |
the commissioners
or by the executive director or by some |
person designated by the board of
election commissioners, and |
shall immediately thereafter be filed with the
board of |
election commissioners. The members of the board of election
|
commissioners and all persons authorized by them under the |
provisions of
this Article to take registrations, after |
themselves taking and subscribing
to the above oath, are |
authorized to take or administer such oaths and
execute such |
affidavits as are required by this Article.
|
|
Appointments of deputy registrars under this Section, |
except precinct committeepersons, shall be for 2-year terms, |
commencing on December 1 following
the general election of |
each even-numbered year, except that the terms of
the initial |
appointments shall be until December 1st following the next
|
general election. Appointments of precinct committeepersons |
shall be for 2-year
terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the general
primary at which they were |
elected and ending on the date immediately preceding the date |
of the next county convention, which may be held by audio or |
video conference . The county clerk shall issue a
certificate |
of appointment to each deputy registrar, and shall maintain in
|
his office for public inspection a list of the names of all |
appointees.
|
(b) The board of election commissioners shall be |
responsible for training
all deputy registrars appointed |
pursuant to subsection (a), at times and
locations reasonably |
convenient for both the board of election commissioners
and |
such appointees. The board of election commissioners shall be |
responsible
for certifying and supervising all deputy |
registrars appointed pursuant
to subsection (a). Deputy |
registrars appointed under subsection (a) shall
be subject to |
removal for cause.
|
(c)
Completed registration materials under the control of |
deputy
registrars appointed pursuant to subsection (a) shall |
be returned to the
appointing election authority by |
|
first-class mail within 2 business days or personal delivery |
within 7 days, except that completed registration
materials |
received by the deputy registrars during the period between |
the
35th and 28th day preceding an election shall be returned |
by the
deputy
registrars to the appointing election authority |
within 48 hours after receipt
thereof. The completed |
registration materials received by the deputy
registrars on |
the 28th day preceding an election shall be returned
by the
|
deputy registrars within 24 hours after receipt thereof. |
Unused materials
shall be returned by deputy registrars |
appointed pursuant to paragraph 4 of
subsection (a), not later |
than the next working day following the close of
registration.
|
(d) The county clerk or board of election commissioners, |
as the case may
be, must provide any additional forms |
requested by any deputy registrar
regardless of the number of |
unaccounted registration forms the deputy registrar
may have |
in his or her possession.
|
(e) No deputy registrar shall engage in any electioneering |
or the promotion
of any cause during the performance of his or |
her duties.
|
(f) The board of election commissioners shall not be |
criminally or
civilly liable for the acts or omissions of any |
deputy registrar. Such
deputy registrars shall not be deemed |
to be employees of the board of
election commissioners.
|
(g) Completed registration materials returned by deputy |
registrars for persons residing outside the election |
|
jurisdiction shall be transmitted by the board of election |
commissioners within 2 days after receipt to the election |
authority of the person's election jurisdiction of residence.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-8)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-15 )
|
Sec. 7-8. The State central committee shall be composed of |
one or two
members from each congressional district in the |
State and shall be elected as
follows:
|
State Central Committee
|
(a) Within 30 days after January 1, 1984 (the effective |
date of Public Act 83-33), the State central committee of each |
political party shall certify to
the State Board of Elections |
which of the following alternatives it wishes
to apply to the |
State central committee of that party.
|
Alternative A. At the primary in
1970 and at the general |
primary election held every 4 years thereafter, each primary
|
elector may vote for one candidate of his party for member of |
the State
central committee for the congressional district in |
which he resides.
The candidate receiving the highest number |
of votes shall be declared
elected State central |
committeeperson from the district. A political party
may, in |
lieu of the foregoing, by a majority vote of delegates at any |
State
convention of such party, determine to thereafter elect |
the State central committeepersons
in the manner following:
|
|
At the county convention held by such political party, |
State central committeepersons
shall be elected in the same |
manner as provided in this
Article for the election of |
officers of the county central committee, and
such election |
shall follow the election of officers of the county central
|
committee. Each elected ward, township or precinct |
committeeperson shall cast
as his vote one vote for each |
ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a
township or |
precinct in the last preceding primary election of his
|
political party. In the case of a county lying partially |
within one
congressional district and partially within another |
congressional district,
each ward, township or precinct |
committeeperson shall vote only with respect
to the |
congressional district in which his ward, township, part of a
|
township or precinct is located. In the case of a |
congressional district
which encompasses more than one county, |
each ward, township or precinct committeeperson
residing |
within the congressional district shall cast as his
vote one |
vote for each ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a
|
township or precinct in the last preceding primary election of |
his
political party for one candidate of his party for member |
of the State
central committee for the congressional district |
in which he resides and
the Chair of the county central |
committee shall report the results of
the election to the |
State Board of Elections. The State Board of Elections
shall |
certify the candidate receiving the highest number of votes |
|
elected
State central committeeperson for that congressional |
district.
|
The State central committee shall adopt rules to provide |
for and govern
the procedures to be followed in the election of |
members of the State central
committee.
|
After August 6, 1999 (the
effective date of Public Act |
91-426), whenever a vacancy occurs in the office of Chair of a |
State
central committee, or at the end of the term of office of |
Chair, the State
central committee of each political party |
that has selected Alternative A shall
elect a Chair who shall |
not be required to be a member of the State Central
Committee. |
The Chair shall be a
registered voter in this State and of the |
same political party as the State
central committee.
|
Alternative B. Each congressional committee shall, within |
30 days after
the adoption of this alternative, appoint a |
person of the sex opposite that
of the incumbent member for |
that congressional district to serve as an
additional member |
of the State central committee until his or her successor
is |
elected at the general primary election in 1986. Each |
congressional
committee shall make this appointment by voting |
on the basis set forth in
paragraph (e) of this Section. In |
each congressional district at the
general primary election |
held in 1986 and every 4 years thereafter, the
male candidate |
receiving the highest number of votes of the party's male
|
candidates for State central committeeman, and the female |
candidate
receiving the highest number of votes of the party's |
|
female candidates for
State central committeewoman, shall be |
declared elected State central
committeeman and State central |
committeewoman from the district. At the
general primary |
election held in 1986 and every 4 years thereafter, if all a
|
party's candidates for State central committeemen or State |
central
committeewomen from a congressional district are of |
the same sex, the candidate
receiving the highest number of |
votes shall be declared elected a State central
committeeman |
or State central committeewoman from the district, and, |
because of
a failure to elect one male and one female to the |
committee, a vacancy shall be
declared to exist in the office |
of the second member of the State central
committee from the |
district. This vacancy shall be filled by appointment by
the |
congressional committee of the political party, and the person |
appointed to
fill the vacancy shall be a resident of the |
congressional district and of the
sex opposite that of the |
committeeman or committeewoman elected at the general
primary |
election. Each congressional committee shall make this |
appointment by
voting on the basis set forth in paragraph (e) |
of this Section.
|
The Chair of a State central committee composed as |
provided in this
Alternative B must be selected from the |
committee's members. |
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 103rd General Assembly, a State central committee |
organized under Alternative B shall include as an honorary |
|
member any person affiliated with the same political party and |
serving as the Governor, President of the Senate, or Speaker |
of the House of Representatives.
|
Except as provided for in Alternative A with respect to |
the selection of
the Chair of the State central committee and |
for in Alternative B with respect to the Governor, President |
of the
Senate, and the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives , under both of the foregoing
alternatives, the
|
State
central
committee of each political party shall be |
composed of members elected
or appointed from the several |
congressional districts of the State,
and of no other person |
or persons whomsoever. The members of the State
central |
committee shall, within 41 days after each quadrennial |
election of
the full committee, meet in the city of |
Springfield and organize
by electing a Chair, and may at such |
time
elect such officers from among their own number (or |
otherwise), as they
may deem necessary or expedient. The |
outgoing chair of the State
central committee of the party |
shall, 10 days before the meeting, notify
each member of the |
State central committee elected at the primary of the
time and |
place of such meeting. In the organization and proceedings of
|
the State central committee, each person elected or appointed |
State central committeeman and State
central committeewoman , |
except for honorary members, shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in his or her
congressional district by the |
primary electors of his or her party at the
primary election |
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the State central
|
committee. Whenever a vacancy occurs in the State central |
committee of any
political party, the vacancy shall be filled |
by appointment of
the chairmen of the county central |
committees of the
political party
of the counties located |
within the congressional district in which the vacancy
occurs |
and,
if applicable, the ward and township committeepersons of |
the
political
party in counties of 2,000,000 or more |
inhabitants located within the
congressional
district. If the |
congressional district in which the vacancy occurs lies
wholly |
within a
county of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants, the ward and |
township committeepersons
of the political party in that |
congressional district shall vote to fill the
vacancy. In |
voting to fill the vacancy, each chair of a county central
|
committee and
each ward and township committeeperson in |
counties of 2,000,000
or
more inhabitants shall have one vote |
for each ballot voted in each precinct of
the congressional |
district in which the vacancy exists of
his or her
county, |
township, or ward cast by the primary electors of his or her |
party
at the
primary election immediately preceding the |
meeting to fill the vacancy in the
State
central committee. |
The person appointed to fill the vacancy shall be a
resident of |
the
congressional district in which the vacancy occurs, shall |
be a qualified voter,
and, in a committee composed as provided |
in Alternative B, shall be of the
same
sex as his or her
|
predecessor. A political party may, by a majority vote of the
|
|
delegates of any State convention of such party, determine to |
return
to the election of State central committeeman and State |
central
committeewoman by the vote of primary electors.
Any |
action taken by a political party at a State convention in |
accordance
with this Section shall be reported to the State |
Board of Elections by the chair
and secretary of such |
convention within 10 days after such action.
|
Ward, Township and Precinct Committeepersons
|
(b) At the primary in 1972 and
at the general primary |
election every 4 years thereafter, each primary elector in |
cities having a
population of 200,000 or over may vote for one |
candidate of his party in
his ward for ward committeeperson. |
Each candidate for ward committeeperson
must be a resident of |
and in the ward where he seeks to be elected ward |
committeeperson. The one having the highest number of votes |
shall be such
ward committeeperson of such party for such |
ward. At the primary election
in 1970 and at the general |
primary election every 4 years thereafter,
each primary |
elector in counties containing a population of 2,000,000 or
|
more, outside of cities containing a population of 200,000 or |
more, may
vote for one candidate of his party for township |
committeeperson. Each
candidate for township committeeperson |
must be a resident of and in the
township or part of a township |
(which lies outside of a city having a
population of 200,000 or |
more, in counties containing a population of
2,000,000 or |
more), and in which township or part of a township he seeks
to |
|
be elected township committeeperson. The one having the |
highest number
of votes shall be such township committeeperson |
of such party for such
township or part of a township. At the |
primary
in 1970 and at the general primary election every 2 |
years thereafter, each primary elector,
except in counties |
having a population of 2,000,000 or over, may vote
for one |
candidate of his party in his precinct for precinct |
committeeperson. Each candidate for precinct committeeperson |
must be a bona
fide resident of the precinct where he seeks to |
be elected precinct committeeperson. The one having the |
highest number of votes shall be such
precinct committeeperson |
of such party for such precinct. The official
returns of the |
primary shall show the name of the committeeperson of each
|
political party.
|
Terms of Committeepersons. All precinct committeepersons |
elected under the
provisions of this Article shall continue as |
such committeepersons until the
date of the primary to be held |
in the second year after their election.
Except as otherwise |
provided in this Section for certain State central |
committeepersons
who have 2 year terms, all State central |
committeepersons, township committeepersons
and ward |
committeepersons shall continue as such committeepersons
until |
the date of primary to be held in the fourth year after their
|
election. However, a vacancy exists in the office of precinct |
committeeperson
when a precinct committeeperson ceases to |
reside in the precinct in which he
was elected and such |
|
precinct committeeperson shall thereafter neither have
nor |
exercise any rights, powers or duties as committeeperson in |
that precinct,
even if a successor has not been elected or |
appointed.
|
(c) The Multi-Township Central Committee shall consist of |
the precinct committeepersons
of such party, in the |
multi-township assessing district formed
pursuant to Section |
2-10 of the Property Tax Code and shall be organized for the |
purposes set forth in Section
45-25 of the Township Code. In |
the organization and proceedings of the
Multi-Township Central |
Committee each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote
|
for each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary electors |
of his party at
the primary at which he was elected.
|
County Central Committee
|
(d) The county central committee of each political party |
in each
county shall consist of the various township |
committeepersons, precinct committeepersons
and ward |
committeepersons, if any, of such party in the county.
In the |
organization and proceedings of the county central committee,
|
each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in
his precinct by the primary electors of his |
party at the primary at
which he was elected; each township |
committeeperson shall have one vote for
each ballot voted in |
his township or part of a township as the case may
be by the |
primary electors of his party at the primary election
for the |
nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
|
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the county central |
committee; and
in the organization and proceedings of the |
county central committee,
each ward committeeperson shall have |
one vote for each ballot voted in his
ward by the primary |
electors of his party at the primary election
for the |
nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the county central |
committee.
|
Cook County Board of Review Election District Committee
|
(d-1) Each board of review election district committee of |
each political
party in Cook County shall consist of the
|
various township committeepersons and ward committeepersons, |
if any, of that party in
the portions of the county composing |
the board of review election district. In
the organization and |
proceedings of each of the 3 election
district committees, |
each township committeeperson shall have one vote for each
|
ballot voted in his or her township or part of a township, as |
the case may be,
by
the primary electors of his or her party at |
the primary election immediately
preceding the meeting of the |
board of review election district committee; and
in the |
organization and proceedings of each of the 3 election |
district
committees, each ward committeeperson shall have one |
vote for each
ballot voted in
his or her ward or part of that |
ward, as the case may be, by the primary
electors of his or her |
party at the primary election immediately preceding the
|
meeting of the board of review election district committee.
|
|
Congressional Committee
|
(e) The congressional committee of each party in each |
congressional
district shall be composed of the chairmen of |
the county central
committees of the counties composing the |
congressional district, except
that in congressional districts |
wholly within the territorial limits of
one county, the |
precinct committeepersons, township committeepersons and ward |
committeepersons, if any, of
the party representing the |
precincts within the limits of the
congressional district, |
shall compose the congressional committee. A
State central |
committeeperson in each district shall be a member and the |
chair
or, when a district has 2 State central |
committeepersons, a co-chairperson
of the congressional |
committee, but shall not have the right to
vote except in case |
of a tie.
|
In the organization and proceedings of congressional |
committees
composed of precinct committeepersons or township |
committeepersons or ward committeepersons, or any combination |
thereof, each precinct committeeperson
shall have one vote for |
each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary
electors of |
his party at the primary at which he was elected, each
township |
committeeperson shall have one vote for each ballot voted in |
his
township or part of a township as the case may be by the |
primary
electors of his party at the primary election |
immediately preceding the
meeting of the congressional |
committee, and each ward committeeperson shall
have one vote |
|
for each ballot voted in each precinct of his ward located
in |
such congressional district by the primary electors of his |
party at
the primary election immediately preceding the |
meeting of the
congressional committee; and in the |
organization and proceedings of
congressional committees |
composed of the chairmen of the county central
committees of |
the counties within such district, each chair of such
county |
central committee shall have one vote for each ballot voted in
|
his county by the primary electors of his party at the primary |
election
immediately preceding the meeting of the |
congressional committee.
|
Judicial District Committee
|
(f) The judicial district committee of each political |
party in each
judicial district shall be composed of the chair |
of the county
central committees of the counties composing the |
judicial district.
|
In the organization and proceedings of judicial district |
committees
composed of the chairmen of the county central |
committees of the
counties within such district, each chair of |
such county central
committee shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in his county by the
primary electors of his party |
at the primary election immediately
preceding the meeting of |
the judicial district committee.
|
Circuit Court Committee
|
(g) The circuit court committee of each political party in |
each
judicial circuit outside Cook County shall be composed of |
|
the chairmen
of the county central committees of the counties |
composing the judicial
circuit.
|
In the organization and proceedings of circuit court |
committees, each chair
of a county central committee shall |
have one vote for each
ballot voted in his county by the |
primary electors of his party at the
primary election |
immediately preceding the meeting of the circuit court
|
committee.
|
Judicial Subcircuit Committee
|
(g-1) The judicial subcircuit committee of each political |
party in
each judicial subcircuit in a judicial circuit |
divided into subcircuits
shall be composed of (i) the ward and |
township committeepersons
of the townships and wards composing |
the judicial subcircuit in Cook County and
(ii) the precinct |
committeepersons of the precincts
composing the judicial |
subcircuit in any county other than Cook County.
|
In the organization and proceedings of each judicial |
subcircuit committee,
each township committeeperson shall have |
one vote for each ballot voted in his
township or part of a |
township, as the case may be, in the judicial
subcircuit by the |
primary electors of his party at the primary election
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit |
committee;
each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote |
for each ballot voted in his
precinct or part of a precinct, as |
the case may be, in the judicial subcircuit
by the primary |
electors of his party at the primary election immediately
|
|
preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee;
|
and
each ward committeeperson shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in his
ward or part of a ward, as the case may be, |
in the judicial subcircuit by
the primary electors of his |
party at the primary election immediately
preceding the |
meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee.
|
Municipal Central Committee
|
(h) The municipal central committee of each political |
party shall be
composed of the precinct, township or ward |
committeepersons, as the case may
be, of such party |
representing the precincts or wards, embraced in such
city, |
incorporated town or village. The voting strength of each
|
precinct, township or ward committeeperson on the municipal |
central
committee shall be the same as his voting strength on |
the county central
committee.
|
For political parties, other than a statewide political |
party,
established only within a municipality or
township, the |
municipal or township managing committee shall be composed
of |
the party officers of the local established party. The party |
officers
of a local established party shall be as follows: the |
chair and
secretary of the caucus for those municipalities and |
townships authorized
by statute to nominate candidates by |
caucus shall serve as party officers
for the purpose of |
filling vacancies in nomination under Section
7-61; for |
municipalities and townships authorized by statute or |
ordinance
to nominate candidates by petition and primary |
|
election, the party officers
shall be the party's candidates |
who are nominated at the primary. If no party
primary was held |
because of the provisions of Section 7-5, vacancies in
|
nomination shall be filled by the party's remaining candidates |
who shall
serve as the party's officers.
|
Powers
|
(i) Each committee and its officers shall have the powers |
usually
exercised by such committees and by the officers |
thereof, not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Article. |
The several committees
herein provided for shall not have |
power to delegate any of their
powers, or functions to any |
other person, officer or committee, but this
shall not be |
construed to prevent a committee from appointing from its
own |
membership proper and necessary subcommittees.
|
(j) The State central committee of a political party which |
elects its
members by Alternative B under paragraph (a) of |
this Section shall adopt a
plan to give effect to the delegate |
selection rules of the national political
party and file a |
copy of such plan with the State Board of Elections when
|
approved by a national political party.
|
(k) For the purpose of the designation of a proxy by a |
Congressional
Committee to vote in place of an
absent State |
central committeeman or committeewoman at meetings of the
|
State central committee of a political party which elects its |
members by
Alternative B under paragraph (a) of this Section, |
the proxy shall be
appointed by the vote of the ward and |
|
township committeepersons, if any, of the
wards and townships |
which lie entirely or partially within the
Congressional |
District from which the absent State central committeeman or
|
committeewoman was elected and the vote of the chairmen of the |
county
central committees of those counties which lie entirely |
or partially within
that Congressional District and in which |
there are no ward or township committeepersons. When voting |
for such proxy, the county chair, ward committeeperson
or |
township committeeperson, as the case may be, shall have one
|
vote for each ballot voted in his county, ward or township, or |
portion
thereof within the Congressional District, by the |
primary electors of his
party at the primary at which he was |
elected. However, the absent State
central committeeman or |
committeewoman may designate a proxy when permitted
by the |
rules of a political party which elects its members by |
Alternative B
under paragraph (a) of this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a person is |
ineligible to hold the position of committeeperson in any |
committee established pursuant to this Section if he or she is |
statutorily ineligible to vote in a general election because |
of conviction of a felony. When a committeeperson is convicted |
of a felony, the position occupied by that committeeperson |
shall automatically become vacant.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-15 )
|
|
Sec. 7-8. The State central committee shall be composed of |
one or two
members from each congressional district in the |
State and shall be elected as
follows:
|
State Central Committee
|
(a) Within 30 days after January 1, 1984 (the effective |
date of Public Act 83-33), the State central committee of each |
political party shall certify to
the State Board of Elections |
which of the following alternatives it wishes
to apply to the |
State central committee of that party.
|
Alternative A. At the primary in
1970 and at the general |
primary election held every 4 years thereafter, each primary
|
elector may vote for one candidate of his party for member of |
the State
central committee for the congressional district in |
which he resides.
The candidate receiving the highest number |
of votes shall be declared
elected State central |
committeeperson from the district. A political party
may, in |
lieu of the foregoing, by a majority vote of delegates at any |
State
convention of such party, determine to thereafter elect |
the State central committeepersons
in the manner following:
|
At the county convention held by such political party, |
State central committeepersons
shall be elected in the same |
manner as provided in this
Article for the election of |
officers of the county central committee, and
such election |
shall follow the election of officers of the county central
|
committee. Each elected ward, township or precinct |
committeeperson shall cast
as his vote one vote for each |
|
ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a
township or |
precinct in the last preceding primary election of his
|
political party. In the case of a county lying partially |
within one
congressional district and partially within another |
congressional district,
each ward, township or precinct |
committeeperson shall vote only with respect
to the |
congressional district in which his ward, township, part of a
|
township or precinct is located. In the case of a |
congressional district
which encompasses more than one county, |
each ward, township or precinct committeeperson
residing |
within the congressional district shall cast as his
vote one |
vote for each ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a
|
township or precinct in the last preceding primary election of |
his
political party for one candidate of his party for member |
of the State
central committee for the congressional district |
in which he resides and
the Chair of the county central |
committee shall report the results of
the election to the |
State Board of Elections. The State Board of Elections
shall |
certify the candidate receiving the highest number of votes |
elected
State central committeeperson for that congressional |
district.
|
The State central committee shall adopt rules to provide |
for and govern
the procedures to be followed in the election of |
members of the State central
committee.
|
After August 6, 1999 (the
effective date of Public Act |
91-426), whenever a vacancy occurs in the office of Chair of a |
|
State
central committee, or at the end of the term of office of |
Chair, the State
central committee of each political party |
that has selected Alternative A shall
elect a Chair who shall |
not be required to be a member of the State Central
Committee. |
The Chair shall be a
registered voter in this State and of the |
same political party as the State
central committee.
|
Alternative B. Each congressional committee shall, within |
30 days after
the adoption of this alternative, appoint a |
person of a different gender than that
of the incumbent member |
for that congressional district to serve as an
additional |
member of the State central committee until the member's |
successor
is elected at the general primary election in 1986. |
Each congressional
committee shall make this appointment by |
voting on the basis set forth in
paragraph (e) of this Section. |
In each congressional district at the
general primary election |
held in 1986 and every 4 years thereafter, the person
|
receiving the highest number of votes for State central |
committeeperson, and the person of a different gender
|
receiving the highest number of votes, shall be declared |
elected State central
committeepersons from the district. At |
the
general primary election held in 1986 and every 4 years |
thereafter, if all a
party's candidates for State central |
committeeperson from a congressional district are of the same |
gender, the candidate
receiving the highest number of votes |
shall be declared elected a State central committeeperson
from |
the district, and, because of
a failure to elect 2 persons from |
|
different genders to the committee, a vacancy shall be
|
declared to exist in the office of the second member of the |
State central
committee from the district. This vacancy shall |
be filled by appointment by
the congressional committee of the |
political party, and the person appointed to
fill the vacancy |
shall be a resident of the congressional district and of a |
different gender than the committeeperson elected at the |
general
primary election. Each congressional committee shall |
make this appointment by
voting on the basis set forth in |
paragraph (e) of this Section.
|
The Chair of a State central committee composed as |
provided in this
Alternative B must be selected from the |
committee's members. |
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 103rd General Assembly, a State central committee |
organized under Alternative B shall include as an honorary |
member any person affiliated with the same political party and |
serving as the Governor, President of the Senate, and the |
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
|
Except as provided for in Alternative A with respect to |
the selection of
the Chair of the State central committee and |
for in Alternative B with respect to the President of the |
Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives , under |
both of the foregoing
alternatives, the
State
central
|
committee of each political party shall be composed of members |
elected
or appointed from the several congressional districts |
|
of the State,
and of no other person or persons whomsoever. The |
members of the State
central committee shall, within 41 days |
after each quadrennial election of
the full committee, meet in |
the city of Springfield and organize
by electing a Chair, and |
may at such time
elect such officers from among their own |
number (or otherwise), as they
may deem necessary or |
expedient. The outgoing chair of the State
central committee |
of the party shall, 10 days before the meeting, notify
each |
member of the State central committee elected at the primary |
of the
time and place of such meeting. In the organization and |
proceedings of
the State central committee, the 2 elected or |
appointed committeepersons shall each have one vote for each |
ballot voted in their
congressional district by the primary |
electors of the committeepersons' party at the
primary |
election immediately preceding the meeting of the State |
central
committee. Whenever a vacancy occurs in the State |
central committee of any
political party, the vacancy shall be |
filled by appointment of
the chairmen of the county central |
committees of the
political party
of the counties located |
within the congressional district in which the vacancy
occurs |
and,
if applicable, the ward and township committeepersons of |
the
political
party in counties of 2,000,000 or more |
inhabitants located within the
congressional
district. If the |
congressional district in which the vacancy occurs lies
wholly |
within a
county of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants, the ward and |
township committeepersons
of the political party in that |
|
congressional district shall vote to fill the
vacancy. In |
voting to fill the vacancy, each chair of a county central
|
committee and
each ward and township committeeperson in |
counties of 2,000,000
or
more inhabitants shall have one vote |
for each ballot voted in each precinct of
the congressional |
district in which the vacancy exists of the chair's or |
committeeperson's
county, township, or ward cast by the |
primary electors of the chair's or committeeperson's party
at |
the
primary election immediately preceding the meeting to fill |
the vacancy in the
State
central committee. The person |
appointed to fill the vacancy shall be a
resident of the
|
congressional district in which the vacancy occurs, shall be a |
qualified voter,
and, in a committee composed as provided in |
Alternative B, shall be of the same gender as the appointee's
|
predecessor. A political party may, by a majority vote of the
|
delegates of any State convention of such party, determine to |
return
to the election of State central committeepersons by |
the vote of primary electors.
Any action taken by a political |
party at a State convention in accordance
with this Section |
shall be reported to the State Board of Elections by the chair
|
and secretary of such convention within 10 days after such |
action.
|
Ward, Township and Precinct Committeepersons
|
(b) At the primary in 1972 and
at the general primary |
election every 4 years thereafter, each primary elector in |
cities having a
population of 200,000 or over may vote for one |
|
candidate of his party in
his ward for ward committeeperson. |
Each candidate for ward committeeperson
must be a resident of |
and in the ward where he seeks to be elected ward |
committeeperson. The one having the highest number of votes |
shall be such
ward committeeperson of such party for such |
ward. At the primary election
in 1970 and at the general |
primary election every 4 years thereafter,
each primary |
elector in counties containing a population of 2,000,000 or
|
more, outside of cities containing a population of 200,000 or |
more, may
vote for one candidate of his party for township |
committeeperson. Each
candidate for township committeeperson |
must be a resident of and in the
township or part of a township |
(which lies outside of a city having a
population of 200,000 or |
more, in counties containing a population of
2,000,000 or |
more), and in which township or part of a township he seeks
to |
be elected township committeeperson. The one having the |
highest number
of votes shall be such township committeeperson |
of such party for such
township or part of a township. At the |
primary
in 1970 and at the general primary election every 2 |
years thereafter, each primary elector,
except in counties |
having a population of 2,000,000 or over, may vote
for one |
candidate of his party in his precinct for precinct |
committeeperson. Each candidate for precinct committeeperson |
must be a bona
fide resident of the precinct where he seeks to |
be elected precinct committeeperson. The one having the |
highest number of votes shall be such
precinct committeeperson |
|
of such party for such precinct. The official
returns of the |
primary shall show the name of the committeeperson of each
|
political party.
|
Terms of Committeepersons. All precinct committeepersons |
elected under the
provisions of this Article shall continue as |
such committeepersons until the
date of the primary to be held |
in the second year after their election.
Except as otherwise |
provided in this Section for certain State central |
committeepersons
who have 2 year terms, all State central |
committeepersons, township committeepersons
and ward |
committeepersons shall continue as such committeepersons
until |
the date of primary to be held in the fourth year after their
|
election. However, a vacancy exists in the office of precinct |
committeeperson
when a precinct committeeperson ceases to |
reside in the precinct in which he
was elected and such |
precinct committeeperson shall thereafter neither have
nor |
exercise any rights, powers or duties as committeeperson in |
that precinct,
even if a successor has not been elected or |
appointed.
|
(c) The Multi-Township Central Committee shall consist of |
the precinct committeepersons
of such party, in the |
multi-township assessing district formed
pursuant to Section |
2-10 of the Property Tax Code and shall be organized for the |
purposes set forth in Section
45-25 of the Township Code. In |
the organization and proceedings of the
Multi-Township Central |
Committee each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote
|
|
for each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary electors |
of his party at
the primary at which he was elected.
|
County Central Committee
|
(d) The county central committee of each political party |
in each
county shall consist of the various township |
committeepersons, precinct committeepersons
and ward |
committeepersons, if any, of such party in the county.
In the |
organization and proceedings of the county central committee,
|
each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in
his precinct by the primary electors of his |
party at the primary at
which he was elected; each township |
committeeperson shall have one vote for
each ballot voted in |
his township or part of a township as the case may
be by the |
primary electors of his party at the primary election
for the |
nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the county central |
committee; and
in the organization and proceedings of the |
county central committee,
each ward committeeperson shall have |
one vote for each ballot voted in his
ward by the primary |
electors of his party at the primary election
for the |
nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the county central |
committee.
|
Cook County Board of Review Election District Committee
|
(d-1) Each board of review election district committee of |
each political
party in Cook County shall consist of the
|
|
various township committeepersons and ward committeepersons, |
if any, of that party in
the portions of the county composing |
the board of review election district. In
the organization and |
proceedings of each of the 3 election
district committees, |
each township committeeperson shall have one vote for each
|
ballot voted in the committeeperson's township or part of a |
township, as the case may be,
by
the primary electors of the |
committeeperson's party at the primary election immediately
|
preceding the meeting of the board of review election district |
committee; and
in the organization and proceedings of each of |
the 3 election district
committees, each ward committeeperson |
shall have one vote for each
ballot voted in the |
committeeperson's
ward or part of that ward, as the case may |
be, by the primary
electors of the committeeperson's party at |
the primary election immediately preceding the
meeting of the |
board of review election district committee.
|
Congressional Committee
|
(e) The congressional committee of each party in each |
congressional
district shall be composed of the chairmen of |
the county central
committees of the counties composing the |
congressional district, except
that in congressional districts |
wholly within the territorial limits of
one county, the |
precinct committeepersons, township committeepersons and ward |
committeepersons, if any, of
the party representing the |
precincts within the limits of the
congressional district, |
shall compose the congressional committee. A
State central |
|
committeeperson in each district shall be a member and the |
chair
or, when a district has 2 State central |
committeepersons, a co-chairperson
of the congressional |
committee, but shall not have the right to
vote except in case |
of a tie.
|
In the organization and proceedings of congressional |
committees
composed of precinct committeepersons or township |
committeepersons or ward committeepersons, or any combination |
thereof, each precinct committeeperson
shall have one vote for |
each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary
electors of |
his party at the primary at which he was elected, each
township |
committeeperson shall have one vote for each ballot voted in |
his
township or part of a township as the case may be by the |
primary
electors of his party at the primary election |
immediately preceding the
meeting of the congressional |
committee, and each ward committeeperson shall
have one vote |
for each ballot voted in each precinct of his ward located
in |
such congressional district by the primary electors of his |
party at
the primary election immediately preceding the |
meeting of the
congressional committee; and in the |
organization and proceedings of
congressional committees |
composed of the chairmen of the county central
committees of |
the counties within such district, each chair of such
county |
central committee shall have one vote for each ballot voted in
|
his county by the primary electors of his party at the primary |
election
immediately preceding the meeting of the |
|
congressional committee.
|
Judicial District Committee
|
(f) The judicial district committee of each political |
party in each
judicial district shall be composed of the chair |
of the county
central committees of the counties composing the |
judicial district.
|
In the organization and proceedings of judicial district |
committees
composed of the chairmen of the county central |
committees of the
counties within such district, each chair of |
such county central
committee shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in his county by the
primary electors of his party |
at the primary election immediately
preceding the meeting of |
the judicial district committee.
|
Circuit Court Committee
|
(g) The circuit court committee of each political party in |
each
judicial circuit outside Cook County shall be composed of |
the chairmen
of the county central committees of the counties |
composing the judicial
circuit.
|
In the organization and proceedings of circuit court |
committees, each chair
of a county central committee shall |
have one vote for each
ballot voted in his county by the |
primary electors of his party at the
primary election |
immediately preceding the meeting of the circuit court
|
committee.
|
Judicial Subcircuit Committee
|
(g-1) The judicial subcircuit committee of each political |
|
party in
each judicial subcircuit in a judicial circuit |
divided into subcircuits
shall be composed of (i) the ward and |
township committeepersons
of the townships and wards composing |
the judicial subcircuit in Cook County and
(ii) the precinct |
committeepersons of the precincts
composing the judicial |
subcircuit in any county other than Cook County.
|
In the organization and proceedings of each judicial |
subcircuit committee,
each township committeeperson shall have |
one vote for each ballot voted in his
township or part of a |
township, as the case may be, in the judicial
subcircuit by the |
primary electors of his party at the primary election
|
immediately preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit |
committee;
each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote |
for each ballot voted in his
precinct or part of a precinct, as |
the case may be, in the judicial subcircuit
by the primary |
electors of his party at the primary election immediately
|
preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee;
|
and
each ward committeeperson shall have one vote for each |
ballot voted in his
ward or part of a ward, as the case may be, |
in the judicial subcircuit by
the primary electors of his |
party at the primary election immediately
preceding the |
meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee.
|
Municipal Central Committee
|
(h) The municipal central committee of each political |
party shall be
composed of the precinct, township or ward |
committeepersons, as the case may
be, of such party |
|
representing the precincts or wards, embraced in such
city, |
incorporated town or village. The voting strength of each
|
precinct, township or ward committeeperson on the municipal |
central
committee shall be the same as his voting strength on |
the county central
committee.
|
For political parties, other than a statewide political |
party,
established only within a municipality or
township, the |
municipal or township managing committee shall be composed
of |
the party officers of the local established party. The party |
officers
of a local established party shall be as follows: the |
chair and
secretary of the caucus for those municipalities and |
townships authorized
by statute to nominate candidates by |
caucus shall serve as party officers
for the purpose of |
filling vacancies in nomination under Section
7-61; for |
municipalities and townships authorized by statute or |
ordinance
to nominate candidates by petition and primary |
election, the party officers
shall be the party's candidates |
who are nominated at the primary. If no party
primary was held |
because of the provisions of Section 7-5, vacancies in
|
nomination shall be filled by the party's remaining candidates |
who shall
serve as the party's officers.
|
Powers
|
(i) Each committee and its officers shall have the powers |
usually
exercised by such committees and by the officers |
thereof, not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Article. |
The several committees
herein provided for shall not have |
|
power to delegate any of their
powers, or functions to any |
other person, officer or committee, but this
shall not be |
construed to prevent a committee from appointing from its
own |
membership proper and necessary subcommittees.
|
(j) The State central committee of a political party which |
elects its
members by Alternative B under paragraph (a) of |
this Section shall adopt a
plan to give effect to the delegate |
selection rules of the national political
party and file a |
copy of such plan with the State Board of Elections when
|
approved by a national political party.
|
(k) For the purpose of the designation of a proxy by a |
Congressional
Committee to vote in place of an
absent State |
central committeeperson at meetings of the
State central |
committee of a political party which elects its members by
|
Alternative B under paragraph (a) of this Section, the proxy |
shall be
appointed by the vote of the ward and township |
committeepersons, if any, of the
wards and townships which lie |
entirely or partially within the
Congressional District from |
which the absent State central committeeperson was elected and |
the vote of the chairmen of the county
central committees of |
those counties which lie entirely or partially within
that |
Congressional District and in which there are no ward or |
township committeepersons. When voting for such proxy, the |
county chair, ward committeeperson
or township |
committeeperson, as the case may be, shall have one
vote for |
each ballot voted in his county, ward or township, or portion
|
|
thereof within the Congressional District, by the primary |
electors of his
party at the primary at which he was elected. |
However, the absent State
central committeeperson may |
designate a proxy when permitted
by the rules of a political |
party which elects its members by Alternative B
under |
paragraph (a) of this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a person is |
ineligible to hold the position of committeeperson in any |
committee established pursuant to this Section if he or she is |
statutorily ineligible to vote in a general election because |
of conviction of a felony. When a committeeperson is convicted |
of a felony, the position occupied by that committeeperson |
shall automatically become vacant.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 7-1-23.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-9)
|
Sec. 7-9. County central committee; county and State |
conventions.
|
(a) For a State central committee organized under |
Alternative A, on On the 29th day next succeeding the primary |
at which committeepersons
are elected, the county central |
committee of each political
party shall meet within the county |
and proceed to
organize by electing from its own number a chair |
and either from its
own number, or otherwise, such other |
officers as such committee may deem
necessary or expedient. |
For a State central committee organized under Alternative B, |
|
on a date that is not earlier than the 29th day after, nor |
later than the 50th day after, the date of the primary at which |
committeepersons
are elected, the county central committee of |
each political
party shall meet within the county and proceed |
to
organize by electing from its own number a chair and either |
from its
own number, or otherwise, such other officers as such |
committee may deem
necessary or expedient. Such meeting of the |
county central committee
shall be known as the county |
convention.
|
The chair of each county committee shall , within 10 days |
after the
organization, forward to the State Board of |
Elections, the names and
post office addresses of the |
officers, precinct committeepersons and
representative |
committeepersons elected by his political party.
|
The county convention of each political party shall choose |
delegates
to the State convention of its party, if the party |
chooses to hold a State convention; but in any county having |
within
its limits any city having a population of 200,000, or |
over the
delegates from such city shall be chosen by wards, the |
ward committeepersons
from the respective wards choosing the |
number of delegates to which such
ward is entitled on the basis |
prescribed in paragraph (e) of this
Section such delegates to |
be members of the delegation to the State
convention from such |
county. In all counties containing a population of
2,000,000 |
or more outside of cities having a population of 200,000 or
|
more, the delegates from each of the townships or parts of |
|
townships as
the case may be shall be chosen by townships or |
parts of townships as
the case may be, the township |
committeepersons from the respective townships
or parts of |
townships as the case may be choosing the number of
delegates |
to which such townships or parts of townships as the case may
|
be are entitled, on the basis prescribed in paragraph (e) of |
this
Section such delegates to be members of the delegation to |
the State
convention from such county.
|
Each member of the State Central Committee of a political |
party which
elects its members by Alternative B under |
paragraph (a) of Section 7-8
shall be a delegate to the State |
Convention, if the party chooses to hold a State convention, |
ex officio.
|
Each member of the State Central Committee of a political |
party which
elects its members by Alternative B under |
paragraph (a) of Section 7-8 may
appoint 2 delegates to the |
State Convention, if the party chooses to hold a State |
convention, who must be residents of the
member's |
Congressional District.
|
(b) State conventions may be held within 180 days after |
the
general primary in the year 2000 and every 4 years |
thereafter. In the year 1998, and every 4 years thereafter,
|
the chair of a State central committee may issue a call for a |
State
convention within 180 days after the general primary.
|
The State
convention of each political party, if the party |
chooses to hold a State convention, has power to make
|
|
nominations of candidates of its political party for the |
electors of
President and Vice President of the United States, |
and to adopt any party
platform, and, to the
extent determined |
by the State central committee as provided in Section
7-14, to |
choose and select delegates and alternate delegates at large |
to
national nominating conventions. The State Central |
Committee may adopt
rules to provide for and govern the |
procedures of the State convention.
|
(c) The chair and secretary of each State convention, if |
the party chooses to hold a State convention, shall,
within 2 |
days thereafter, transmit to the State Board of Elections of
|
this State a certificate setting forth the names and addresses |
of all
persons nominated by such State convention for electors |
of President and
Vice President of the United States, and of |
any persons selected by the State
convention for
delegates and |
alternate delegates at large to national nominating
|
conventions; and the names of such candidates so chosen by |
such State
convention for electors of President and Vice |
President of the United
States, shall be caused by
the State |
Board of Elections to be printed upon the official ballot at
|
the general election, in the manner required by law, and shall |
be
certified to the various county clerks of the proper |
counties in the
manner as provided in Section 7-60 of this |
Article 7 for the certifying
of the names of persons nominated |
by any party for State offices. If and
as long as this Act |
prescribes that the names of such electors be not
printed on |
|
the ballot, then the names of such electors shall be
certified |
in such manner as may be prescribed by the parts of this Act
|
applicable thereto.
|
(d) Each convention, if the party chooses to hold a State |
convention, may perform all other functions inherent to such
|
political organization and not inconsistent with this Article.
|
(e) At least 33 days before the date of a State convention, |
if the party chooses to hold a State convention, the chair of |
the State central committee of each political
party shall file |
in the principal office of the State Board of
Elections a call |
for the State convention. Such call shall state, among
other |
things, the time and place (designating the building or hall) |
for
holding the State convention. Such call shall be signed by |
the chair
and attested by the secretary of the committee. In |
such convention each
county shall be entitled to one delegate |
for each 500 ballots voted by
the primary electors of the party |
in such county at the primary to be
held next after the |
issuance of such call; and if in such county, less
than 500 |
ballots are so voted or if the number of ballots so voted is
|
not exactly a multiple of 500, there shall be one delegate for |
such
group which is less than 500, or for such group |
representing the number
of votes over the multiple of 500, |
which delegate shall have 1/500 of
one vote for each primary |
vote so represented by him. The call for such
convention shall |
set forth this paragraph (e) of Section 7-9 in full and
shall |
direct that the number of delegates to be chosen be calculated |
|
in
compliance herewith and that such number of delegates be |
chosen.
|
(f) All precinct, township and ward committeepersons when |
elected as
provided in this Section shall serve as though |
elected at large
irrespective of any changes that may be made |
in precinct, township or
ward boundaries and the voting |
strength of each committeeperson shall
remain as provided in |
this Section for the entire time for which he is
elected.
|
(g) The officers elected at any convention provided for in |
this
Section shall serve until their successors are elected as |
provided in
this Act.
|
(h) A special meeting of any central committee may be |
called by the chair, or by not less than 25% of the members of |
such committee, by
giving 5 days notice to members of such |
committee in writing designating
the time and place at which |
such special meeting is to be held and the
business which it is |
proposed to present at such special meeting.
|
(i) Except as otherwise provided in this Act, whenever a |
vacancy
exists in the office of precinct committeeperson |
because no one was elected
to that office or because the |
precinct committeeperson ceases to reside in
the precinct or |
for any other reason, the chair of the county
central |
committee of the appropriate political party may fill the
|
vacancy in such office by appointment of a qualified resident |
of the
county and the appointed precinct committeeperson shall |
serve as though
elected; however, for a State central |
|
committee organized under Alternative A, no such appointment |
may be made between the general
primary election and the 30th |
day after the general primary election and for a State central |
committee organized under Alternative B, no such appointment |
may be made between the general
primary election and the |
county convention following the general primary election .
|
(j) If the number of Congressional Districts in the State |
of Illinois
is reduced as a result of reapportionment of |
Congressional Districts
following a federal decennial census, |
the State Central Committeemen and
Committeewomen of a |
political
party which elects its State Central
Committee by |
either Alternative A or by Alternative B under paragraph (a)
|
of Section 7-8 who were
previously elected shall continue to |
serve as if no reapportionment had
occurred until the |
expiration of their terms.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-522, eff. 6-30-16; 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 9-3) |
Sec. 9-3. Political committee statement of organization. |
(a) Every political committee shall file with the State |
Board of Elections a
statement of organization within 10 |
business days of the creation of
such
committee, except any |
political committee created within the 30 days before
an
|
election shall file a statement of organization within 2 |
business days in person, by facsimile transmission, or by |
electronic mail. Any change in information previously |
|
submitted in a statement of organization shall be reported, as |
required for the original statement of organization by this |
Section, within 10 days following that change.
The Board shall |
impose a civil penalty of $50 per business day upon political
|
committees for failing to file or late filing of a statement of |
organization. Such penalties shall not
exceed $5,000, and |
shall not exceed $10,000 for statewide office political
|
committees.
There shall be no fine if the statement is mailed |
and postmarked at least 72
hours prior to the filing deadline.
|
In addition to the civil penalties authorized by this |
Section, the State
Board of Elections or any other political |
committee may apply to the
circuit court for a temporary |
restraining
order or a preliminary or permanent injunction |
against the political committee
to cease the expenditure of |
funds and to cease operations until the statement
of |
organization is filed.
|
For the purpose of this Section,
"statewide office" means |
the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State,
|
Attorney General, State Treasurer, and State Comptroller.
|
(b) The statement of organization shall include:
|
(1) the name
and address of the political committee |
and the designation required by Section 9-2;
|
(2) the scope, area of activity, party affiliation, |
and purposes of the political
committee;
|
(3) the name, address, and position of each custodian |
of the
committee's books and accounts;
|
|
(4) the name, address, and position of the committee's |
principal
officers, including the chairman, treasurer, and |
officers and members of
its finance committee, if any;
|
(5) (blank) the name and address of any sponsoring |
entity ;
|
(6) a statement of what specific disposition of |
residual fund will
be made in the event of the dissolution |
or
termination of the committee;
|
(7) a listing of all banks or other financial |
institutions, safety
deposit boxes, and any other |
repositories or custodians of funds used by
the committee; |
and
|
(8) the amount of funds available for campaign |
expenditures as of
the filing date of the committee's |
statement of organization.
|
For purposes of this Section, a "sponsoring entity" is (i) |
any person,
organization, corporation, or association that |
contributes
at least 33% of the total funding of the political |
committee or (ii) any person
or other entity that is |
registered or is required to register under the
Lobbyist |
Registration Act and contributes at least 33% of the total |
funding of
the political committee.
|
(c) Each statement of organization required to be
filed in |
accordance with this Section shall be verified, dated, and |
signed
by either the treasurer of the political committee |
making the statement or
the candidate on whose behalf the |
|
statement is made and shall contain
substantially the |
following verification: |
"VERIFICATION: |
I declare that this statement of organization (including |
any
accompanying schedules and statements) has been examined |
by me and, to the
best of my knowledge and belief, is a true, |
correct, and complete statement
of organization as required by |
Article 9 of the Election Code. I understand
that willfully |
filing a false or incomplete statement is
subject to a civil |
penalty of at least $1,001 and up to $5,000. |
................ ..........................................
|
(date of filing) (signature of person making the statement)". |
(d) The statement of organization for a ballot initiative |
committee also shall include a verification signed by the |
chairperson of the committee that (i) the committee is formed |
for the purpose of supporting or opposing a question of public |
policy, (ii) all contributions and expenditures of the |
committee will be used for the purpose described in the |
statement of organization, (iii) the committee may accept |
unlimited contributions from any source, provided that the |
ballot initiative committee does not make contributions or |
expenditures in support of or opposition to a candidate or |
candidates for nomination for election, election, or |
retention, and (iv) failure to abide by these requirements |
shall deem the committee in violation of this Article. |
(d-5) The statement of organization for an independent |
|
expenditure committee also shall include a verification signed |
by the chairperson of the committee that (i) the committee is |
formed for the exclusive purpose of making independent |
expenditures, (ii) all contributions and expenditures of the |
committee will be used for the purpose described in the |
statement of organization, (iii) the committee may accept |
unlimited contributions from any source, provided that the |
independent expenditure committee does not make contributions |
to any candidate political committee, political party |
committee, or political action committee, and (iv) failure to |
abide by these requirements shall deem the committee in |
violation of this Article. |
(e) For purposes of implementing the changes made by this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, every political |
committee in existence on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall file the |
statement required by this Section with the Board by December |
31, 2010. |
(Source: P.A. 99-522, eff. 6-30-16.)
|
(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 or |
legislative offices that are in more than one county or |
are wholly located within a single county with a |
population of less than 3,000,000 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 of a county |
with a population of less than 3,000,000 to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for |
county offices and judicial offices of a district, |
subcircuit, or
circuit coterminous with or less than a |
county, for any school district offices, 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 chair, 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. If a school |
district is located in 2 or more counties, the county |
officers electoral board of the county in which the |
principal office of the school district is located shall |
hear and pass upon objections to nominations of candidates |
for school district office in that school district.
|
2.5. The county officers electoral board of a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more to hear and
pass |
upon objections to the nominations of candidates for |
county offices, candidates for congressional and |
legislative offices and representatives in the General |
Assembly if the district is wholly within a county with a |
population of 3,000,000 or more, unless the district is |
wholly or partially within the jurisdiction of a municipal |
board of election commissioners, and judicial offices of a |
district, subcircuit, or circuit coterminous with or less |
than a county, for any school district offices, 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, and for candidates |
for the Senate, 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 chair, 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. If a school district |
is located in 2 or more counties, the county officers |
electoral board of the county in which the principal |
office of the school district is located shall hear and |
pass upon objections to nominations of candidates for |
school district office in that school district. |
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 chair.
|
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 |
chair.
|
5. The education officers electoral board to hear and |
pass upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for |
offices in
community college districts shall be composed |
of the presiding officer of
the community college district |
board, who shall be the chair,
the secretary of the |
community college district board and the
eligible elected |
community college board member who has the
longest term of |
continuous service as a board member.
|
6. In all cases, however, where the Congressional, |
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 community college district board member |
who has had the
second longest term of continuous service |
as a board member.
|
In the event that the chair of the electoral board is |
ineligible
to act because of the fact that he or she 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 chair; 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 chair
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 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 |
chair of an electoral
board shall be designated by the Chief |
Judge.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(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 chair
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 ; to the election authority to whom the ballot is |
certified; and to the appropriate county clerk. The chair
of |
the electoral board other than the State Board of Elections , |
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 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 |
chair 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 chair
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 and only upon a vote by a majority of |
its members, may authorize the chair
to 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 United 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 to the election authority to |
whom the ballot is certified and the appropriate county clerk , |
and such officer or board shall abide by and comply with the
|
ruling so made to all intents and purposes.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; |
100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-4) (from Ch. 46, par. 11-4)
|
Sec. 11-4.
It shall be the duty of the Board of Election |
Commissioners,
established under Article 6 of this Act, to |
appoint the place of registry
in each precinct for the first |
|
registration under Article 6 of this Act and
the places for |
registry in subsequent registrations in the manner provided
by |
such Article, and also the polling place in each precinct in |
such city,
village or incorporated town which has adopted or |
is operating under said
Article 6, and to give public notice |
thereof, and shall cause the same to
be fitted up, warmed, |
lighted and cleaned, but in each election precinct
and in each |
area for which a registration place is designated such place |
or
places shall be in the most public, orderly and convenient |
portions
thereof, and no building or part of a building shall |
be designated or used
as a place of registry, or revision of |
registration, or as a polling place,
in which spirituous or |
intoxicating liquor is sold. Provided, however,
where the |
Board of Election Commissioners is unable to secure a suitable
|
polling place within the boundaries of a precinct, it may |
select a polling
place on a street immediately adjacent to and |
adjoining the precinct. Said
Board of Election Commissioners |
may demand of the chief of police or the
sheriff, to furnish |
officers of the law to attend during the progress of
any |
registration, revision or election, at any place or places of
|
registration, or any polling place, or places, designated by |
said
commissioners, or to attend at any meeting of said |
commissioners. Said
officers of the law, shall be furnished by |
said chief of police or sheriff
and shall be stationed in the |
place or places of registration and polling
place or places in |
such manner as said commissioners shall direct, and
during |
|
said assignment shall be under the direction and control of |
the
election commissioners.
|
Notwithstanding the above, when there
are no more than 50 |
registered voters in a precinct
who are entitled to
vote in a |
local government or school district election,
the election |
authority
having jurisdiction over the precinct,
is authorized |
to reassign such voters
to one or more polling
places in |
adjacent precincts, within or without the
election authority's |
jurisdiction, for that election. For
the purposes of such |
local government or school district election only, the
votes |
of the reassigned voters
shall be tallied and canvassed as |
votes from the precinct of the polling place to which
such |
voters have been reassigned.
The election authority having |
jurisdiction over the precinct shall approve
all |
administrative and polling place procedures.
Such procedures |
shall take into account voter convenience, and ensure that the
|
integrity of the election process is maintained and that the |
secrecy of the
ballot is not violated.
|
Except in the event of a fire, flood or total loss of heat |
in a place
fixed or established by the Board of Election |
Commissioners pursuant to
this Section as a polling place for |
an election, no election authority
shall change the location |
of a polling place so established for any
precinct after |
notice of the place of holding the election for that
precinct |
has been given as required under Article 12 unless the |
election
authority notifies all registered voters in the |
|
precinct of the change in
location by first class mail in |
sufficient time for such notice to be
received by the |
registered voters in the precinct at least one day prior to
the |
date of the election. |
If, within the 10 days before any election, an election |
authority changes a polling location, the election authority |
shall send notice by electronic mail or phone call to the |
township committeeperson, ward committeeperson, or precinct |
committeepersons, as applicable, as soon as the location of |
the polling place is changed.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-867.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/11-8) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2023) |
Sec. 11-8. Vote centers. |
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, election
|
authorities shall establish at least one location to be |
located at an
office of the election authority or in the |
largest municipality
within its jurisdiction where all voters |
in its jurisdiction
are allowed to vote on election day during |
polling place hours,
regardless of the precinct in which they |
are registered , and that location shall provide curbside |
voting . Election authorities may establish more than one vote |
center, but in jurisdictions with a population of more than |
500,000 inhabitants, the election authority shall establish at |
least 2 vote centers. An
election authority establishing such |
|
a location under this Section shall identify the location and |
any health and safety requirements by the 40th day
preceding |
an the 2022 general primary election and the 2022 general |
election and certify such to the
State Board of Elections. |
(b) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2029 2023 .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; 102-668, eff. 11-15-21; |
102-1109, eff. 12-21-22.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/12-4) (from Ch. 46, par. 12-4)
|
Sec. 12-4.
Not more than 30 nor less than 10 days prior to |
the date of
the consolidated and
nonpartisan elections, each |
election authority
shall publish notice
of the election of |
officers of each political subdivision to be conducted
in his |
or its jurisdiction on such election date. The notice of |
election
shall be published once in one or more newspapers
|
published in each political subdivision, and if there is no |
such newspaper,
then published once in a local, community |
newspaper having
general circulation in the subdivision, and |
also once in a newspaper published
in the county wherein the |
political subdivisions or portions thereof, having
such |
elections are situated.
|
The notice shall be substantially in the form prescribed |
in Section
12-1, and may include notice of the location of the
|
precincts and polling places within or including part of the |
political
subdivision in which the election is to be |
conducted.
|
|
Not less than 10 days before each such election, the |
election authority
shall publish notice of the precincts and |
the location of the polling
places where the election will be |
conducted for political subdivisions
wholly or partially |
within its jurisdiction. The election authority
shall cause |
publication in the manner heretofore prescribed for the notice |
of election. |
If, within the 10 days before any election, an election |
authority changes a polling location, the election authority |
shall send notice by electronic mail or phone call to the |
township committeeperson, ward committeeperson, or precinct |
committeepersons, as applicable, as soon as the location of |
the polling place is changed.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-963.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/16-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 16-3)
|
Sec. 16-3. (a) The names of all candidates to be voted for |
in each
election district or precinct shall be printed on one |
ballot, except as
is provided in Sections 16-6, 16-6.1 , and |
21-1.01 of this Code Act and except as otherwise
provided in |
this Code Act with respect to the odd year regular elections |
and
the emergency referenda . The lettering of candidate names |
on a ballot shall be in both capital and lowercase letters in |
conformance with standard English language guidelines, unless |
compliance is not feasible due to the election system utilized |
by the election authority. All ; all nominations
of any |
|
political party shall be being placed under the party |
appellation or title
of such party as designated in the |
certificates of nomination or
petitions. The names of all |
independent candidates shall be printed upon
the ballot in a |
column or columns under the heading "independent"
arranged |
under the names or titles of the respective offices for which
|
such independent candidates shall have been nominated and so |
far as
practicable, the name or names of any independent |
candidate or
candidates for any office shall be printed upon |
the ballot opposite the
name or names of any candidate or |
candidates for the same office
contained in any party column |
or columns upon said ballot. The ballot
shall contain no other |
names, except that in cases of electors for
President and |
Vice-President of the United States, the names of the
|
candidates for President and Vice-President may be added to |
the party
designation and words calculated to aid the voter in |
his choice of candidates
may be added, such as "Vote for one," |
"Vote for not more than three." If no candidate or candidates |
file for an office and if no person or persons file a |
declaration as a write-in candidate for that office, then |
below the title of that office the election authority instead |
shall print "No Candidate". When an electronic
voting system |
is used which utilizes a ballot label booklet, the candidates
|
and questions shall appear on the pages of such booklet in the |
order
provided by this Code; and, in any case where candidates |
for an office
appear on a page which does not contain the name |
|
of any candidate for
another office, and where less than 50% of |
the page is utilized, the name of
no candidate shall be printed |
on the lowest 25% of such page. On the back or
outside of the |
ballot, so as to appear when folded, shall be printed the words
|
"Official Ballot", followed by the designation of the polling |
place for
which the ballot is prepared, the date of the |
election and a facsimile
of the signature of the election |
authority who has caused the ballots to
be printed. The |
ballots shall be of plain white paper, through which the
|
printing or writing cannot be read. However, ballots for use |
at the
nonpartisan and consolidated elections may be printed |
on different color
paper, except blue paper, whenever |
necessary or desirable to facilitate
distinguishing between |
ballots for different political subdivisions. In
the case of |
nonpartisan elections for officers of a political
subdivision, |
unless the statute or an ordinance adopted pursuant to
Article |
VII of the Constitution providing the form of government
|
therefor requires otherwise, the column listing such |
nonpartisan
candidates shall be printed with no appellation or |
circle at its head.
The party appellation or title, or the word |
"independent" at the head of
any column provided for |
independent candidates, shall be printed in letters not less |
than one-fourth of an inch in height
and a
circle one-half inch |
in diameter shall be printed at the beginning of
the line in |
which such appellation or title is printed, provided,
however, |
that no such circle shall be printed at the head of any column
|
|
or columns provided for such independent candidates. The names |
of
candidates shall be printed in letters not less than |
one-eighth
nor more than one-fourth of an inch in height, and |
at the beginning of
each line in which a name of a candidate is |
printed a square shall be
printed, the sides of which shall be |
not less than one-fourth of an inch
in length. However, the |
names of the candidates for Governor and
Lieutenant Governor |
on the same ticket shall be printed within a bracket
and a |
single square shall be printed in front of the bracket. The |
list
of candidates of the several parties and any such list of |
independent
candidates shall be placed in separate columns on |
the ballot in such
order as the election authorities charged |
with the printing of the
ballots shall decide; provided, that |
the names of the candidates of the
several political parties, |
certified by the State Board of Elections to
the several |
county clerks shall be printed by the county clerk of the
|
proper county on the official ballot in the order certified by |
the State
Board of Elections. Any county clerk refusing, |
neglecting or failing to
print on the official ballot the |
names of candidates of the several
political parties in the |
order certified by the State Board of
Elections, and any |
county clerk who prints or causes to be printed upon
the |
official ballot the name of a candidate, for an office to be |
filled
by the Electors of the entire State, whose name has not |
been duly
certified to him upon a certificate signed by the |
State Board of
Elections shall be guilty of a Class C |
|
misdemeanor.
|
(b) When an electronic voting system is used which |
utilizes a ballot
card,
on the inside flap of each ballot card |
envelope there shall be printed
a form for write-in voting |
which shall be substantially as follows:
|
WRITE-IN VOTES
|
(See card of instructions for specific information. |
Duplicate form below
by hand for additional write-in votes.)
|
.............................
|
Title of Office
|
( ) .............................
|
Name of Candidate
|
Write-in lines equal to the number of candidates for which |
a voter may vote shall be printed for an office only if one or |
more persons filed declarations of intent to be write-in |
candidates or qualify to file declarations to be write-in |
candidates under Sections 17-16.1 and 18-9.1 when the |
certification of ballot contains the words "OBJECTION |
PENDING".
|
(c) When an electronic voting system is used which uses a |
ballot sheet,
the
instructions to voters on the ballot sheet |
shall refer the voter to the
card of instructions for specific |
information on write-in voting. Below
each office appearing on |
such ballot sheet there shall be a provision for
the casting of |
a write-in vote. Write-in lines equal to the number of |
candidates for which a voter may vote shall be printed for an |
|
office only if one or more persons filed declarations of |
intent to be write-in candidates or qualify to file |
declarations to be write-in candidates under Sections 17-16.1 |
and 18-9.1 when the certification of ballot contains the words |
"OBJECTION PENDING".
|
(d) When such electronic system is used, there shall be |
printed on the
back of each ballot card, each ballot card |
envelope, and
the first page of the ballot label when a ballot |
label is used, the
words "Official Ballot," followed by the |
number of the
precinct or other precinct identification, which |
may be stamped, in lieu
thereof and, as applicable, the number |
and name of the township, ward
or other election district for |
which the ballot card, ballot card
envelope, and ballot label |
are prepared, the date of the election and a
facsimile of the |
signature of the election authority who has caused the
ballots |
to be printed. The back of the ballot card shall also include
a |
method of identifying the ballot configuration such as a |
listing of the
political subdivisions and districts for which |
votes may be cast on that
ballot, or a number code identifying |
the ballot configuration or color coded
ballots, except that |
where there is only one ballot configuration in a
precinct, |
the precinct identification, and any applicable ward
|
identification, shall be sufficient. Ballot card envelopes |
used in punch
card systems shall be of paper through which no |
writing or punches may be
discerned and shall be of sufficient |
length to enclose all voting
positions. However, the election |
|
authority may provide
ballot card envelopes on which no |
precinct number or township, ward or
other election district |
designation, or election date are preprinted, if
space and a |
preprinted form are provided below the space provided for
the |
names of write-in candidates where such information may be |
entered
by the judges of election. Whenever an election |
authority utilizes
ballot card envelopes on which the election |
date and precinct is not
preprinted, a judge of election shall |
mark such information for the
particular precinct and election |
on the envelope in ink before tallying
and counting any |
write-in vote written thereon.
If some method of insuring |
ballot secrecy other than an envelope is used,
such |
information must be provided on the ballot itself.
|
(e) In the designation of the name of a candidate on the |
ballot, the
candidate's given name or names, initial or |
initials, a nickname by
which the candidate is commonly known, |
or a combination thereof, may be
used in addition to the |
candidate's surname. If a candidate has changed his or her |
name, whether by a statutory or common law procedure in |
Illinois or any other jurisdiction, within 3 years before the |
last day for filing the petition for nomination, nomination |
papers, or certificate of nomination for that office, |
whichever is applicable, then (i) the candidate's name on the |
ballot must be followed by "formerly known as (list all prior |
names during the 3-year period) until name changed on (list |
date of each such name change)" and (ii) the petition, papers, |
|
or certificate must be accompanied by the candidate's |
affidavit stating the candidate's previous names during the |
period specified in (i) and the date or dates each of those |
names was changed; failure to meet these requirements shall be |
grounds for denying certification of the candidate's name for |
the ballot or removing the candidate's name from the ballot, |
as appropriate, but these requirements do not apply to name |
changes resulting from adoption to assume an adoptive parent's |
or parents' surname, marriage or civil union to assume a |
spouse's surname, or dissolution of marriage or civil union or |
declaration of invalidity of marriage or civil union to assume |
a former surname or a name change that conforms the |
candidate's name to his or her gender identity. No other |
designation such
as a political slogan, title, or degree or |
nickname suggesting or
implying possession of a
title, degree |
or professional status, or similar information may be used
in |
connection with the candidate's surname.
For purposes of this |
Section, a "political slogan" is defined as any
word or words |
expressing or connoting a position, opinion, or belief that |
the
candidate may espouse, including , but not limited to, any |
word or words
conveying any meaning other than that of the |
personal identity of the
candidate. A
candidate may not use a |
political slogan as part of his or her name on the
ballot, |
notwithstanding that the political slogan may be part of the
|
candidate's name.
|
(f) The State Board of Elections, a local election |
|
official, or an
election
authority shall remove any |
candidate's name designation from a ballot that is
|
inconsistent with subsection (e) of this Section. In addition, |
the State Board
of Elections, a local election official, or an |
election authority shall not
certify to any election authority |
any candidate name designation that is
inconsistent with |
subsection (e) of this Section.
|
(g) If the State Board of Elections, a local election |
official, or an
election
authority removes a candidate's name |
designation from a ballot under
subsection (f) of this |
Section, then the aggrieved candidate may seek
appropriate |
relief in circuit court.
|
Where voting machines or electronic voting systems are |
used, the
provisions of this Section may be modified as |
required or authorized by
Article 24 or Article 24A, whichever |
is applicable.
|
Nothing in this Section shall prohibit election |
authorities from using
or reusing ballot card envelopes which |
were printed before January 1, 1986 ( the effective
date of |
Public Act 84-820) this amendatory Act of 1985 .
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; revised 2-28-22.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/16-6) (from Ch. 46, par. 16-6)
|
Sec. 16-6.
Whenever one or more proposals for amendment of |
the
constitution or the calling of a constitutional convention |
or any
combination thereof is or are to be voted upon by the |
|
people, the
proposition or propositions for the adoption or |
rejection of such
amendment or amendments or convention shall |
be submitted upon the same a ballot
separate from the |
"Official Ballot" containing the names of candidates
for State |
and other offices to be voted at such election. Such |
proposition or propositions shall be printed at the top of the |
"Official Ballot" preceding the names of candidates for State |
and other offices to be voted at such election. Such |
proposition or propositions shall be printed upon plain white |
paper with no shading, highlighting, or other distinct |
markings and shall include the official title of the section |
so named to be added or amended in the Constitution. Such |
separate
ballot shall be printed upon paper of a distinctly |
blue color and shall,
as near as may be practicable, be of |
uniform size and blue color, but
any variation in the size of |
such ballots or in the tincture of blue
employed shall not |
affect or impair the validity thereof. Preceding
each proposal |
to amend the constitution shall be printed the brief
|
explanation of the amendment, prepared by the General |
Assembly, or in the
case of a proposed amendment initiated by |
petition pursuant to Section
3 of Article XIV of the |
Constitution of the State of Illinois by the principal
|
proponents of the amendment as approved by the Attorney |
General, and
immediately below the explanation, the |
proposition shall be printed in
substantially the following |
form:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
YES For the proposed amendment
- |
---------- to Article ______ (or Section
|
NO _______ of Article ______) of
|
the Constitution.
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
In the case of a proposition for the calling of a |
constitutional
convention, such proposition shall be printed |
in substantially the
following form:
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
YES For the calling
- |
---------- of a Constitutional
|
NO Convention.
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
Included with the ballot there On the back or outside of |
the ballot so as to appear when folded,
shall be a printed |
notice with the words "CONSTITUTION AMENDMENT BALLOT ", |
followed by the
designation of the polling place for which the |
ballot is prepared, the
date of the election and a facsimile of |
the signature of the clerk or
other officer who has caused the |
ballots to be printed. Immediately
above the words |
"CONSTITUTION AMENDMENT BALLOT " in the case of a proposition |
for
the calling of a constitutional convention or a |
proposition to amend the Constitution the following legend |
shall be
printed in bold face type:
|
"NOTICE
|
|
THE FAILURE TO VOTE THIS BALLOT MAY BE THE EQUIVALENT OF A |
NEGATIVE VOTE, BECAUSE A CONVENTION SHALL BE CALLED OR THE |
AMENDMENT SHALL BECOME EFFECTIVE IF APPROVED BY EITHER |
THREE-FIFTHS OF THOSE VOTING ON THE QUESTION OR A MAJORITY OF |
THOSE VOTING IN THE ELECTION.
(THIS IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS A |
DIRECTION THAT YOUR VOTE IS REQUIRED
TO BE CAST EITHER IN FAVOR |
OF OR IN OPPOSITION TO THE PROPOSITION HEREIN
CONTAINED.)
|
WHETHER YOU VOTE THIS BALLOT OR NOT YOU MUST RETURN IT TO |
THE
ELECTION JUDGE WHEN YOU LEAVE THE VOTING BOOTH".
|
If a proposition for the calling of a constitutional |
convention is
submitted at the same election as one or more |
propositions to amend the
constitution, the proposition for |
the calling of a constitutional
convention shall be printed at |
the top of the ballot. In such case, the constitution |
amendment notice the
back or outside of the ballot shall be |
printed the same as if it were a
proposal solely to amend the |
constitution.
|
Where voting machines or electronic voting systems are |
used, the
provisions of this Section may be modified as |
required or authorized by
Article 24 or Article 24A, whichever |
is applicable.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-766, eff. 7-6-12.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-2.5) |
Sec. 19-2.5. Notice for vote by mail ballot. An election |
authority shall notify all qualified voters, except voters who |
|
have applied for permanent vote by mail status under |
subsection (b) of Section 19-3 or voters who submit a written |
request to be excluded from the permanent vote by mail status, |
not more than 90 days nor less than 45 days before a general or |
consolidated election , of the option for permanent vote by |
mail status using the following notice and including the |
application for permanent vote by mail status in subsection |
(b) of Section 19-3: |
"You may apply to permanently be placed on vote by mail |
status using the attached application.".
|
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; 102-668, eff. 11-15-21.) |
(10 ILCS 5/19-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-3) |
Sec. 19-3. Application for a vote by mail ballot. |
(a) The
application for a vote by mail ballot for a single |
election shall be substantially in the
following form: |
APPLICATION FOR VOTE BY MAIL 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 .... in the municipality of |
.... in the county of ....; that I have resided at such address |
for at least 30 days; that I am lawfully entitled to vote at |
the .... election to be held on ....; and that I wish to vote |
by mail. 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 vote by mail |
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 |
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. |
I understand that this application is made for an official |
vote by mail ballot or ballots to be voted by me at the |
election specified in this application and that I must submit |
a separate application for an official vote by mail ballot or |
ballots to be voted by me at any subsequent election. |
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: |
............... |
|
(a-5) The application for a single vote by mail ballot |
transmitted electronically pursuant to Section 19-2.6 shall be |
substantively similar to the application for a vote by mail |
ballot for a single election and shall include: |
I swear or affirm that I am a voter with a print |
disability, and, as a result of this disability, I am |
making a request to receive a vote by mail ballot |
electronically so that I may privately and independently |
mark, verify, and print my vote by mail ballot. |
(b) The application for permanent vote by mail status |
shall be substantially in the following form: |
APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT VOTE BY MAIL STATUS |
I am currently a registered voter and wish to apply for |
permanent vote by mail status. |
I state that I am a resident of .... in the municipality of |
.... in the county of ....; that I have resided at such address |
for at least 30 days; that I am lawfully entitled to vote at |
the .... election to be held on ....; and that I wish to vote |
by mail in: I state that I am a resident of the City of .... |
residing at .... in such city 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 vote by mail ballot in: |
..... all subsequent elections that do not require a party |
designation. |
|
..... all subsequent elections, and I wish to receive a |
................... Party vote by mail ballot in |
elections that require a party designation. |
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 |
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 under Section 29-10 of |
the Election Code, the undersigned certifies that the |
statements set forth in this application are true and correct. |
.... |
Post office address to which ballot is mailed: |
............... |
(b-5) The application for permanent vote by mail ballots |
transmitted electronically pursuant to Section 19-2.6 shall be |
substantively similar to the application for permanent vote by |
mail status and shall include: |
I swear or affirm that I am a voter with a |
non-temporary print disability, and as a result of this |
disability, I am making a request to receive vote by mail |
ballots electronically so that I may privately and |
independently mark, verify, and print my vote by mail |
|
ballots. |
(c) 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. The election authority shall allow |
any voter on permanent vote by mail status to change his or her |
party affiliation for a primary election ballot by a method |
and deadline published and selected by the election authority. |
(d) If application is made electronically, the applicant |
shall mark the box associated with the above described |
statement included as part of the online application |
certifying that the statements set forth in the application |
under subsection (a) or (b) are true and correct, and a |
signature is not required. |
(e) Any person may produce, reproduce, distribute, or |
return to an election authority an application under this |
Section. If applications are sent to a post office box |
controlled by any individual or organization that is not an |
election authority, those applications shall (i) include a |
valid and current phone number for the individual or |
organization controlling the post office box and (ii) be |
turned over to the appropriate election authority within 7 |
days of receipt or, if received within 2 weeks of the election |
in which an applicant intends to vote, within 2 days of |
receipt. Failure to turn over the applications in compliance |
with this paragraph shall constitute a violation of this Code |
|
and shall be punishable as a petty offense with a fine of $100 |
per application. Removing, tampering with, or otherwise |
knowingly making the postmark on the application unreadable by |
the election authority shall establish a rebuttable |
presumption of a violation of this paragraph. Upon receipt, |
the appropriate election authority shall accept and promptly |
process any application under this Section submitted in a form |
substantially similar to that required by this Section, |
including any substantially similar production or reproduction |
generated by the applicant. |
(f) An election authority may combine the applications in |
subsections (a) and (b) onto one form, but the distinction |
between the applications must be clear and the form must |
provide check boxes for an applicant to indicate whether he or |
she is applying for a single election vote by mail ballot or |
for permanent vote by mail status. |
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; 102-819, eff. 5-13-22.) |
(10 ILCS 5/19-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-5) |
Sec. 19-5. Folding and enclosure of ballots in unsealed |
envelope; address on envelope; certification; instructions for |
marking and returning ballots. It shall be the duty of the |
election authority to fold the
ballot or ballots in the manner |
specified by the statute for folding
ballots prior to their |
deposit in the ballot box, and to enclose such
ballot or |
ballots in an envelope unsealed to be furnished by the |
|
election authority him , which
envelope shall bear upon the |
face thereof the name, official title and
post office address |
of the election authority, and upon the other side
a printed |
certification in substantially the
following form:
|
I state that I am a resident of .... in the municipality of |
.... in the county of ....; that I have resided at such address |
for at least 30 days; and that I am lawfully entitled to cast a |
ballot. 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 .... months
last past; and that I am lawfully |
entitled to vote in such precinct at the
.... election to be |
held on .....
|
*fill in either (1), (2) or (3).
|
I further state that I personally marked the enclosed |
ballot in secret.
|
Under penalties of perjury as provided by law pursuant to |
Section 29-10
of The Election Code, the undersigned certifies |
that the statements set
forth in this certification are true |
and correct.
|
.......................
|
If the ballot is to go to an elector who is physically |
incapacitated and needs assistance marking the ballot,
the |
envelope shall bear upon the back thereof a certification in
|
substantially the following form:
|
|
I state that I am a resident of .... in the municipality of |
.... in the county of ....; that I have resided at such address |
for at least 30 days; that I am lawfully entitled to cast a |
ballot; and that I am physically incapable of personally |
marking the ballot for this election. 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 .... months
|
last past; that I am lawfully entitled to vote in such precinct |
at the
.... election to be held on ....; that I am physically |
incapable
of personally marking the ballot for
such election.
|
*fill in either (1), (2) or (3).
|
I further state that I marked the enclosed ballot in |
secret with the assistance of
|
.................................
|
(Individual rendering assistance)
|
.................................
|
(Residence Address)
|
Under penalties of perjury as provided by law pursuant to |
Section 29-10
of The Election Code, the undersigned certifies |
that the statements set forth
in this certification are true |
and correct.
|
.......................
|
In the case of a voter with a physical
incapacity, marking |
a ballot in secret includes marking a ballot with the
|
|
assistance of another individual, other than a candidate
whose |
name appears on the ballot (unless the voter is the spouse or a
|
parent, child, brother, or sister of the candidate),
the |
voter's employer, an
agent of that employer, or an officer or |
agent of the voter's union, when
the voter's physical |
incapacity necessitates such assistance.
|
In the case of a physically incapacitated voter, marking a |
ballot in secret includes marking a ballot with the
assistance |
of another individual, other than a candidate
whose name |
appears on the ballot (unless the voter is the spouse or a
|
parent, child, brother, or sister of the candidate), the |
voter's
employer, an
agent of that employer, or an officer or |
agent of the voter's union, when
the voter's physical |
incapacity necessitates such assistance.
|
Provided, that if the ballot enclosed is to be voted at a |
primary
election, the certification shall designate the name |
of the political
party with which the voter is affiliated.
|
In addition to the above, the election authority shall |
provide
printed slips, or an electronic version thereof for |
voters voting by mail pursuant to Section 19-2.6, giving full |
instructions regarding the manner of marking
and returning the |
ballot in order that the same may be counted, and
shall furnish |
one of such printed slips or the electronic version thereof |
for voters voting by mail pursuant to Section 19-2.6 to each of |
such applicants at
the same time the ballot is delivered to |
him.
Such instructions shall include the following statement: |
|
"In signing the
certification on the vote by mail ballot |
envelope, you are attesting that you
personally marked this |
vote by mail ballot in secret. If you are physically
unable to |
mark the ballot, a friend or relative may assist you after
|
completing the enclosed affidavit. Federal and State laws |
prohibit a
candidate whose name appears on the ballot (unless |
you
are the spouse or a parent, child, brother, or sister of |
the candidate), your
employer, your employer's agent or an |
officer or agent of your union
from assisting voters with |
physical disabilities."
|
In addition to the above, if a ballot to be provided to an |
elector
pursuant to this Section contains a public question |
described in subsection
(b) of Section 28-6 and the territory |
concerning which the question is
to be submitted is not |
described on the ballot due to the space limitations
of such |
ballot, the election authority shall provide a printed copy of
|
a notice of the public question, which shall include a |
description of the
territory in the manner required by Section |
16-7. The notice shall be
furnished to the elector at the same |
time the ballot is delivered to the
elector.
|
Election authorities transmitting ballots by electronic |
transmission pursuant to Section 19-2.6 shall, to the greatest |
extent possible, provide those applicants with the same |
instructions, certifications, and other balloting materials |
required when sending ballots by mail. |
(Source: P.A. 102-819, eff. 5-13-22.)
|
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-8)
|
Sec. 19-8. Time and place of counting ballots. |
(a) (Blank.) |
(b) Each vote by mail voter's ballot returned to an |
election authority, by any means authorized by this Article, |
and received by that election authority before the closing of |
the polls on election day shall be endorsed by the receiving |
election authority with the day and hour of receipt and may be |
processed by the election authority beginning on the day it is |
received by the election authority in the central ballot |
counting location of the election authority, but the results |
of the processing may not be counted until the day of the |
election after 7:00 p.m., except as provided in subsections |
(g) and (g-5).
|
(c) Each vote by mail voter's ballot that is mailed to an |
election authority and postmarked no later than election day, |
but that is received by the election authority after the polls |
close on election day and before the close of the period for |
counting provisional ballots cast at that election, shall be |
endorsed by the receiving authority with the day and hour of |
receipt and shall be counted at the central ballot counting |
location of the election authority during the period for |
counting provisional ballots. |
Each vote by mail voter's ballot that is mailed to an |
election authority absent a postmark or a barcode usable with |
|
an intelligent mail barcode tracking system, but that is |
received by the election authority after the polls close on |
election day and before the close of the period for counting |
provisional ballots cast at that election, shall be endorsed |
by the receiving authority with the day and hour of receipt, |
opened to inspect the date inserted on the certification, and, |
if the certification date is election day or earlier and the |
ballot is otherwise found to be valid under the requirements |
of this Section, counted at the central ballot counting |
location of the election authority during the period for |
counting provisional ballots. Absent a date on the |
certification, the ballot shall not be counted.
|
If an election authority is using an intelligent mail |
barcode tracking system, a ballot that is mailed to an |
election authority absent a postmark may be counted if the |
intelligent mail barcode tracking system verifies the envelope |
was mailed no later than election day. |
(d) Special write-in vote by mail voter's blank ballots |
returned to an election authority, by any means authorized by |
this Article, and received by the election authority at any |
time before the closing of the polls on election day shall be |
endorsed by the receiving election authority with the day and |
hour of receipt and shall be counted at the central ballot |
counting location of the election authority during the same |
period provided for counting vote by mail voters' ballots |
under subsections (b), (g), and (g-5). Special write-in vote |
|
by mail voter's blank ballots that are mailed to an election |
authority and postmarked no later than election day, but that |
are received by the election authority after the polls close |
on election day and before the closing of the period for |
counting provisional ballots cast at that election, shall be |
endorsed by the receiving authority with the day and hour of |
receipt and shall be counted at the central ballot counting |
location of the election authority during the same periods |
provided for counting vote by mail voters' ballots under |
subsection (c). |
(e) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, vote by |
mail voters' ballots and special write-in vote by mail voter's |
blank ballots received by the election authority after the |
closing of the polls on an
election day shall be endorsed by |
the election authority receiving them
with the day and hour of |
receipt and shall be safely kept unopened by the
election |
authority for the period of time required for the preservation |
of
ballots used at the election, and shall then, without being |
opened, be
destroyed in like manner as the used ballots of that |
election.
|
(f) Counting required under this Section to begin on |
election day after the closing of the polls shall commence no |
later than 8:00 p.m. and shall be conducted
by a panel or |
panels of election judges appointed in the manner provided
by |
law. The counting shall continue until all vote by mail |
voters' ballots and special write-in vote by mail voter's |
|
blank ballots required to be counted on election day have been |
counted.
|
(g) The procedures set forth in Articles 17 and
18 of this |
Code shall apply to all ballots counted under
this Section. In |
addition, within 2 days after a vote by mail ballot is |
received, but in all cases before the close of the period for |
counting provisional ballots, the election judge or official |
shall compare the voter's signature on the certification |
envelope of that vote by mail ballot with the voter's |
signature on the application verified in accordance with |
Section 19-4 or the signature of the voter on file in the |
office of the election authority. If the election judge or |
official determines that the 2 signatures match, and that the |
vote by mail voter is otherwise qualified to cast a vote by |
mail ballot, the election authority shall cast and count the |
ballot on election day or the day the ballot is determined to |
be valid, whichever is later, adding the results to the |
precinct in which the voter is registered. If the election |
judge or official determines that the signatures do not match, |
or that the vote by mail voter is not qualified to cast a vote |
by mail ballot, then without opening the certification |
envelope, the judge or official shall mark across the face of |
the certification envelope the word "Rejected" and shall not |
cast or count the ballot. |
In addition to the voter's signatures not matching, a vote |
by mail ballot may be rejected by the election judge or |
|
official: |
(1) if the ballot envelope is open or has been opened |
and resealed; |
(2) if the voter has already cast an early or grace |
period ballot; |
(3) if the voter voted in person on election day or the |
voter is not a duly registered voter in the precinct; or |
(4) on any other basis set forth in this Code. |
If the election judge or official determines that any of |
these reasons apply, the judge or official shall mark across |
the face of the certification envelope the word "Rejected" and |
shall not cast or count the ballot.
|
(g-5) If a vote by mail ballot is rejected by the election |
judge or official for any reason, the election authority |
shall, within 2 days after the rejection but in all cases |
before the close of the period for counting provisional |
ballots, notify the vote by mail voter that his or her ballot |
was rejected. The notice shall inform the voter of the reason |
or reasons the ballot was rejected and shall state that the |
voter may appear before the election authority, on or before |
the 14th day after the election, to show cause as to why the |
ballot should not be rejected. The voter may present evidence |
to the election authority supporting his or her contention |
that the ballot should be counted. The election authority |
shall appoint a panel of 3 election judges to review the |
contested ballot, application, and certification envelope, as |
|
well as any evidence submitted by the vote by mail voter. No |
more than 2 election judges on the reviewing panel shall be of |
the same political party. The reviewing panel of election |
judges shall make a final determination as to the validity of |
the contested vote by mail ballot. The judges' determination |
shall not be reviewable either administratively or judicially. |
A vote by mail ballot subject to this subsection that is |
determined to be valid shall be counted before the close of the |
period for counting provisional ballots.
|
If a vote by mail ballot is rejected for any reason, the |
election authority shall, within one day after the rejection, |
transmit to the State Board of Elections by electronic means |
the voter's name, street address, email address and precinct, |
ward, township, and district numbers, as the case may be. If a |
rejected vote by mail ballot is determined to be valid, the |
election authority shall, within one day after the |
determination, remove the name of the voter from the list |
transmitted to the State Board of Elections. The State Board |
of Elections shall maintain the names and information in an |
electronic format on its website accessible to State and local |
political committees. |
Upon request by the State or local political committee, |
each election authority shall, within one day after the |
request, provide the following information about all rejected |
vote by mail ballots: voter's name, street address, email |
address and precinct, ward, township, and district numbers, as |
|
the case may be. |
(g-10) All vote by mail ballots determined to be valid |
shall be added to the vote totals for the precincts for which |
they were cast in the order in which the ballots were opened.
|
(h) Each political party, candidate, and qualified civic |
organization shall be entitled to have present one pollwatcher |
for each panel of election judges therein assigned.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-1126, eff. 2-10-23.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-9.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 22-9.1)
|
Sec. 22-9.1. Within 5 days after the last day for |
proclamation of the results of any
canvass declaring persons |
nominated, elected or declared eligible for a
runoff election |
for any office or declaring the
adoption or rejection of a |
question of public policy, the following
persons may file a |
petition for discovery:
|
(a) any candidate who, in the entire area in which |
votes may be cast
for the office for which he is a |
candidate, received votes equal in
number to at least 95% |
of the number of votes cast for any successful
candidate |
for the same office; and
|
(b) any 5 electors of the same area within which votes |
may be cast
on a question of public policy, if the results |
of the canvass are such
that the losing side on the |
question would have been the prevailing side
had it |
received an additional number of votes equal to 5% of the |
|
total
number of votes cast on the question.
|
A petition under this Section shall be filed with the |
election authority
for purposes of
discovery only. The |
petition shall ask that ballots, voting machines,
or ballot |
cards - as the case may be - shall be examined, that any
|
automatic tabulating equipment shall be tested, and that |
ballots,
recorded votes, or ballot cards - as the case may be - |
shall be counted
in specified precincts, not exceeding 25% of |
the
total number of precincts within the jurisdiction
of the |
election authority. Where there are fewer than 4 precincts |
under
the jurisdiction of the election authority and within |
the area in which
votes could be cast
in the election in |
connection with which the petition has been filed,
discovery |
shall be permitted in one of such precincts.
|
A petition filed under this Section shall be accompanied |
by the
payment of a fee of $50 $10.00 per precinct specified.
|
All such fees shall be paid by the election authority into the |
county or city
treasury, as the case may be.
|
After 3 days notice in writing to the successful candidate |
for the
same office or, in the case of a question of public |
policy, such
notice as will reasonably inform interested |
persons of the time and
place of the discovery proceedings, |
the election authority shall examine the
ballots, voting |
machines, ballot cards, voter affidavits and applications
for |
ballot, test the automatic
tabulating equipment, and count the |
ballots, recorded votes, and ballot
cards in the specified |
|
election districts or precincts. At the request
of any |
candidate entitled to participate in the discovery |
proceedings, the
election authority shall also make available |
for examination the ballot
applications and voter affidavits |
for the specified precincts. Each candidate
affected by such |
examination shall have the right to attend the same in
person |
or by his representative. In the case of a question of public
|
policy, the board shall permit an equal number of acknowledged
|
proponents and acknowledged opponents to attend the |
examination.
|
On completion of the count of any ballots in each district |
or
precinct, the ballots shall be secured and sealed in the |
same manner
required of judges of election by Sections 7-54 |
and 17-20 of the Election Code.
The handling of the ballots in |
accord with this Section shall not of
itself affect the |
admissibility in evidence of the ballots in any other
|
proceedings, either legislative or judicial.
|
The results of the examination and count shall not be |
certified, used
to amend or change the abstracts of the votes |
previously completed, used
to deny the successful candidate |
for the same office his certificate of
nomination or election, |
nor used to change the previously declared result of the vote
|
on a question of public policy. Such count shall not be binding |
in an
election contest brought about under the provisions of |
the Election
Code, shall not be a prerequisite to bringing |
such an election contest,
shall not prevent the bringing of |
|
such an election contest, nor shall it
affect the results of |
the canvass previously proclaimed.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-647, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/23-23) (from Ch. 46, par. 23-23)
|
Sec. 23-23. The case shall be tried in like manner as other |
civil cases,
and may be heard and determined by the court at |
any time not less than 10
days after service of process, or at |
any time after the defendant is
required by notification to |
appear, and shall have preference in the order
of hearing to |
all other cases. The court may make and enforce all necessary
|
orders for the preservation and production of the ballots, |
poll books,
tally papers, returns, registers and other papers |
or evidence that may bear
upon the contest.
|
Whenever a petition for a recount has been filed as |
provided in this
Article, any opposing candidate or any |
elector, under like provisions and
in like manner may file a |
petition within 10 days after the completion of
the canvass of |
the precincts specified in the petition for a further
recount |
of the votes cast in any or all of the balance of the precincts |
in
the county, municipality or other political subdivision, as |
the case may be.
|
In event the court, in any such case, is of the opinion |
that such action will
expedite hearing and determination of |
the contest, the court may
refer the case to the election |
authority to recount the ballots, to take testimony and other
|
|
evidence, to examine the election returns, to make a record of |
all objections
to be heard by the court that may be made to the |
election returns or to any of
them or to any ballots cast or |
counted, and to take all necessary steps and do
all necessary |
things to determine the true and correct result of the |
election
and to make report thereof to the court. The election |
authority shall have authority to count the
ballots or cause |
the same to be counted under its supervision and direction, to
|
conduct such hearing or hearings as may be necessary and |
proper, to apply to
the court in the manner provided by law for |
the issuance of subpoenas or for
any other appropriate order |
or orders to compel the attendance of witnesses,
and to take |
such steps and perform such duties and acts in connection with |
the
conduct of any such hearing or hearings as may be |
necessary. The election authority may, with the
approval of |
the court, employ such assistants as may be necessary and |
proper to
provide for counting the ballots, examining the |
election returns and for taking
all necessary steps and doing |
all necessary things to determine the true and
correct result |
of the election under the direction and supervision of the |
election authority. Upon the motion or application of the |
election authority or of any party to the case, the court shall |
require the party contesting the election to deposit moneys |
with the court as security for costs as reasonably needed to |
compensate the election authority for the costs incurred in |
relation to the election contest. The money deposited for |
|
security shall be taxed and allowed as costs to compensate the |
election authority for the services of its assistants and for |
reimbursement of expenses incurred by the election authority |
in relation to the election contest. The election authority |
shall not be required to undertake any work in furtherance of |
the election contest until the necessary funds are deposited |
with the court. Any money deposited as security for costs by a |
petitioner contesting an election must be returned to the |
petitioner if the judgment of the court is to annul the |
election or to declare as elected someone other than the |
person whose election is contested. The election authority
|
shall receive such compensation for its services and such |
allowances for the
services of its assistants and for |
reimbursement of expenses incurred by it as
shall be approved |
by the court, and all such compensation and allowances when
|
approved by the court shall be taxed and allowed as costs in |
such cause. The
court may from time to time, upon the court's |
own motion or upon the
application of the election authority |
or of any party to said cause, require the parties to the
cause |
or any of them to deposit such amounts of money with the court |
as
security for costs as the court may deem reasonable and |
proper.
|
Any petitioner may amend his petition at any time before |
the completion
of the recount by withdrawing his request for a |
recount of certain
precincts, or by requesting a recount of |
additional specified precincts.
The petitioner shall deposit |
|
or shall cause to be deposited, such amounts
of money as the |
court may require as security for costs for such additional
|
precincts as the court may deem reasonable and proper.
|
Any money deposited as security for costs by a petitioner |
contesting an
election must be returned to such petitioner if |
the judgment of the court
is to annul the election or to |
declare as elected someone other than the
person whose |
election is contested.
|
Any money deposited as security for costs by a petitioner |
in opposition
to a petition contesting an election must be |
returned to such petitioner if
the judgment of the court is to |
confirm the election or to declare as
elected the person whose |
election is contested.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-647, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
Section 15. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority |
Act is amended by changing Section 14 as follows: |
(70 ILCS 210/14) (from Ch. 85, par. 1234) |
Sec. 14. Board; compensation. The governing and |
administrative body of the Authority shall be a
board known as |
the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Board. On the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the |
Trustee shall assume the duties and powers of the Board for a |
period of 18 months or until the Board is fully constituted, |
whichever is later. Any action requiring Board approval shall |
|
be deemed approved by the Board if the Trustee approves the |
action in accordance with Section 14.5. Beginning the first |
Monday of the month occurring 18 months after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly and |
until the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly, the Board shall consist of 9 members. On and |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly, the Board shall consist of 11 members. The |
Governor shall appoint 5 members to the Board, subject to the |
advice and consent of the Senate. The Mayor shall appoint 5 |
members to the Board. At least one member of the Board shall |
represent the interests of labor, and at least one member of |
the Board shall represent the interests of the convention |
industry. A majority of the members appointed by the Governor |
and Mayor shall appoint a ninth member to serve as the |
chairperson until the chairperson's term expires on or after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly, at which time, a majority of the members appointed |
by the Governor and Mayor shall appoint an eleventh member to |
serve as the chairperson. The Board shall be fully constituted |
when a quorum has been appointed. The members of
the board |
shall be individuals of generally recognized ability and
|
integrity. No member of the Board may be (i) an
officer or |
employee of, or a member of a board, commission or authority |
of,
the State, any unit of local government or any school |
district or (ii) a person who served on the Board prior to the |
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly. |
Of the initial members appointed by the Governor, one |
shall serve for a term expiring June 1, 2013, one shall serve |
for a term expiring June 1, 2014, one shall serve for a term |
expiring June 1, 2015, and one shall serve for a term expiring |
June 1, 2016, as determined by the Governor. Of the initial |
members appointed by the Mayor, one shall serve for a term |
expiring June 1, 2013, one shall serve for a term expiring June |
1, 2014, one shall serve for a term expiring June 1, 2015, and |
one shall serve for a term expiring June 1, 2016, as determined |
by the Mayor. The initial chairperson appointed by the Board |
shall serve a term for a term expiring June 1, 2015. Additional |
members of the Board appointed pursuant to this amendatory Act |
of the 102nd General Assembly shall serve for a term expiring |
on June 1, 2026. Successors shall be appointed to 4-year |
terms. |
Members of the Board shall serve without compensation, but |
shall be reimbursed for actual
expenses incurred by them in |
the performance of their duties. All members of
the Board and |
employees of the Authority are subject to the Illinois
|
Governmental Ethics Act, in accordance with its terms. |
For any member of the Board appointed after April 1, 2023 |
and before May 15, 2023, that Board membership position is |
terminated 6 months after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly. Beginning |
|
December 15, 2023, a new membership position to the Board is |
created, which appointment shall be made by the Mayor. The |
Mayor and Governor shall not have the authority to make an |
appointment to the Board within the last 45 days of his or her |
term, except when the Mayor or Governor is re-elected and that |
re-election is certified by the relevant election authority. |
(Source: P.A. 102-699, eff. 4-19-22; 102-1129, eff. 2-10-23.) |
Section 20. The Park District Code is amended by changing |
Sections 2-10a and 2-12a as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 1205/2-10a) (from Ch. 105, par. 2-10a)
|
Sec. 2-10a.
Any district may provide by referendum, or by |
resolution of
the board, that the board shall be comprised of 7 |
commissioners. Any such
referendum shall be initiated and held |
in the same manner as is provided
by the general election law.
|
If a majority of the votes cast on the proposition is in |
favor of the 7-member
board, or if the board adopts a |
resolution stating that it is acting pursuant
to this Section |
in order to create a 7-member board, then whichever of the
|
following transition schedules are appropriate shall be |
applied: At the
election of commissioners next following by at |
least 197 60 days after the date on
which the proposition to |
create a 7-member board was approved at referendum
or by |
resolution, the number of commissioners to be elected shall be |
2 more
than the number that would otherwise have been elected. |
|
If this results
in the election, pursuant to Section 2-12 of |
this Act, of 4 commissioners
at that election, one of the 4, to |
be determined by lot within 30 days after
the election, shall |
serve for a term of 4 years or 2 years as the case
may be, |
instead of 6 years, so that his term will expire in the same |
year
in which the term of only one of the incumbent |
commissioners expires.
Thereafter ,
all commissioners shall be |
elected for 6-year terms as provided in Section
2-12. If the |
creation of a 7-member board results in the election of either
|
3 or 4 commissioners, pursuant to Section 2-12a of this Act, at |
that election,
2 of them, to
be determined by lot within 30 |
days after the election, shall serve for
terms of 2 years |
instead of 4 years. Thereafter , all commissioners shall
be |
elected for 4-year terms as provided in Section 2-12a of this |
Act.
|
In any district where a 7-member board has been created |
pursuant to this
Section whether by referendum or by |
resolution, the number of commissioners
may later be reduced |
to 5, but only by a referendum initiated and held in
the same |
manner as prescribed in this Section for creating a 7-member |
board.
No proposition to reduce the number of commissioners |
shall affect the terms
of any commissioners holding office at |
the time of the referendum or to
be elected within 197 60 days |
after of the referendum. If a majority of the votes cast on the |
proposition is in favor of reducing a 7-member board to a |
5-member board, then, at the election of commissioners next |
|
following by at least 197 60 days after the date on which the |
proposition was approved at referendum, the number of |
commissioners to be elected shall be 2 less than the number |
that would otherwise have been elected and whichever of the |
following transition schedules are appropriate shall be |
applied: (i) if this results in the election of no |
commissioners for a 6-year term pursuant to Section 2-12 of |
this Act, then at the next election in which 3 commissioners |
are scheduled to be elected to 6-year terms as provided in |
Section 2-12, one of the 3, to be determined by lot within 30 |
days after the election, shall serve for a term of 4 years or 2 |
years, as the case may be, instead of 6 years, so that his or |
her term will expire in the same year in which the term of no |
incumbent commissioner is scheduled to expire; thereafter, all |
commissioners shall be elected for 6-year terms as provided in |
Section 2-12; or (ii) if the reduction to a 5-member board |
results in the election of one commissioner to a 4-year term, |
pursuant to Section 2-12a of this Act, then at the next |
election in which 4 commissioners are scheduled to be elected |
to 4-year terms as provided in Section 2-12a, one of the 4, to |
be determined by lot within 30 days after the election, shall |
serve for a term of 2 years, instead of 4 years, so that his or |
her term will expire in the same year in which the term of only |
one incumbent commissioner is scheduled to expire; thereafter, |
all commissioners shall be elected for 4-year terms as |
provided in Section 2-12a.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 100-351, eff. 8-25-17.)
|
(70 ILCS 1205/2-12a) (from Ch. 105, par. 2-12a)
|
Sec. 2-12a.
Any district may provide, either by resolution |
of the board
or by referendum, that the term of commissioners |
shall be 4 years rather
than 6 years. Any such referendum shall |
be initiated and held in the same
manner as is provided by the |
general election law for public questions
authorized by |
Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
|
If a majority of the votes cast on the proposition is in |
favor of a 4-year
term for commissioners, or if the Board |
adopts a resolution stating that
it is acting pursuant to this |
Section to change the term of office from
6 years to 4 years, |
commissioners thereafter elected, commencing with the
first |
regular park district election at least 197 60 days after the |
date on
which the proposition for 4-year terms was approved at |
referendum or by
resolution, shall be elected for a term of 4 |
years. In order to provide
for the transition from 6-year |
terms to 4-year terms: |
(1) If 2 commissioners on a 5-member board
are to be |
elected at the first such election and if the term of only |
one
commissioner is scheduled to expire in the year of the |
next election at
which commissioners are elected, of the 2 |
commissioners elected, one shall
serve a 2-year
term and |
one a 4-year term, to be determined by lot between the 2 |
persons
elected within 30 days after the election. |
|
(2) On a 7-member board under Section 2-10a, if the |
terms of only 2 commissioners are scheduled to expire in |
the year of the second election at which commissioners are |
elected after the first regular park district election at |
least 197 60 days after the date on which the proposition |
for 4-year terms was approved at referendum or by |
resolution, then: |
(A) if 3 commissioners are elected at the first |
regular election, 2 of the commissioners elected shall |
serve a 2-year term and one shall serve a 4-year term |
to be determined by lot between persons elected within |
30 days after the first election; or |
(B) if 2 commissioners are elected at the first |
regular election, those 2 commissioners elected shall |
serve a 2-year term.
|
In any district where the board has created 4-year terms |
pursuant to
this Section, whether by referendum or by |
resolution, the length of terms
may later be increased to 6 |
years, but only by a referendum initiated and
held in the same |
manner as prescribed in this Section for creating 4-year
|
terms. No proposition to increase the terms of commissioners |
shall affect
any commissioner holding office at the time of |
the referendum or to be
elected within 197 60 days after of the |
referendum.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-58, eff. 7-12-19.)
|
|
Section 25. The School Code is amended by changing |
Sections 24-2, 34-4.1, and 34-21.10 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-2)
|
Sec. 24-2. Holidays. |
(a) Teachers shall not be required
to teach on Saturdays, |
nor, except as provided in subsection (b) of this Section, |
shall teachers or other school
employees, other than |
noncertificated school employees whose presence is
necessary |
because of an emergency or for the continued operation and
|
maintenance of school facilities or property, be
required to |
work on legal school
holidays, which are January 1, New Year's |
Day; the third Monday in
January, the Birthday of Dr. Martin |
Luther King, Jr.; February 12, the
Birthday of President |
Abraham Lincoln; the
first Monday in March (to be known as |
Casimir Pulaski's birthday); Good
Friday; the day designated |
as Memorial Day by federal law; June 19, Juneteenth National |
Freedom Day; July 4,
Independence Day; the first Monday in |
September, Labor Day; the second Monday
in October, Columbus |
Day; November 11, Veterans' Day; the Thursday in
November |
commonly called Thanksgiving Day; and December 25, Christmas |
Day.
School boards may grant special holidays whenever in |
their judgment such
action is advisable. No deduction shall
be |
made from the time or
compensation of a school employee on |
account of any legal
or special holiday.
|
(b) A school board or other entity eligible to apply for |
|
waivers and modifications under Section 2-3.25g of this Code |
is authorized to hold school or schedule teachers' institutes, |
parent-teacher conferences, or staff development on the third |
Monday in January (the Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, |
Jr.); February 12 (the Birthday of President Abraham Lincoln); |
the first Monday in March (known as Casimir Pulaski's |
birthday); the second Monday in October (Columbus Day); and |
November 11 (Veterans' Day), provided that: |
(1) the person or persons honored by the holiday are |
recognized through instructional activities conducted on |
that day or, if the day is not used for student attendance, |
on the first school day preceding or following that day; |
and |
(2) the entity that chooses to exercise this authority |
first holds a public hearing about the proposal. The |
entity shall provide notice preceding the public hearing |
to both educators and parents. The notice shall set forth |
the time, date, and place of the hearing, describe the |
proposal, and indicate that the entity will take testimony |
from educators and parents about the proposal.
|
(c) Commemorative holidays, which recognize specified |
patriotic, civic,
cultural or historical persons, activities, |
or events, are regular school
days. Commemorative
holidays |
are: January 17 (the birthday of Muhammad Ali), January 28 (to |
be known as Christa McAuliffe Day and
observed as a |
commemoration of space exploration), February 15 (the
birthday |
|
of Susan B. Anthony), March 29 (Viet Nam War Veterans' Day),
|
September 11 (September 11th Day of Remembrance), the school |
day
immediately preceding Veterans' Day (Korean War Veterans'
|
Day), October 1 (Recycling Day), October 7 (Iraq and |
Afghanistan Veterans Remembrance Day), December 7 (Pearl |
Harbor Veterans' Day), and
any day so appointed by the |
President or
Governor. School boards may establish |
commemorative holidays whenever in
their judgment such action |
is advisable.
School boards shall include instruction relative |
to commemorated persons,
activities, or
events on the |
commemorative holiday or at any other time during the school
|
year and at any point in the curriculum when such instruction |
may be deemed
appropriate. The State Board of Education shall |
prepare and make available
to school boards instructional |
materials relative to commemorated persons,
activities,
or |
events which may be used by school boards in conjunction with |
any
instruction provided pursuant to this paragraph.
|
(d) City of Chicago School District 299 shall observe |
March 4 of each year as
a commemorative holiday. This holiday |
shall be known as Mayors' Day which
shall be a day to |
commemorate and be reminded of the past Chief Executive
|
Officers of the City of Chicago, and in particular the late |
Mayor Richard
J. Daley and the late Mayor Harold Washington. |
If March 4 falls on a
Saturday or Sunday, Mayors' Day shall be |
observed on the following Monday. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to |
|
the contrary, November 3, 2020 shall be a State holiday known |
as 2020 General Election Day and shall be observed throughout |
the State pursuant to this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly. All government offices, with the exception of |
election authorities, shall be closed unless authorized to be |
used as a location for election day services or as a polling |
place. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary, November 8, 2022 shall be a State holiday known as |
2022 General Election Day and shall be observed throughout the |
State under Public Act 102-15. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of State law to the |
contrary, November 5, 2024 shall be a State holiday known as
|
2024 General Election Day and shall be observed throughout |
this
State pursuant to this amendatory Act of the 103rd |
General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-642, eff. 6-16-20; 102-14, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-15, eff. 6-17-21; 102-334, eff. 8-9-21; 102-411, eff. |
1-1-22; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-4.1) |
Sec. 34-4.1. Nomination petitions. In addition to the |
requirements of the general election law, the form of |
petitions under Section 34-4 of this Code shall be |
substantially as follows: |
NOMINATING PETITIONS |
|
(LEAVE OUT THE INAPPLICABLE PART.) |
To the Board of Election Commissioners for the City of |
Chicago: |
We the undersigned, being (.... or more) of the voters |
residing within said district, hereby petition that .... who |
resides at .... in the City of Chicago shall be a candidate for |
the office of .... of the board of education (full term) |
(vacancy) to be voted for at the election to be held on (insert |
date). |
Name: .................. Address: ................... |
In the designation of the name of a candidate on a petition |
for nomination, the candidate's given name or names, initial |
or initials, a nickname by which the candidate is commonly |
known, or a combination thereof may be used in addition to the |
candidate's surname. If a candidate has changed his or her |
name, whether by a statutory or common law procedure in |
Illinois or any other jurisdiction, within 3 years before the |
last day for filing the petition, then (i) the candidate's |
name on the petition must be followed by "formerly known as |
(list all prior names during the 3-year period) until name |
changed on (list date of each such name change)" and (ii) the |
petition must be accompanied by the candidate's affidavit |
stating the candidate's previous names during the period |
specified in clause (i) and the date or dates each of those |
names was changed; failure to meet these requirements shall be |
grounds for denying certification of the candidate's name for |
|
the ballot, but these requirements do not apply to name |
changes resulting from adoption to assume an adoptive parent's |
or parents' surname, marriage to assume a spouse's surname, or |
dissolution of marriage or declaration of invalidity of |
marriage to assume a former surname. No other designation, |
such as a political slogan, as defined by Section 7-17 of the |
Election Code, title or degree, or nickname suggesting or |
implying possession of a title, degree or professional status, |
or similar information may be used in connection with the |
candidate's surname. |
All petitions for the nomination of members of a board of |
education shall be filed with the board of election |
commissioners of the jurisdiction in which the principal |
office of the school district is located within the time |
provided for by the general election law, except that |
petitions for the nomination of members of the board of |
education for the 2024 general primary election shall be |
prepared and certified on the same schedule as the petition |
schedule for the candidates for the General Assembly . The |
board of election commissioners shall receive and file only |
those petitions that include a statement of candidacy, the |
required number of voter signatures, the notarized signature |
of the petition circulator, and a receipt from the county |
clerk showing that the candidate has filed a statement of |
economic interest on or before the last day to file as required |
by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act. The board of election |
|
commissioners may have petition forms available for issuance |
to potential candidates and may give notice of the petition |
filing period by publication in a newspaper of general |
circulation within the school district not less than 10 days |
prior to the first day of filing. The board of election |
commissioners shall make certification to the proper election |
authorities in accordance with the general election law. |
The board of election commissioners of the jurisdiction in |
which the principal office of the school district is located |
shall notify the candidates for whom a petition for nomination |
is filed or the appropriate committee of the obligations under |
the Campaign Financing Act as provided in the general election |
law. Such notice shall be given on a form prescribed by the |
State Board of Elections and in accordance with the |
requirements of the general election law. The board of |
election commissioners shall within 7 days of filing or on the |
last day for filing, whichever is earlier, acknowledge to the |
petitioner in writing the office's acceptance of the petition. |
A candidate for membership on the board of education who |
has petitioned for nomination to fill a full term and to fill a |
vacant term to be voted upon at the same election must withdraw |
his or her petition for nomination from either the full term or |
the vacant term by written declaration. |
Nomination petitions are not valid unless the candidate |
named therein files with the board of election commissioners a |
receipt from the county clerk showing that the candidate has |
|
filed a statement of economic interests as required by the |
Illinois Governmental Ethics Act. Such receipt shall be so |
filed either previously during the calendar year in which his |
or her nomination papers were filed or within the period for |
the filing of nomination papers in accordance with the general |
election law.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-177, eff. 6-1-22; 102-691, eff. 12-17-21 .)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-21.10)
|
Sec. 34-21.10. Creation of electoral districts; |
reapportionment of districts. |
(a) For purposes of elections conducted pursuant to |
subsection (b-5) of Section 34-3, the City of Chicago shall be |
subdivided into 10 electoral districts for the 2024 elections |
and into 20 electoral districts for the 2026 elections after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly by the General Assembly for seats on the Chicago |
Board of Education. The electoral districts must be drawn on |
or before April 1, 2024 July 1, 2023 . Each district must be |
compact, contiguous, and substantially equal in population and |
consistent with the Illinois Voting Rights Act. |
(b) In the year following each decennial census, the |
General Assembly shall redistrict the electoral districts to |
reflect the results of the decennial census consistent with |
the requirements in subsection (a). The reapportionment plan |
shall be completed and formally approved by the General |
|
Assembly not less than 90 days before the last date |
established by law for the filing of nominating petitions for |
the second school board election after the decennial census |
year. If by reapportionment a board member no longer resides |
within the electoral district from which the member was |
elected, the member shall continue to serve in office until |
the expiration of the member's regular term. All new members |
shall be elected from the electoral districts as |
reapportioned.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-177, eff. 6-1-22; 102-691, eff. 12-17-21 .)
|
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law, except that the changes made to Section 3-6 of |
the Election Code are effective January 1, 2024.
|