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Public Act 094-0645 |
HB1968 Enrolled |
LRB094 02783 JAM 32784 b |
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AN ACT concerning elections.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Election Code is amended by changing |
Sections 1A-16, 1A-25, 4-6.2,
4-16, 5-16.2, 5-23, 6-50.2, 6-54, |
7-7, 7-8, 7-10, 7-15, 7-34, 7-56, 7-60, 7-61, 8-8, 9-1.4, |
9-1.14, 9-3, 9-7.5, 9-9.5, 9-10, 10-9, 12-1, 17-9, 17-15, |
17-23, 18-5, 18A-5,
18A-15, 19-2.1, 19-4, 19-10, 20-4, 22-1, |
22-5, 22-7, 22-8, 22-9, 22-15, 22-15.1, 22-17, 23-15.1, 24A-10, |
24A-10.1, 24A-15.1, 24A-22, 24B-10, 24B-10.1, 24B-15.1, 24C-2, |
24C-12, 24C-13, and 24C-15 and by adding Articles 12A and 19A |
and Sections 1A-17, 1A-18, 4-105, 5-105, 6-105, 7-100, 12A-2, |
12A-5, 12A-10, 12A-15, 12A-35, 12A-40, 12A-45, 12A-50, 12A-55, |
13-2.5, 14-4.5, 17-100, 18-100, 19A-5, 19A-10, 19A-15, 19A-20, |
19A-25, 19A-25.5, 19A-30, 19A-35, 19A-40, 19A-45, 19A-50, |
19A-55, 19A-60, 19A-65, 19A-70, 19A-75, and 23-50 as
follows:
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(10 ILCS 5/1A-16)
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Sec. 1A-16. Voter registration information; internet |
posting; processing
of voter registration forms; content of |
such forms. Notwithstanding any law to
the contrary, the |
following provisions shall apply to voter registration under
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this Code.
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(a) Voter registration information; Internet posting of |
voter registration
form. Within 90 days after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the
93rd
General Assembly, the |
State Board of Elections shall post on its World Wide Web
site |
the following information:
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(1) A comprehensive list of the names, addresses, phone |
numbers, and
websites, if applicable, of all county clerks |
and boards
of election commissioners in Illinois.
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(2) A schedule of upcoming elections and the deadline |
for voter
registration.
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(3) A downloadable, printable voter registration form, |
in at least English
and in
Spanish versions, that a person |
may complete and mail or submit to the
State Board of |
Elections or the appropriate county clerk or
board of |
election commissioners.
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Any forms described under paragraph (3) must state the |
following:
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If you do not have a driver's license or social |
security number, and this
form is submitted by mail, and |
you have never registered to vote in the
jurisdiction you |
are now registering in, then you must send, with this
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application, either (i) a copy of a current and valid photo |
identification, or
(ii) a copy of a current utility bill, |
bank statement, government check,
paycheck, or other |
government document that shows the name and address of the
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voter. If you do not provide the information required |
above, then you will be
required to provide election |
officials with either (i) or (ii) described above
the first |
time you vote at a voting place or by absentee ballot.
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(b) Acceptance of registration forms by the State Board of |
Elections and
county clerks and board of election |
commissioners. The
State Board of Elections, county clerks, and |
board of election commissioners
shall accept all completed |
voter registration forms
described in subsection (a)(3) of this |
Section and Section 1A-17 that are:
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(1) postmarked on or before the day that voter |
registration is closed
under
the Election Code;
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(2) not postmarked, but arrives no later than 5 days |
after the close
of registration;
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(3) submitted in person by a person using the form on |
or before the
day that voter registration is closed under |
the Election Code; or
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(4) submitted in person by a person who submits one or |
more forms
on behalf of one or more persons who used the |
form on or before
the day that voter registration is closed |
under the Election Code.
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Upon the receipt of a registration form, the State Board of |
Elections shall
mark
the date on which the form was received
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and send the form via first class mail to the appropriate |
county clerk or board
of
election commissioners, as the case |
may be, within 2 business days based upon
the home address of |
the person submitting the registration form. The county
clerk |
and board of election commissioners shall accept and process |
any form
received from the State Board of Elections.
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(c) Processing of registration forms by county clerks and |
boards of election
commissioners. The county clerk or board of |
election commissioners shall
promulgate procedures for |
processing the voter registration form.
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(d) Contents of the voter registration form. The State |
Board shall create
a voter registration form, which must |
contain the following content:
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(1) Instructions for completing the form.
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(2) A summary of the qualifications to register to vote |
in Illinois.
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(3) Instructions for mailing in or submitting the form |
in person.
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(4) The phone number for the State Board of Elections |
should a person
submitting the form have questions.
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(5) A box for the person to check that explains one of |
3 reasons for
submitting the form:
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(a) new registration;
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(b) change of address; or
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(c) change of name.
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(6) a box for the person to check yes or no that asks, |
"Are you a citizen
of the United States?", a box for the |
person to check yes or no that asks,
"Will you be 18 years |
of age on or before election day?", and a statement of
"If |
you checked 'no' in response to either of these questions, |
then do not
complete this form.".
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(7) A space for the person to fill in his or her home |
telephone
number.
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(8) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her first, |
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middle, and last
names, street address (principal place of |
residence), county, city, state, and
zip code.
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(9) Spaces for the person to fill in his or her mailing |
address, city,
state, and zip code if different from his or |
her principal place of residence.
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(10) A space for the person to fill in his or her |
Illinois driver's
license number if the person has a |
driver's license.
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(11) A space for a person without a driver's license to |
fill in the last
four digits of his or her social security |
number if the person has a social
security number.
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(12) A space for a person without an Illinois driver's |
license to fill in
his or her identification number from |
his or her State Identification card
issued by the |
Secretary of State.
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(13) A space for the person to fill the name appearing |
on his or her last
voter registration, the street address |
of his or her last registration,
including the city, |
county, state, and zip code.
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(14) A space where the person swears or affirms the |
following under
penalty of perjury with his or her |
signature:
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(a) "I am a citizen of the United States.";
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(b) "I will be at least 18 years old on or before |
the next election.";
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(c) "I will have lived in the State of Illinois and |
in my election
precinct at least 30 days as of the date |
of the next election."; and
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"The information I have provided is true to the |
best of my knowledge
under penalty of perjury. If I |
have provided false information, then
than I may be
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fined, imprisoned, or if I am not a U.S. citizen, |
deported from or refused
entry into the United States."
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(d) Compliance with federal law; rulemaking authority. The |
voter
registration
form described in this Section shall be |
consistent with the form prescribed by
the
Federal
Election |
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Commission under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,
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P.L. 103-31, as amended from time to time, and the Help America |
Vote Act of
2002, P.L. 107-252, in all relevant respects. The |
State Board of Elections
shall periodically update the form |
based on changes to federal or State law.
The State Board of |
Elections shall promulgate any rules necessary for the
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implementation of this Section; provided that the rules
comport |
with the letter and spirit of the National Voter Registration |
Act of
1993 and Help America Vote Act of 2002 and maximize the |
opportunity for a
person to register to vote.
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(e) Forms available in paper form. The State Board of |
Elections shall make
the voter registration form available in |
regular paper stock and form in
sufficient quantities for the |
general public. The State Board of Elections may
provide the |
voter registration form to the Secretary of State, county
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clerks, boards of election commissioners, designated agencies |
of the State of
Illinois, and any other person or entity |
designated to have these forms by the
Election Code in regular |
paper stock and form or some other format deemed
suitable by |
the Board. Each county clerk or board of election commissioners |
has
the authority to design and print its own voter |
registration form so long as
the form complies with the |
requirements of this Section. The State Board
of Elections, |
county clerks, boards of election commissioners, or other
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designated agencies of the State of Illinois required to have |
these forms under
the Election Code shall provide a member of |
the public with any reasonable
number of forms
that he or she |
may request. Nothing in this Section shall permit the State
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Board of
Elections, county clerk, board of election |
commissioners, or other appropriate
election official who may |
accept a voter registration form to refuse to accept
a voter |
registration form because the form is printed on photocopier or |
regular
paper
stock and form.
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(f) Internet voter registration study. The State Board of |
Elections shall
investigate the feasibility of offering voter |
registration on its website and
consider voter registration |
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methods of other states in an effort to maximize
the |
opportunity for all Illinois citizens to register to vote. The |
State Board
of Elections shall assemble its findings in a |
report and submit it to the
General Assembly no later than |
January 1, 2006. The report shall contain
legislative |
recommendations to the General Assembly on improving voter
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registration in Illinois.
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(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
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(10 ILCS 5/1A-17 new)
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Sec. 1A-17. Voter registration outreach. |
(a) The Secretary of State, the Department of Human |
Services, the Department of Children and Family Services, the |
Department of Public Aid, the Department of Employment |
Security, and each public institution of higher learning in |
Illinois must make available on its World Wide Web site a |
downloadable, printable voter registration form that complies |
with the requirements in subsection (d) of Section 1A-16 for |
the State Board of Elections' voter registration form. |
(b) Each public institution of higher learning in Illinois |
must include voter registration information and a voter |
registration form supplied by the State Board of Elections |
under subsection (e) of Section 1A-16 in any mailing of student |
registration materials to an address located in Illinois. Each |
public institution of higher learning must provide voter |
registration information and a voter registration form |
supplied by the State Board of Elections under subsection (e) |
of Section 1A-16 to each person with whom the institution |
conducts in-person student registration. |
(c) As used in this Section, a public institution of higher |
learning means a public university, college, or community |
college in Illinois. |
(10 ILCS 5/1A-18 new)
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Sec. 1A-18. Voter registration applications; General |
Assembly district offices. Each member of the General Assembly, |
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and his or her State employees (as defined in Section 1-5 of |
the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act) authorized by the |
member, may make available voter registration forms supplied by |
the State Board of Elections under subsection (e) of Section |
1A-16 to the public and may undertake that and other voter |
registration activities at the member's district office, |
during regular business hours or otherwise, in a manner |
determined by the member. |
(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.
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(2) 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 . 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
Sections 4-20, 5-28, and 6-65 .
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(3) The centralized statewide voter registration list |
shall:
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(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 |
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software programs that are unique to each |
jurisdiction.
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(ii) Allow each election authority to perform |
essential election management functions, including but |
not limited to production of voter lists, processing of |
absentee 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.
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(4) The registration information maintained by each |
election authority shall at all times be synchronized with |
that authority's information on the statewide list at least |
once every 24 hours
on a constant, real-time basis .
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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.
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(Source: P.A. 93-1071, eff. 1-18-05 .)
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(10 ILCS 5/4-6.2) (from Ch. 46, par. 4-6.2)
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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
their
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respective municipalities, townships and road districts. A |
deputy registrar
serving as such by virtue of his status as a |
municipal clerk, or a duly
authorized deputy of a municipal |
clerk, of a municipality the territory of
which lies in more |
than one county may accept the registration of any
qualified |
resident of the municipality, regardless of which county the
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resident, municipal clerk or the duly authorized deputy of the |
municipal
clerk lives in .
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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
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county , except during the 27 days preceding an election.
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The election authority shall appoint as deputy registrars a |
reasonable
number of employees of the Secretary of State |
located at driver's license
examination stations and |
designated to the election authority by the
Secretary of State |
who may accept the registration of any qualified
residents of |
the State
county at any such driver's license examination |
stations.
The appointment of employees of the Secretary of |
State as deputy registrars
shall be made in the manner provided |
in Section 2-105 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code.
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The county clerk shall appoint each of the following named |
persons as deputy
registrars upon the written request of such |
persons:
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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
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county ,
at such library.
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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
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qualified resident of the State
county , at such school. The |
county clerk shall notify
every principal and |
vice-principal of each high school, elementary school, and
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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
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months prior to every election.
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3. The president, or a qualified person designated by |
the president, of
any university, college, community |
college, academy or other institution of
learning situated |
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within the election jurisdiction, who may accept the
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registrations of any resident of the State
county , at such |
university, college,
community college, academy or |
institution.
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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
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county .
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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
county .
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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,
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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
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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
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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.
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6.
The Director of the Illinois Department of Public |
Aid, or a
reasonable number of employees designated by the |
Director and located at
public aid offices, who may accept |
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the registration of any qualified
resident of the county at |
any such public aid office.
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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
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resident of the county at any such unemployment office.
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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
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county .
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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.
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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
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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 Chairman |
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's
political |
party. A Chairman of a County Central Committee shall submit a
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list of applicants to the county clerk by November 30 of each |
year. The
county clerk may require a Chairman of a County |
Central Committee to
furnish a supplemental list of applicants.
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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 |
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within the county and shall take and
subscribe to the following |
oath or affirmation:
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"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
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person nor cause the registration of any person except upon his |
personal
application before me.
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............................
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(Signature Deputy Registrar)"
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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.
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Appointments of deputy registrars under this Section, |
except precinct
committeemen, 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
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general election. Appointments of precinct committeemen shall |
be for 2-year
terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the general
primary at which they were |
elected. 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.
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(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.
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(c)
Completed registration materials under the control of |
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deputy registrars,
appointed pursuant to subsection (a), shall |
be returned to the appointing
proper election
authority within |
7 days, except that completed registration materials
received |
by the deputy registrars during the period between the 35th and
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28th day preceding an election shall be returned by the deputy
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registrars to
the appointing
proper 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.
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(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.
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(e) No deputy registrar shall engage in any electioneering |
or the promotion
of any cause during the performance of his or |
her duties.
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(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.
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(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.
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(Source: P.A. 92-816, eff. 8-21-02; 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
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(10 ILCS 5/4-16) (from Ch. 46, par. 4-16)
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Sec. 4-16. Any registered voter who changes his residence |
from one address
to another within the same county wherein this |
Article is in effect, may
have his registration transferred to |
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his new address by making and signing
an application for change |
of residence address upon a form to be provided
by the county |
clerk. Such application must be made to the office of the
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county clerk and may be made either in person or by mail. In |
case the
person is unable to sign his name, the county clerk |
shall require him to
execute the application in the presence of |
the county clerk or of his
properly authorized representative, |
by his mark, and if satisfied of the
identity of the person, |
the county clerk shall make the transfer.
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Upon receipt of the application, the county clerk, or one |
of his
employees deputized to take registrations shall cause |
the signature of the
voter and the data appearing upon the |
application to be compared with the
signature and data on the |
registration record card, and if it appears that
the applicant |
is the same person as the person previously registered under
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that name the transfer shall be made.
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No transfers of registration under the provisions of this |
Section shall
be made during the 27 days preceding any election |
at which such
voter would
be entitled to vote. When a removal |
of a registered voter takes place from
one address to another |
within the same precinct within a period during
which a |
transfer of registration cannot be made
before any election or |
primary, he shall be entitled to vote upon
presenting the |
judges of election his affidavit substantially in the form
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prescribed in Section 17-10 of this Act of a change of |
residence address
within the precinct on a date therein |
specified.
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The county clerk may obtain information from utility |
companies, city,
village, incorporated town and township |
records, the post office, or from
other sources, regarding the |
removal of registered voters, and may treat
such information, |
and information procured from his death and marriage
records on |
file in his office, as an application to erase from the |
register
any name concerning which he may so have information |
that the voter is no
longer qualified to vote under the name, |
or from the address from which
registered, and give notice |
|
thereof in the manner provided by Section 4--12
of this |
Article, and notify voters who have changed their address that |
a
transfer of registration may be made in the manner provided |
in this
Section enclosing a form therefor.
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If any person be registered by error in a precinct other |
than that in
which he resides, the county clerk may transfer |
his registration to the
proper precinct, and if the error is or |
may be on the part of the
registration officials, and is |
disclosed too late before an election or
primary to mail the |
certificate required by Section 4--15, such certificate
may be |
personally delivered to the voter and he may vote thereon as |
therein
provided, but such certificates so issued shall be |
specially listed with
the reason for the issuance thereof.
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Where a revision or rearrangement of precincts is made by |
the county
board, the county clerk shall immediately transfer |
to the proper precinct
the registration of any voter affected |
by such revision or rearrangement of
the precinct; make the |
proper notations on the registration cards of a
voter affected |
by the revision or rearrangement and shall issue revised
|
certificates to each registrant of such change.
|
Any registered voter who changes his or her name by |
marriage or
otherwise shall be required to register anew and |
authorize the cancellation
of the previous registration; but if |
the voter still resides in the same
precinct and if the change |
of name takes place within a period during
which a transfer of |
registration cannot be made, preceding any election
or primary,
|
the elector may, if otherwise
qualified, vote upon making an |
affidavit at the polling place attesting that the voter is the |
same person who is registered to vote under his or her former |
name. The affidavit shall be treated by the election authority |
as authorization to cancel the registration under the former |
name, and the election authority shall register the person |
under his or her current name.
substantially in the form
|
prescribed in Section 17-10 of this Act.
|
The precinct election officials shall report to the county |
clerk the
names and addresses of all persons who have changed |
|
their addresses and
voted, which shall be treated as an |
application to change address
accordingly, and the names and |
addresses of all persons otherwise voting by
affidavit as in |
this Section provided, which shall be treated as an
application |
to erase under Section 4--12 hereof.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-816, eff. 8-21-02.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/4-105 new)
|
Sec. 4-105. First time voting. If a person registered to |
vote by mail, the person must vote for the first time in person |
and not by an absentee ballot, except that the person may vote |
by absentee ballot in person if the person first provides the |
appropriate election authority with sufficient proof of |
identity by the person's driver's license number or State |
identification card number or, if the person does not have |
either of those, by the last 4 digits of the person's social |
security number, a copy of a current and valid photo |
identification, or a copy of any of the following current |
documents that show the person's name and address: utility |
bill, bank statement, paycheck, government check, or other |
government document.
|
(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
their respective
counties. A |
deputy registrar serving as such by virtue of his status as a
|
municipal clerk, or a duly authorized deputy of a municipal |
clerk, of a
municipality the territory of which lies in more |
than one county may accept
the registration of any qualified |
resident of any county in which the
municipality is located, |
regardless of which county the resident, municipal
clerk or the |
duly authorized deputy of the municipal clerk lives in .
|
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
|
county , except during the 27 days preceding an election.
|
The election authority shall appoint as deputy registrars a |
reasonable
number of employees of the Secretary of State |
located at driver's license
examination stations and |
designated to the election authority by the
Secretary of State |
who may accept the registration of any qualified
residents of |
the State
county at any such driver's license examination |
stations.
The appointment of employees of the Secretary of |
State as deputy registrars
shall be made in the manner provided |
in Section 2-105 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code.
|
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
|
county ,
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
county , 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
county , 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
|
county .
|
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
county .
|
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 the Illinois Department of Public |
Aid, 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
|
county .
|
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 Chairman |
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's
political |
party. A Chairman 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 Chairman 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 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
committeemen, 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 committeemen shall |
be for
2-year terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the
general primary at which they were |
elected. 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
proper election
authority 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
proper 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. 92-816, eff. 8-21-02; 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/5-23) (from Ch. 46, par. 5-23)
|
Sec. 5-23. Any registered voter who changes his residence |
from one address,
number or place to another within the same |
county wherein this article 5
is in effect, may have his |
registration transferred to his new address by
making and |
signing an application for such change of residence upon a form
|
|
to be provided by the county clerk. Such application must be |
made to the
office of the county clerk. In case the person is |
unable to sign his name
the county clerk shall require such |
person to execute the request in the
presence of the county |
clerk or of his properly authorized representative,
by his |
mark, and if satisfied of the identity of the person, the |
county
clerk shall make the transfer.
|
Upon receipt of such application, the county clerk, or one |
of his employees
deputized to take registrations shall cause |
the signature of the voter and
the data appearing upon the |
application to be compared with the signature
and data on the |
registration record, and if it appears that the applicant
is |
the same person as the party previously registered under that |
name the
transfer shall be made.
|
Transfer of registration under the provisions of this |
section may not be
made within the period when the county |
clerk's office is closed to registration
prior to an election |
at which such voter would be entitled to vote.
|
Any registered voter who changes his or her name by |
marriage or
otherwise, shall be required to register anew and |
authorize the
cancellation of the previous registration; |
provided, however, that if
the change of name takes place |
within a period during which such new
registration cannot be |
made, next preceding any election or primary, the
elector may, |
if otherwise qualified, vote upon making the following
|
affidavit before the judges of election:
|
I do solemnly swear that I am the same person now |
registered in the
.... precinct of the .... ward of the city of |
.... or .... District Town
of .... under the name of .... and |
that I still reside in said precinct
or district.
|
(Signed) ....
|
If the voter whose name has changed still resides in the |
same precinct, the voter may vote after making the affidavit at |
the polling place regardless of when the change of name |
occurred. In that event, the affidavit shall not state that the |
voter is required to register; the affidavit shall be treated |
|
by the election authority as authorization to cancel the |
registration under the former name, and the election authority |
shall register the voter under his or her current name.
|
When a removal of a registered voter takes place from one |
address to
another within the same precinct within a period |
during which such
transfer of registration cannot be made, |
before any election or primary,
he shall be entitled to vote |
upon presenting to the judges of election
an affidavit of a |
change and having said affidavit supported by the
affidavit of |
a qualified voter of the same precinct.
|
Suitable forms for this purpose shall be provided by the |
county clerk. The form
in all cases shall be similar to the |
form furnished by the county clerk
for county and state |
elections.
|
The precinct election officials shall report to the county |
clerk the names
and addresses of all such persons who have |
changed their addresses and voted.
The city, village, town and |
incorporated town clerks shall within five days
after every |
election report to the county clerk the names and addresses
of |
the persons reported to them as having voted by affidavit as in |
this
section provided.
|
The county clerk may obtain information from utility |
companies, city,
village, town and incorporated town records, |
the post office or from
other sources regarding the removal of |
registered voters and notify such
voters that a transfer of |
registration may be made in the manner
provided by this |
section.
|
If any person be registered by error in a precinct other |
than that in
which he resides the county clerk shall be |
empowered to transfer his
registration to the proper precinct.
|
Where a revision or rearrangement of precincts is made by |
the board
of county commissioners, the county clerk shall |
immediately transfer to
the proper precinct the registration of |
any voter affected by such
revision or rearrangement of the |
precincts; make the proper notations on
the registration cards |
of a voter affected by the revision of
registration and shall |
|
notify the registrant of such change.
|
(Source: P.A. 80-1469.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/5-105 new)
|
Sec. 5-105. First time voting. If a person registered to |
vote by mail, the person must vote for the first time in person |
and not by an absentee ballot, except that the person may vote |
by absentee ballot in person if the person first provides the |
appropriate election authority with sufficient proof of |
identity by the person's driver's license number or State |
identification card number or, if the person does not have |
either of those, by the last 4 digits of the person's social |
security number, a copy of a current and valid photo |
identification, or a copy of any of the following current |
documents that show the person's name and address: utility |
bill, bank statement, paycheck, government check, or other |
government document.
|
(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
election
|
jurisdiction , except during the 27 days preceding an election.
|
The election authority shall appoint as deputy registrars a |
reasonable
number of employees of the Secretary of State |
located at driver's license
examination stations and |
designated to the election authority by the
Secretary of State |
who may accept the registration of any qualified
residents of |
the State
county at any such driver's license examination |
stations. The
appointment of employees of the Secretary of |
State as deputy registrars shall
be made in the manner provided |
in Section 2-105 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
|
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
|
election
jurisdiction , 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
election jurisdiction , 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
election jurisdiction , 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
|
election jurisdiction .
|
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
|
election jurisdiction .
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 the Illinois Department of Public |
Aid, 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
|
election jurisdiction .
|
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 Chairman
|
of the County Central Committee of the applicant's political |
party. A Chairman
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 Chairman 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
committeemen, 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 committeemen shall |
be for 2-year
terms commencing on the date of the county |
convention following the general
primary at which they were |
elected. 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
proper election authority 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
proper 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. 92-816, eff. 8-21-02; 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/6-54) (from Ch. 46, par. 6-54)
|
Sec. 6-54. Any registered voter who changes his or her name |
by marriage or
otherwise, shall be required to register anew |
and authorize the
cancellation of the previous registration; |
provided, however, that if the
change of name takes place |
within a period during which such new
registration cannot be |
made, next preceding any election or primary, the
elector may, |
if otherwise qualified, vote upon making the following
|
affidavit before the judges of election:
|
"I do solemnly swear that I am the same person now |
|
registered in the
.... precinct of the .... ward, under the |
name of .... and that I still
reside in said precinct.
|
(Signed)...."
|
If the voter whose name has changed still resides in the |
same precinct, the voter may vote after making the affidavit at |
the polling place regardless of when the change of name |
occurred. In that event, the affidavit shall not state that the |
voter is required to register; the affidavit shall be treated |
by the election authority as authorization to cancel the |
registration under the former name, and the election authority |
shall register the voter under his or her current name.
|
(Source: Laws 1943, vol. 2, p. 1.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/6-105 new)
|
Sec. 6-105. First time voting. If a person registered to |
vote by mail, the person must vote for the first time in person |
and not by an absentee ballot, except that the person may vote |
by absentee ballot in person if the person first provides the |
appropriate election authority with sufficient proof of |
identity by the person's driver's license number or State |
identification card number or, if the person does not have |
either of those, by the last 4 digits of the person's social |
security number, a copy of a current and valid photo |
identification, or a copy of any of the following current |
documents that show the person's name and address: utility |
bill, bank statement, paycheck, government check, or other |
government document.
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-7) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-7)
|
Sec. 7-7. For the purpose of making nominations in certain |
instances as
provided in this Article and this Act, the |
following committees are authorized
and shall constitute the |
central or managing committees of each political
party, viz: A |
State central committee , whose responsibilities include, but |
are not limited to, filling by appointment vacancies in |
nomination for statewide offices, including but not limited to |
|
the office of United States Senator , a congressional committee |
for each
congressional district, a county central committee for |
each county, a
municipal central committee for each city, |
incorporated town or village, a
ward committeeman for each ward |
in cities containing a population of
500,000 or more; a |
township committeeman for each township or part of a
township |
that lies outside of cities having a population of 200,000 or
|
more, in counties having a population of 2,000,000 or more; a |
precinct
committeeman for each precinct in counties having a |
population of less than
2,000,000; a county board district |
committee for each county board district
created under Division |
2-3 of the Counties Code; a State's Attorney committee
for each |
group of 2 or more counties which jointly elect a State's |
Attorney; a
Superintendent of Multi-County Educational Service |
Region committee for each
group of 2 or more counties which |
jointly elect a Superintendent of a
Multi-County Educational |
Service Region; a judicial subcircuit
committee in
a judicial |
circuit divided into subcircuits for each judicial subcircuit |
in
that circuit; and
a board of review election district |
committee
for each Cook County Board of Review election |
district.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-541, eff. 8-18-03; 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; |
revised
9-22-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-8)
|
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 the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
1983 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 held on the third Tuesday in
|
March 1970, and at the primary 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 |
committeeman 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
committeemen in the manner following:
|
At the county convention held by such political party State |
central
committeemen 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 committeeman 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 committeeman 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
committeeman 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 Chairman 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 committeeman 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 the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 91st |
General
Assembly, whenever a vacancy occurs in the office of |
Chairman of a State
central committee, or at the end of the |
term of office of Chairman, the State
central committee of each |
political party that has selected Alternative A shall
elect a |
Chairman who shall not be required to be a member of the State |
Central
Committee. The Chairman 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 Chairman of a State central committee composed as |
provided in this
Alternative B must be selected from the |
committee's members.
|
Except as provided for in Alternative A with respect to the |
selection of
the Chairman of the State central committee, 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
30 days |
after each quadrennial election of
the full committee, meet in |
the city of Springfield and organize
by electing a chairman, |
and may at such time
elect such officers from among their own |
number (or otherwise), as they
may deem necessary or expedient. |
The outgoing chairman 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 State central committeeman |
and State
central committeewoman 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 committeemen 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 |
committeemen
of the political party in that congressional |
district shall vote to fill the
vacancy. In voting to fill the |
vacancy, each chairman of a county central
committee and
each |
ward and township committeeman 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
chairman and |
secretary of such convention within 10 days after such action.
|
Ward, Township and Precinct Committeemen
|
(b) At the primary held on the third Tuesday in March, |
1972, and
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 committeeman. Each |
candidate for ward committeeman
must be a resident of and in |
the ward where he seeks to be elected ward
committeeman. The |
one having the highest number of votes shall be such
ward |
committeeman of such party for such ward. At the primary |
election
held on the third Tuesday in March, 1970, and 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 committeeman. Each
candidate for |
township committeeman 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 committeeman. The |
one having the highest number
of votes shall be such township |
committeeman of such party for such
township or part of a |
township. At the primary held on the third Tuesday
in March, |
1970 and 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
|
committeeman. Each candidate for precinct committeeman must be |
a bona
fide resident of the precinct where he seeks to be |
elected precinct
committeeman. The one having the highest |
number of votes shall be such
precinct committeeman of such |
party for such precinct. The official
returns of the primary |
shall show the name of the committeeman of each
political |
party.
|
Terms of Committeemen. All precinct committeemen elected |
under the
provisions of this Article shall continue as such |
committeemen 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
committeemen who have |
2 year terms, all State central committeemen, township
|
committeemen and ward committeemen shall continue as such |
committeemen
until the date of primary to be held in the fourth |
year after their
election. However, a vacancy exists in the |
office of precinct committeeman
when a precinct committeeman |
ceases to reside in the precinct in which he
was elected and |
such precinct committeeman shall thereafter neither have
nor |
exercise any rights, powers or duties as committeeman in that |
precinct,
even if a successor has not been elected or |
appointed.
|
(c) The Multi-Township Central Committee shall consist of |
|
the precinct
committeemen 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 committeeman 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 committeemen, |
precinct
committeemen and ward committeemen, if any, of such |
party in the county.
In the organization and proceedings of the |
county central committee,
each precinct committeeman 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 committeeman 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 |
committeeman 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 committeemen and ward committeemen, 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 |
committeeman 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 committeeman 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, or partly |
within 2 or more counties, but not coterminous
with the county |
lines of all of such counties, the precinct
committeemen, |
township committeemen and ward committeemen, if any, of
the |
party representing the precincts within the limits of the
|
congressional district, shall compose the congressional |
committee. A
State central committeeman in each district shall |
be a member and the
chairman or, when a district has 2 State |
central committeemen, a co-chairman
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 committeemen or township |
committeemen or ward
committeemen, or any combination thereof, |
each precinct committeeman
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 committeeman |
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 |
|
committeeman 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 |
chairman 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 chairman 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 chairman |
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
chairman 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 |
committeemen
of the townships and wards composing the judicial |
subcircuit in Cook County and
(ii) the precinct committeemen 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 committeeman 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 committeeman 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 |
committeeman 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 |
committeemen, 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 committeeman 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 |
|
chairman 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 it
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 |
committeemen, 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
committeemen. When voting for such proxy the |
county chairman, ward
committeeman or township committeeman, |
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. 93-541, eff. 8-18-03; 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; |
93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-10)
|
Sec. 7-10. Form of petition for nomination. The name of no |
candidate for
nomination, or State central committeeman, or |
township committeeman, or
precinct committeeman, or ward |
committeeman or candidate for delegate or
alternate delegate to |
national nominating conventions, shall be printed
upon the |
primary ballot unless a petition for nomination has been filed |
in
his behalf as provided in this Article in substantially the |
following form:
|
We, the undersigned, members of and affiliated with the |
.... party
and qualified primary electors of the .... party, in |
the .... of ....,
in the county of .... and State of Illinois, |
do hereby petition that
the following named person or persons |
shall be a candidate or candidates
of the .... party for the |
|
nomination for (or in case of committeemen for
election to) the |
office or offices hereinafter specified, to be voted
for at the |
primary election to be held on (insert date).
|
|
Name |
Office |
Address |
|
John Jones |
Governor |
Belvidere, Ill. |
|
Thomas Smith |
Attorney General |
Oakland, Ill. |
|
Name.................. Address.......................
|
State of Illinois)
|
) ss.
|
County of........)
|
I, ...., do hereby certify
that I reside at No. .... |
street, in the .... of ...., county of ....,
and State of |
....., that I am 18 years of age or older, that
I am a citizen |
of the United States, and that the signatures on this sheet
|
were signed
in my presence, and are genuine, and that to the |
best of my knowledge
and belief the persons so signing were at |
the time of signing the
petitions qualified voters of the .... |
party, and that their respective
residences are correctly |
stated, as above set forth.
|
.........................
|
Subscribed and sworn to before me on (insert date).
|
.........................
|
|
Each sheet of the petition other than the statement of |
candidacy and
candidate's statement shall be of uniform size |
and shall contain above
the space for signatures an appropriate |
heading giving the information
as to name of candidate or |
candidates, in whose behalf such petition is
signed; the |
office, the political party represented and place of
residence; |
and the heading of each sheet shall be the same.
|
Such petition shall be signed by qualified primary electors |
residing
in the political division for which the nomination is |
sought in their
own proper persons only and opposite the |
|
signature of each signer, his
residence address shall be |
written or printed. The residence address
required to be |
written or printed opposite each qualified primary elector's
|
name shall include the street address or rural route number of |
the signer,
as the case may be, as well as the signer's county, |
and city, village or
town, and state.
However the county or |
city, village or town, and state of residence of
the electors |
may be printed on the petition forms where all of the
electors |
signing the petition reside in the same county or city, village
|
or town, and state. Standard abbreviations may be used in |
writing the
residence address, including street number, if any. |
At the bottom of
each sheet of such petition shall be added a |
circulator statement signed by
a person 18 years of age or |
older who is a citizen of the United States,
stating the street |
address or rural route number, as the case may be, as well
as |
the county, city, village or town, and state;
and certifying |
that the signatures on that sheet of the petition were signed |
in
his or her presence and certifying that the signatures are |
genuine; and
either (1) indicating the dates on which that |
sheet was circulated, or (2)
indicating the first and last |
dates on which the sheet was circulated, or (3)
certifying that |
none of the signatures on the sheet were signed more than 90
|
days preceding the last day for the filing of the petition and |
certifying that
to the best of his or her knowledge and belief |
the persons so signing were at
the time of signing the |
petitions qualified voters of the political party for
which a |
nomination is sought. Such statement shall be sworn to before |
some
officer authorized to administer oaths in this State.
|
No petition sheet shall be circulated more than 90 days |
preceding the
last day provided in Section 7-12 for the filing |
of such petition.
|
The person circulating the petition, or the candidate on |
whose behalf the
petition is circulated, may strike any |
signature from the petition,
provided that:
|
(1) the person striking the signature shall initial the |
petition at
the place where the signature is struck; and
|
|
(2) the person striking the signature shall sign a |
certification
listing the page number and line number of |
each signature struck from
the petition. Such |
certification shall be filed as a part of the petition.
|
Such sheets before being filed shall be neatly fastened |
together in
book form, by placing the sheets in a pile and |
fastening them together
at one edge in a secure and suitable |
manner, and the sheets shall then
be numbered consecutively. |
The sheets shall not be fastened by pasting
them together end |
to end, so as to form a continuous strip or roll. All
petition |
sheets which are filed with the proper local election |
officials,
election authorities or the State Board of Elections |
shall be the original
sheets which have been signed by the |
voters and by the circulator thereof,
and not photocopies or |
duplicates of such sheets. Each petition must include
as a part |
thereof, a statement of candidacy for each of the candidates |
filing,
or in whose behalf the petition is filed. This |
statement shall set out the
address of such candidate, the |
office for which he is a candidate, shall state
that the |
candidate is a qualified primary voter of the party to which |
the
petition relates and is qualified for the office specified |
(in the case of a
candidate for State's Attorney it shall state |
that the candidate is at the time
of filing such statement a |
licensed attorney-at-law of this State), shall state
that he |
has filed (or will file before the close of the petition filing |
period)
a statement of economic interests as required by the |
Illinois Governmental
Ethics Act, shall request that the |
candidate's name be placed upon the official
ballot, and shall |
be subscribed and sworn to by such candidate before some
|
officer authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds in the State |
and shall be in
substantially the following form:
|
Statement of Candidacy
|
|
Name |
Address |
Office |
District |
Party |
|
John Jones |
102 Main St. |
Governor |
Statewide |
Republican |
|
|
Belvidere, |
|
|
|
|
|
Illinois |
|
|
|
|
|
State of Illinois)
|
) ss.
|
County of .......)
|
I, ...., being first duly sworn, say that I reside at .... |
Street in the city
(or village) of ...., in the county of ...., |
State of Illinois; that I
am a qualified voter therein and am a |
qualified primary voter of the ....
party; that I am a |
candidate for nomination (for election in the case of
|
committeeman and delegates and alternate delegates) to the |
office of ....
to be voted upon at the primary election to be |
held on (insert date); that I am
legally qualified (including
|
being the holder of any license that may be an eligibility |
requirement
for the office I seek the nomination for) to hold |
such office and that I
have filed (or I will file before the |
close of the petition filing period)
a statement of economic |
interests as required by the Illinois
Governmental Ethics Act |
and I hereby request that my name be printed
upon the official |
primary ballot for nomination for (or election to in
the case |
of committeemen and delegates and alternate delegates) such
|
office.
|
Signed ......................
|
Subscribed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me by ...., |
who is to me
personally known, on (insert date).
|
Signed ....................
|
(Official Character)
|
(Seal, if officer has one.)
|
The petitions, when filed, shall not be withdrawn or added |
to, and no
signatures shall be revoked except by revocation |
filed in writing with
the State Board of Elections, election |
authority or local election
official with whom the petition is |
required to be filed, and before the
filing of such petition. |
Whoever forges the name of a signer upon any
petition required |
by this Article is deemed guilty of a forgery and on
conviction |
thereof shall be punished accordingly.
|
|
A candidate for the offices listed in this Section must |
obtain the number
of signatures specified in this Section on |
his or her petition for nomination.
|
(a) Statewide office or delegate to a national nominating |
convention. If a
candidate seeks to run for statewide office or |
as a delegate or alternate
delegate to a national nominating |
convention elected from the State at-large,
then the |
candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least 5,000 |
but
not more than 10,000 signatures.
|
(b) Congressional office or congressional delegate to a |
national nominating
convention. If a candidate seeks to run for |
United States Congress or as a
congressional delegate or |
alternate congressional delegate to a national
nominating |
convention elected from a congressional district, then the
|
candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the |
number of
signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary |
electors of his or her party
in his or her congressional |
district. In the first primary election following a
|
redistricting of congressional districts, a candidate's |
petition for nomination
must contain at least 600 signatures of |
qualified primary electors of the
candidate's political party |
in his or her congressional district.
|
(c) County office. If a candidate seeks to run for any |
countywide office,
including but not limited to county board |
chairperson or county board
member, elected on an at-large |
basis, in a county other than Cook County,
then the candidate's |
petition for nomination must contain at least the number
of |
signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors of his or |
her party who
cast votes at the last preceding general election |
in his or her county. If a
candidate
seeks to run for county |
board member elected from a county board district, then
the |
candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the |
number of
signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary |
electors of his or her party
in the
county board district. In |
the first primary election following a redistricting
of county |
board districts or the initial establishment of county board
|
|
districts, a candidate's petition for nomination must contain |
at least the
number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the |
qualified electors of his or her
party
in the entire county who |
cast votes at the last preceding general election
divided by |
the
total number of county board districts comprising the |
county board; provided
that
in no event shall the number of |
signatures be less than 25.
|
(d) County office; Cook County only.
|
(1) If a candidate seeks to run for countywide office |
in Cook County,
then the candidate's petition for |
nomination must contain at least the number
of signatures |
equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors of his or her party |
who
cast votes at the last preceding general election in |
Cook County.
|
(2) If a candidate seeks to run for Cook County Board |
Commissioner,
then the candidate's petition for nomination |
must contain at least the number
of signatures equal to |
0.5% of
the qualified primary electors of his or her party |
in his or her county board
district. In the first primary |
election following a redistricting of Cook
County Board of |
Commissioners districts, a candidate's petition for
|
nomination must contain at least the number of signatures |
equal to 0.5% of
the qualified electors of his or her party |
in the entire county who cast votes
at the last
preceding |
general election divided by the total number of county |
board
districts comprising the county board; provided that |
in no event shall the
number of signatures be less than 25.
|
(3) If a candidate seeks to run for Cook County Board |
of Review
Commissioner, which is elected from a district |
pursuant to subsection (c)
of Section 5-5 of the Property |
Tax Code, then the candidate's petition for
nomination must |
contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of
|
the total number of registered voters in his or her board |
of
review district in the last general election at which a |
commissioner was
regularly scheduled to be elected from |
that board of review district. In no
event shall the number |
|
of signatures required be greater than the requisite
number |
for a candidate who seeks countywide office in Cook County
|
under subsection (d)(1) of this Section. In the first |
primary election
following a redistricting of Cook County |
Board of Review districts, a
candidate's petition for |
nomination must contain at least 4,000 signatures
or at |
least the number of signatures required for a countywide |
candidate in
Cook County, whichever is less,
of the |
qualified electors of his or her party in the district.
|
(e) Municipal or township office. If a candidate seeks to |
run for municipal
or township office, then the candidate's |
petition for nomination must contain
at least the number of |
signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary
electors of |
his or her party in the municipality or township. If a |
candidate
seeks to run for alderman of a municipality, then the |
candidate's petition for
nomination must contain at least the |
number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the
qualified primary |
electors of his or her party of the ward. In the first
primary |
election following redistricting of aldermanic wards or |
trustee
districts of a municipality or the initial |
establishment of wards or districts,
a candidate's petition for |
nomination must contain the number of signatures
equal to at |
least 0.5% of the total number of votes cast for the candidate |
of
that political party who received the highest number of |
votes in the entire
municipality at the last regular election |
at which an officer was regularly
scheduled to be elected from
|
the entire municipality, divided by the number of wards or |
districts. In no
event shall the number of signatures be less |
than 25.
|
(f) State central committeeperson. If a candidate seeks to |
run for State
central committeeperson, then the candidate's |
petition for nomination must
contain at least 100 signatures of |
the primary electors of his or her party of
his or
her |
congressional district.
|
(g) Sanitary district trustee. If a candidate seeks to run |
for trustee of a
sanitary district in which trustees are not |
|
elected from wards, then the
candidate's petition for |
nomination must contain at least the number of
signatures equal |
to 0.5% of the primary electors of his or her party from the
|
sanitary district. If a candidate seeks to run for trustee
of a |
sanitary district in which trustees are elected from wards, |
then the
candidate's petition for
nomination must contain at |
least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the
primary |
electors of his or her party in the ward of that sanitary |
district. In
the
first primary election following |
redistricting of sanitary districts elected
from wards, a |
candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the
|
signatures of 150 qualified primary electors of his or her ward |
of that
sanitary district.
|
(h) Judicial office. If a candidate seeks to run for |
judicial office in a district, then the candidate's petition |
for nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to |
0.4% of the number of votes cast in that district for the |
candidate for his or her political party for the office of |
Governor at the last general election at which a Governor was |
elected, but in no event less than 500 signatures. If a |
candidate seeks to run for judicial office in a
district,
|
circuit , or subcircuit, then the candidate's petition for |
nomination
must contain the number of signatures equal to 0.25% |
of the number of votes
cast for the judicial candidate of his |
or her political party who received the
highest number of votes
|
at the last general election at which a judicial
officer from |
the same district, circuit , or subcircuit was regularly |
scheduled
to be elected, but in no event less than 500 |
signatures.
|
(i) Precinct, ward, and township committeeperson. If a |
candidate seeks to
run for precinct committeeperson, then the |
candidate's petition for nomination
must contain at least 10 |
signatures of the primary electors of his or her
party for the |
precinct. If a candidate seeks to run for ward committeeperson,
|
then the candidate's petition for nomination must contain no |
less than the
number of signatures equal to 10% of the primary |
|
electors of his or her party
of the ward, but no more than 16% |
of those same electors; provided that the
maximum number of |
signatures may be 50 more than the minimum number, whichever
is |
greater. If a candidate seeks to run for township |
committeeperson, then the
candidate's petition for nomination |
must contain no less than the number of
signatures equal to 5% |
of the primary electors of his or her party of the
township, |
but no more than 8% of those same electors;
provided that the |
maximum number of signatures may be 50 more than the
minimum |
number, whichever is greater.
|
(j) State's attorney or regional superintendent of schools |
for multiple
counties. If
a candidate seeks to run for State's |
attorney or regional Superintendent of
Schools who serves more |
than one county, then the candidate's petition for
nomination |
must contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of |
the
primary electors of his or her party in the territory |
comprising the counties.
|
(k) Any other office. If a candidate seeks any other |
office, then the
candidate's petition for nomination must |
contain at least the number of
signatures equal to 0.5% of the |
registered voters of the political subdivision,
district, or |
division for which the nomination is made or 25 signatures,
|
whichever is greater.
|
For purposes of this Section the number of primary electors |
shall be
determined by taking the total vote cast, in the |
applicable district, for the
candidate for that political party |
who received the highest number of votes,
statewide, at the |
last general election in the State at which electors for
|
President of the United States were elected. For political |
subdivisions, the
number of primary electors shall be |
determined by taking the total vote
cast for the candidate for |
that political party who received the highest number
of votes |
in the political subdivision at the last regular election at |
which an
officer was regularly scheduled to be elected from |
that subdivision. For wards
or districts of political |
subdivisions, the number of primary electors shall be
|
|
determined by taking the total vote cast for the candidate for |
that political
party who received the highest number of votes |
in the ward or district at the
last regular election at which |
an officer was regularly scheduled to be elected
from that ward |
or district.
|
A "qualified primary elector" of a party may not
sign |
petitions for or be a candidate in the primary of more than
one |
party.
|
The changes made to this Section of this amendatory Act of |
the 93rd General
Assembly are declarative of existing law, |
except for item (3) of subsection
(d).
|
Petitions of candidates for nomination for offices herein |
specified,
to be filed with the same officer, may contain the |
names of 2 or more
candidates of the same political party for |
the same or different
offices.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-129, eff. 7-20-01; |
93-574, eff.
8-21-03 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-15) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-15)
|
Sec. 7-15. At least 60 days prior to each general and |
consolidated primary,
the election authority shall provide |
public notice, calculated to reach
elderly and handicapped |
voters, of the availability of registration and
voting aids |
under the Federal Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and
|
Handicapped Act, of the availability of assistance in marking |
the ballot,
and procedures for voting by absentee ballot , and |
procedures for early
voting
by personal appearance .
At least 20 |
days before the general primary the county
clerk of each |
county, and not more than 30 nor less than 10 days before
the |
consolidated primary the election authority, shall prepare in |
the
manner provided in this Act, a notice of such primary which |
notice shall
state the time and place of holding the primary, |
the hours during which
the polls will be open, the offices for |
which candidates will be
nominated at such primary and the |
political parties entitled to
participate therein, |
notwithstanding that no candidate of any such
political party |
|
may be entitled to have his name printed on the primary
ballot. |
Such notice shall also include the list of addresses of
|
precinct polling places for the consolidated primary unless |
such list is
separately published by the election authority not |
less than 10 days
before the consolidated primary.
|
In counties, municipalities, or towns having fewer than |
500,000
inhabitants notice of the general primary shall be |
published once in two
or more newspapers published in the |
county, municipality or town, as the
case may be, or if there |
is no such newspaper, then in any two or more
newspapers |
published in the county and having a general circulation
|
throughout the community.
|
In counties, municipalities, or towns having 500,000 or |
more
inhabitants notice of the general primary shall be |
published at least 15
days prior to the primary by the same |
authorities and in the same manner
as notice of election for |
general elections are required to be published
in counties, |
municipalities or towns of 500,000 or more inhabitants
under |
this Act.
|
Notice of the consolidated primary shall be published once |
in one or
more newspapers published in each political |
subdivision having such
primary, 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
primary are |
situated.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-808.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-34) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-34)
|
Sec. 7-34. Pollwatchers in a primary election shall be |
authorized in
the following manner:
|
(1) Each established political party shall be entitled to |
appoint
one pollwatcher per precinct. Such pollwatchers must be |
affiliated with
the political party for which they are |
pollwatching and must be a registered
voter in Illinois.
|
|
(2) Each candidate shall be entitled to appoint two |
pollwatchers per
precinct. For Federal, State, and county , |
township, and municipal primary elections, the
pollwatchers |
must be registered to vote in Illinois.
|
(3) Each organization of citizens within the county or |
political
subdivision, which has among its purposes or |
interests the investigation
or prosecution of election frauds, |
and which shall have registered its
name and address and the |
names and addresses of its principal officers
with the proper |
election authority at least 40 days before the primary
|
election, shall be entitled to appoint one pollwatcher per |
precinct.
For all primary elections, the pollwatcher must be |
registered to vote in
Illinois.
|
(4) Each organized group of proponents or opponents of a |
ballot
proposition, which shall have registered the name and |
address of its
organization or committee and the name and |
address of its chairman with
the proper election authority at |
least 40 days before the primary
election, shall be entitled to |
appoint one pollwatcher per precinct. The
pollwatcher must be |
registered to vote in Illinois.
|
(5) In any primary election held to nominate candidates for |
the offices
of a municipality of less than 3,000,000 population |
that is situated in
2 or more counties, a pollwatcher who is a |
resident of a county in which
any part of the municipality is
|
situated shall be eligible to serve as a pollwatcher in any |
polling place
located within such municipality, provided that |
such pollwatcher otherwise
complies with the respective |
requirements of subsections (1) through (4)
of this Section and |
is a registered voter whose residence is within
Illinois.
|
All pollwatchers shall be required to have proper |
credentials. Such
credentials shall be printed in sufficient |
quantities, shall be issued
by and under the facsimile |
signature(s) of the election authority and
shall be available |
for distribution at least 2 weeks prior to the
election. Such |
credentials shall be authorized by the real or facsimile
|
signature of the State or local party official or the candidate |
|
or the
presiding officer of the civic organization or the |
chairman of the
proponent or opponent group, as the case may |
be.
|
Pollwatcher credentials shall be in substantially the |
following form:
|
POLLWATCHER CREDENTIALS
|
TO THE JUDGES OF ELECTION:
|
In accordance with the provisions of the Election Code,
the |
undersigned hereby appoints ........... (name of pollwatcher)
|
at .......... (address) in the county of ...........,
|
.......... (township or municipality) of ........... (name), |
State of Illinois
and who is duly registered to vote from this |
address,
to act as a pollwatcher in the ........... precinct of |
the
.......... ward (if applicable) of the ...........
|
(township or municipality) of ........... at the
........... |
election to be held on (insert date).
|
........................ (Signature of Appointing Authority)
|
........................ TITLE (party official, candidate,
|
civic organization president,
|
proponent or opponent group chairman)
|
Under penalties provided by law pursuant to Section 29-10 |
of the
Election Code, the undersigned pollwatcher certifies |
that he or she resides
at .............. (address) in the |
county of ........., ......... (township
or municipality) of |
.......... (name), State of Illinois, and is duly
registered to |
vote in Illinois.
|
........................... ..........................
|
(Precinct and/or Ward in (Signature of Pollwatcher)
|
Which Pollwatcher Resides)
|
Pollwatchers must present their credentials to the Judges |
of Election
upon entering the polling place. Pollwatcher |
credentials properly
executed and signed shall be proof of the |
qualifications of the
pollwatcher authorized thereby. Such |
credentials are retained by the
Judges and returned to the |
|
Election Authority at the end of the day of election
with the |
other election materials. Once a pollwatcher has surrendered a
|
valid credential, he may leave and reenter the polling place |
provided
that such continuing action does not disrupt the |
conduct of the election.
Pollwatchers may be substituted during |
the course of the day, but established
political parties, |
candidates, qualified civic organizations and proponents
and |
opponents of a ballot proposition can have only as many |
pollwatchers
at any given time as are authorized in this |
Article. A substitute must
present his signed credential to the |
judges of election upon entering the
polling place. Election |
authorities must provide a sufficient number of
credentials to |
allow for substitution of pollwatchers.
After the polls have |
closed, pollwatchers shall be allowed to
remain until the |
canvass of votes is completed; but may leave and
reenter only |
in cases of necessity, provided that such action is not so
|
continuous as to disrupt the canvass of votes.
|
Candidates seeking office in a district or municipality |
encompassing 2
or more counties shall be admitted to any and |
all polling places throughout
such district or municipality |
without regard to the counties in which such
candidates are |
registered to vote. Actions of such candidates shall be
|
governed in each polling place by the same privileges and |
limitations that
apply to pollwatchers as provided in this |
Section. Any such candidate who
engages in an activity in a |
polling place which could reasonably be
construed by a majority |
of the judges of election as campaign activity
shall be removed |
forthwith from such polling place.
|
Candidates seeking office in a district or municipality |
encompassing 2 or
more counties who desire to be admitted to |
polling places on election day
in such district or municipality |
shall be required to have proper
credentials. Such credentials |
shall be printed in sufficient quantities,
shall be issued by |
and under the facsimile signature of the
election authority of |
the election jurisdiction where the polling place in
which the |
candidate seeks admittance is located, and shall be available |
|
for
distribution at least 2 weeks prior to the election. Such |
credentials shall
be signed by the candidate.
|
Candidate credentials shall be in substantially the |
following form:
|
CANDIDATE CREDENTIALS
|
TO THE JUDGES OF ELECTION:
|
In accordance with the provisions of the Election Code, I |
...... (name of
candidate) hereby certify that I am a candidate |
for ....... (name of
office) and seek admittance to ....... |
precinct of the ....... ward (if
applicable) of the ....... |
(township or municipality) of ....... at the
....... election |
to be held on (insert date).
|
......................... .......................
|
(Signature of Candidate) OFFICE FOR WHICH
|
CANDIDATE SEEKS
|
NOMINATION OR
|
ELECTION
|
Pollwatchers shall be permitted to observe all proceedings |
and view all reasonably requested records relating
to the |
conduct of the election , provided the secrecy of the ballot is |
not impinged, and to station themselves in a position
in the |
voting room as will enable them to observe the judges making |
the
signature comparison between the voter application and the |
voter
registration record card; provided, however, that such |
pollwatchers
shall not be permitted to station themselves in |
such close proximity to
the judges of election so as to |
interfere with the orderly conduct of
the election and shall |
not, in any event, be permitted to handle
election materials. |
Pollwatchers may challenge for cause the voting
qualifications |
of a person offering to vote and may call to the
attention of |
the judges of election any incorrect procedure or apparent
|
violations of this Code.
|
If a majority of the judges of election determine that the |
polling
place has become too overcrowded with pollwatchers so |
|
as to interfere
with the orderly conduct of the election, the |
judges shall, by lot,
limit such pollwatchers to a reasonable |
number, except that each
candidate and each established or new |
political party shall be permitted
to have at least one |
pollwatcher present.
|
Representatives of an election authority, with regard to an |
election
under its jurisdiction, the State Board of Elections, |
and law
enforcement agencies, including but not limited to a |
United States
Attorney, a State's attorney, the Attorney |
General, and a State, county,
or local police department, in |
the performance of their official
election duties, shall be |
permitted at all times to enter and remain in
the polling |
place. Upon entering the polling place, such
representatives |
shall display their official credentials or other
|
identification to the judges of election.
|
Uniformed police officers assigned to polling place duty |
shall follow
all lawful instructions of the judges of election.
|
The provisions of this Section shall also apply to |
supervised casting of
absentee ballots as provided in Section |
19-12.2 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-56) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-56)
|
Sec. 7-56. As soon as complete returns are delivered to the |
proper election
authority, the returns shall be canvassed for |
all primary elections as follows:
|
1. In the case of the nomination of candidates for city |
offices, by
the mayor, the city attorney and the city clerk.
|
2. In the case of nomination of candidates for village
|
offices, by the president of the board of trustees,
one member |
of the board of trustees, and the village clerk.
|
3. In the case of nomination of candidates for township |
offices, by the
town supervisor, the town assessor and the town |
clerk; in the case of
nomination of candidates for incorporated |
town offices, by the corporate
authorities of the incorporated |
town.
|
|
3.5. For multi-township assessment districts, by the |
chairman, clerk,
and assessor of the multi-township assessment |
district.
|
4. For road district offices, by the highway commissioner |
and the road
district clerk.
|
5. The officers who are charged by law with the duty of |
canvassing
returns of general elections made to the county |
clerk, shall also open
and canvass the returns of a primary |
made to such county clerk. Upon the
completion of the canvass |
of the returns by the county canvassing board,
said canvassing |
board shall make a tabulated statement of the returns
for each |
political party separately, stating in appropriate columns and
|
under proper headings, the total number of votes cast in said |
county for
each candidate for nomination by said party, |
including candidates for
President of the United States and for |
State central committeemen, and
for delegates and alternate |
delegates to National nominating
conventions, and for precinct |
committeemen, township committeemen, and
for ward |
committeemen. Within
two (2) days after the completion of said
|
canvass by said canvassing board the county clerk shall
mail to |
the
State Board of Elections a certified copy of such tabulated |
statement of
returns. Provided, however, that the number of |
votes cast for the
nomination for offices, the certificates of |
election for which offices,
under this Act or any other laws |
are issued by the county clerk shall
not be included in such |
certified copy of said tabulated statement of
returns, nor |
shall the returns on the election of precinct, township or
ward |
committeemen be so certified to the State Board of Elections. |
The
said officers shall also determine and set down as to each |
precinct the
number of ballots voted by the primary electors of |
each party at the primary.
|
6. In the case of the nomination of candidates for offices,
|
including President of the United States and the State central
|
committeemen, and delegates and alternate delegates to |
National
nominating conventions, certified tabulated statement |
of returns for
which are filed with the State Board of |
|
Elections, said returns shall be
canvassed by the board. And, |
provided, further, that within 5 days after
said returns shall |
be canvassed by the said Board, the Board shall cause
to be |
published in one daily newspaper of general circulation at the
|
seat of the State government in Springfield a certified |
statement of the
returns filed in its office, showing the total |
vote cast in the State
for each candidate of each political |
party for President of the United
States, and showing the total |
vote for each candidate of each political
party for President |
of the United States, cast in each of the several
congressional |
districts in the State.
|
7. Where in cities or villages which have a board of |
election commissioners,
the returns of a primary are made to |
such board of election commissioners, said
return shall be |
canvassed by such board, and, excepting in the case of the
|
nomination for any municipal office, tabulated statements of |
the returns of
such primary shall be made to the county clerk.
|
8. Within 48 hours
of the delivery of complete returns of |
the consolidated
primary to the election authority, the |
election authority shall deliver
an original certificate of |
results to each local election official, with
respect to whose |
political subdivisions nominations were made at such primary,
|
for each precinct in his jurisdiction in which such nominations |
were on
the ballot. Such original certificate of results need |
not include any offices
or nominations for any other political |
subdivisions. The local election
official shall immediately |
transmit the certificates to the canvassing board
for his |
political subdivisions, which shall open and canvass the |
returns,
make a tabulated statement of the returns for each |
political party separately,
and as nearly as possible, follow |
the procedures required for the county
canvassing board. Such |
canvass of votes shall be conducted within 21
7 days
after the |
close of the consolidated primary.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1052.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-60) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-60)
|
|
Sec. 7-60. Not less than 67 days before the date of the |
general
election, the State Board of Elections shall certify to |
the county clerks
the names of each of the candidates who have |
been nominated as shown by the
proclamation of the State Board |
of Elections as a canvassing board or who
have been nominated |
to fill a vacancy in nomination and direct the election
|
authority to place upon the official ballot for the general |
election the
names of such candidates in the same manner and in |
the same order as shown
upon the certification, except as |
otherwise provided in this Section.
|
Not less than 61 days before the date of the general |
election, each
county clerk shall certify the names of each of |
the candidates for county
offices who have been nominated as |
shown by the proclamation of the county
canvassing board or who |
have been nominated to fill a vacancy in nomination
and declare |
that the names of such candidates for the respective offices
|
shall be placed upon the official ballot for the general |
election in the
same manner and in the same order as shown upon |
the certification, except
as otherwise provided by this |
Section. Each county clerk shall place a
copy of the |
certification on file in his or her office and at the same
time |
issue to the State Board of Elections a copy of such |
certification.
In addition, each county clerk in whose county |
there is a board of election
commissioners shall, not less than |
61 days before the date of the general
election, issue to such |
board a copy of the certification that has been
filed in the |
county clerk's office, together with a copy of the
|
certification that has been issued to the clerk by the State |
Board of
Elections, with directions to the board of election |
commissioners to place
upon the official ballot for the general |
election in that election
jurisdiction the names of all |
candidates that are listed on such
certifications, in the same |
manner and in the same order as shown upon such
certifications, |
except as otherwise provided in this Section.
|
Whenever there are two or more persons nominated by the |
same political
party for multiple offices for any board, the |
|
name of the candidate of such
party receiving the highest |
number of votes in the primary election as a
candidate for such |
office, as shown by the official election returns of the
|
primary, shall be certified first under the name of such |
offices, and the
names of the remaining candidates of such |
party for such offices shall
follow in the order of the number |
of votes received by them respectively at
the primary election |
as shown by the official election results.
|
No person who is shown by the canvassing board's |
proclamation to have
been nominated or elected at the primary |
as a write-in candidate shall have his or her
name certified |
unless such person shall have filed with the certifying
office |
or board within 10 days after the canvassing board's |
proclamation
a statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10 ,
|
and a statement pursuant
to Section 7-10.1 , and a receipt for |
the filing of a statement of economic interests in relation to |
the unit of government to which he or she has been elected or |
nominated .
|
Each county clerk and board of election commissioners shall |
determine
by a fair and impartial method of random selection |
the order of placement
of established political party |
candidates for the general election ballot.
Such determination |
shall be made within 30 days following the canvass and |
proclamation
of the results of the general primary
in the |
office of the county clerk or board of election commissioners |
and
shall be open to the public. Seven days written notice of |
the time and place
of conducting such random selection shall be |
given, by each such election
authority, to the County Chairman |
of each established political party, and
to each organization |
of citizens within the election jurisdiction which
was |
entitled, under this Article, at the next preceding election, |
to have
pollwatchers present on the day of election. Each |
election authority shall
post in a conspicuous, open and public |
place, at the entrance of the election
authority office, notice |
of the time and place of such lottery. However,
a board of |
election commissioners may elect to place established |
|
political
party candidates on the general election ballot in |
the same order determined
by the county clerk of the county in |
which the city under the jurisdiction
of such board is located.
|
Each certification shall indicate, where applicable, the |
following:
|
(1) The political party affiliation of the candidates for |
the respective offices;
|
(2) If there is to be more than one candidate elected to an |
office from
the State, political subdivision or district;
|
(3) If the voter has the right to vote for more than one |
candidate for an office;
|
(4) The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled for |
less than a
full term or if the offices to be filled in a |
political subdivision are for
different terms.
|
The State Board of Elections or the county clerk, as the |
case may be,
shall issue an amended certification whenever it |
is discovered that the
original certification is in error.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-867; 86-875; 86-1028.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-61) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-61)
|
Sec. 7-61. Whenever a special election is necessary the |
provisions of
this Article are applicable to the nomination of |
candidates to be voted
for at such special election.
|
In cases where a primary election is required the officer |
or board or
commission whose duty it is under the provisions of |
this Act relating to
general elections to call an election, |
shall fix a date for the primary
for the nomination of |
candidates to be voted for at such special
election. Notice of |
such primary shall be given at least 15 days prior
to the |
maximum time provided for the filing of petitions for such a
|
primary as provided in Section 7-12.
|
Any vacancy in nomination under the provisions of this |
Article 7
occurring on or after the primary and prior to |
certification of
candidates by the certifying board or officer, |
must be filled prior to the
date of certification. Any vacancy |
in nomination occurring after certification
but prior to 15 |
|
days before the general election shall be filled within 8 days
|
after the event creating the vacancy. The resolution filling |
the vacancy shall
be sent by U. S. mail or personal delivery to |
the certifying officer or board
within 3 days of the action by |
which the vacancy was filled; provided, if such
resolution is |
sent by mail and the U. S. postmark on the envelope containing
|
such resolution is dated prior to the expiration of such 3 day |
limit, the
resolution shall be deemed filed within such 3 day |
limit. Failure to so
transmit the resolution within the time |
specified in this Section shall
authorize the certifying |
officer or board to certify the original candidate.
Vacancies |
shall be filled by the officers of a local municipal or |
township
political party as specified in subsection (h) of |
Section 7-8, other than a
statewide political party, that is |
established only within a municipality or
township and the |
managing committee (or legislative committee in case of a
|
candidate for State Senator or representative committee in the |
case of a
candidate for State Representative in the General |
Assembly or State central committee in the case of a candidate |
for statewide office, including but not limited to the office |
of United States Senator ) of the respective
political party for |
the territorial area in which such vacancy occurs.
|
The resolution to fill a vacancy in nomination shall be |
duly
acknowledged before an officer qualified to take |
acknowledgements of deeds
and shall include, upon its face, the |
following information:
|
(a) the name of the original nominee and the office |
vacated;
|
(b) the date on which the vacancy occurred;
|
(c) the name and address of the nominee selected to fill |
the vacancy and
the date of selection.
|
The resolution to fill a vacancy in nomination shall be |
accompanied by a
Statement of Candidacy, as prescribed in |
Section 7-10, completed by the
selected nominee and a receipt |
indicating that such nominee has filed a
statement of economic |
interests as required by the Illinois Governmental
Ethics Act.
|
|
The provisions of Section 10-8 through 10-10.1 relating to |
objections to
certificates of nomination and nomination |
papers, hearings on objections,
and judicial review, shall |
apply to and govern objections to resolutions
for filling a |
vacancy in nomination.
|
Any vacancy in nomination occurring 15 days or less before |
the consolidated
election or the general election shall not be |
filled. In this event, the
certification of the original |
candidate shall stand and his name shall
appear on the official |
ballot to be voted at the general election.
|
A vacancy in nomination occurs when a candidate who has |
been
nominated under the provisions of this Article 7 dies |
before the
election (whether death occurs prior to, on or after |
the day of the
primary), or declines the nomination; provided |
that nominations may
become vacant for other reasons.
|
If the name of no established political party candidate was |
printed on
the consolidated primary ballot for a particular |
office
and if no person was nominated as a write-in candidate |
for such office,
a vacancy in nomination shall be created which |
may be filled in accordance
with the requirements of this |
Section. If the name of no established political
party |
candidate was printed on the general primary ballot for a |
particular
office and if no person was nominated as a write-in |
candidate for such office,
a vacancy in nomination shall be |
created, but no candidate of the party for the
office shall be |
listed on the ballot at the general election unless such
|
vacancy is filled in accordance with the requirements of this |
Section within 60
days after the date of the general primary.
|
A candidate for whom a nomination paper has been filed as a |
partisan
candidate at a primary election, and who is defeated |
for his or her
nomination at such primary election, is |
ineligible to be listed on the
ballot at that general or |
consolidated election as a candidate of another
political |
party.
|
A candidate seeking election to an office for which |
candidates of
political parties are nominated by caucus who is |
|
a participant in the
caucus and who is defeated for his or her |
nomination at such caucus, is
ineligible to be listed on the |
ballot at that general or consolidated
election as a candidate |
of another political party.
|
In the proceedings to nominate a candidate to fill a |
vacancy or to
fill a vacancy in the nomination, each precinct, |
township, ward, county
or congressional district, as the case |
may be, shall through its
representative on such central or |
managing committee, be entitled to one
vote for each ballot |
voted in such precinct, township, ward, county or
congressional |
district, as the case may be, by the primary electors of
its |
party at the primary election immediately preceding the meeting |
at
which such vacancy is to be filled.
|
For purposes of this Section, the words "certify" and |
"certification"
shall refer to the act of officially declaring |
the names of candidates
entitled to be printed upon the |
official ballot at an election and
directing election |
authorities to place the names of such candidates upon
the |
official ballot. "Certifying officers or board" shall refer to |
the
local election official, election authority or the State |
Board of
Elections, as the case may be, with whom nomination |
papers, including
certificates of nomination and resolutions |
to fill vacancies in nomination,
are filed and whose duty it is |
to "certify" candidates.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-867; 86-1348; 87-1052.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/7-100 new)
|
Sec. 7-100. Definition of a vote.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the |
purpose of this
Article, a person casts a valid vote on a punch |
card ballot when:
|
(1) A chad on the card has at least one corner detached |
from the card;
|
(2) The fibers of paper on at least one edge of the |
chad are broken in a
way that permits unimpeded light to be |
seen through the card; or
|
|
(3) An indentation on the chad from the stylus or other |
object is present
and indicates a clearly ascertainable |
intent of the voter to vote based on the
totality of the |
circumstances, including but not limited to any pattern or
|
frequency of indentations on other ballot positions from |
the same ballot
card.
|
(b) Write-in votes shall be counted in a manner consistent |
with the existing
provisions of this Code.
|
(c) For purposes of this Section, a "chad" is that portion |
of a ballot card
that a voter punches or perforates with a |
stylus or other designated marking
device to manifest his or |
her vote for a particular ballot position on a ballot
card as |
defined in subsection (a).
|
(d) Prior to the original counting of any punch card |
ballots, an election judge may not alter a punch card ballot in |
any manner, including, but not limited to, the removal or |
manipulation of chads.
|
(10 ILCS 5/8-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 8-8)
|
Sec. 8-8. Form of petition for nomination. The name of no |
candidate for nomination shall be printed
upon the primary |
ballot unless a petition for nomination shall have been
filed |
in his behalf as provided for in this Section. Each such |
petition
shall include as a part thereof the oath required by |
Section 7-10.1 of
this Act and a statement of candidacy by the |
candidate filing or in
whose behalf the petition is filed. This |
statement shall set out the
address of such candidate, the |
office for which he is a candidate, shall
state that the |
candidate is a qualified primary voter of the party to
which |
the petition relates, is qualified for the office specified and
|
has filed a statement of economic interests as required by the |
Illinois
Governmental Ethics Act, shall request that the |
candidate's name be
placed upon the official ballot and shall |
be subscribed and sworn by
such candidate before some officer |
authorized to take acknowledgment of
deeds in this State and |
may be in substantially the following form:
|
|
State of Illinois)
|
) ss.
|
County ..........)
|
I, ...., being first duly sworn, say that I reside at .... |
street in
the city (or village of) .... in the county of .... |
State of Illinois;
that I am a qualified voter therein and am a |
qualified primary voter of
.... party; that I am a candidate |
for nomination to the office of ....
to be voted upon at the |
primary election to be held on (insert date);
that I am legally |
qualified to hold such office and
that I have filed a statement |
of economic interests as required by the
Illinois Governmental |
Ethics Act and I hereby request that my name be
printed upon |
the official primary ballot for nomination for such office.
|
Signed ....................
|
Subscribed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me by ...., |
who is to me
personally known, on (insert date).
|
Signed .... (Official Character)
|
(Seal if officer has one.)
|
The receipt issued by the Secretary of State indicating |
that the candidate has filed the statement of economic |
interests required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act must |
be filed with the petitions for nomination as provided in |
subsection (8) of Section 7-12 of this Code.
|
All petitions for nomination for the office of State |
Senator shall be signed
by 1% or 1,000
600 , whichever is |
greater, of the qualified primary electors of
the candidate's |
party in his legislative district, except that for the first
|
primary following a redistricting of legislative districts, |
such petitions
shall be signed by at least 1,000
600 qualified |
primary electors of the candidate's
party in his legislative |
district.
|
All petitions for nomination for the office of |
Representative in the General
Assembly shall be signed by at |
least 1% or 500
300 , whichever is greater, of
the qualified |
primary electors of the candidate's party in his or her
|
representative district, except that for the first primary |
|
following
a redistricting of representative districts such |
petitions shall be signed
by at least 500
300 qualified primary |
electors of the candidate's party in
his or her representative |
district.
|
Opposite the signature of each qualified primary elector |
who signs a
petition for nomination for the office of State |
Representative or State
Senator such elector's residence |
address shall be written or printed. The
residence address |
required to be written or printed opposite each qualified
|
primary elector's name shall include the street address or |
rural route
number of the signer, as the case may be, as well |
as the signer's county
and city, village or town.
|
For the purposes of this Section, the number of primary |
electors shall
be determined by taking the total vote cast, in |
the applicable district,
for the candidate for such political |
party who received the highest number
of votes, state-wide, at |
the last general election in the State at which
electors for |
President of the United States were elected.
|
A "qualified primary elector" of a party may not sign |
petitions for or be a
candidate in the primary of more than one |
party.
|
In the affidavit at the bottom of each sheet, the petition |
circulator,
who shall be a person 18 years of age or older who |
is a citizen of the United
States, shall state his or her |
street address or rural route
number, as the
case may be, as |
well as his or her county, city, village or
town, and state; |
and
shall certify that the signatures on that sheet of the |
petition were signed in
his or her presence; and shall certify |
that the signatures are genuine; and
shall certify
that to the |
best of his or her knowledge and belief the persons so signing |
were
at the time of signing the petition qualified primary |
voters for which the
nomination is sought.
|
In the affidavit at the bottom of each petition sheet, the |
petition
circulator shall either (1) indicate the dates on |
which he or she
circulated that sheet, or (2) indicate the |
first and last dates on which
the sheet was circulated, or (3) |
|
certify that none of the signatures on the
sheet were signed |
more than 90 days preceding the last day for the filing
of the |
petition. No petition sheet shall be circulated more than 90 |
days
preceding the last day provided in Section 8-9 for the |
filing of such petition.
|
All petition sheets which are filed with the State Board of |
Elections shall
be the original sheets which have been signed |
by the voters and by the
circulator, and not photocopies or |
duplicates of such sheets.
|
The person circulating the petition, or the candidate on |
whose behalf
the petition is circulated, may strike any |
signature from the petition,
provided that:
|
(1) the person striking the signature shall initial the |
petition at
the place where the signature is struck; and
|
(2) the person striking the signature shall sign a |
certification
listing the page number and line number of |
each signature struck from
the petition. Such |
certification shall be filed as a part of the petition.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-57, eff. 6-30-99; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; |
92-129, eff. 7-20-01.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-1.4) (from Ch. 46, par. 9-1.4)
|
Sec. 9-1.4. "Contribution" means-
|
(1) a gift, subscription, donation, dues, loan, advance, or |
deposit
of money or anything of value, knowingly received in |
connection with the
nomination for election, or election, of |
any person to public office, in
connection with the election of |
any person as ward or township committeeman in
counties of |
3,000,000 or more population, or
in connection with any |
question of public policy;
|
(1.5) a gift, subscription, donation, dues, loan, advance, |
deposit of money, or anything of value that constitutes an |
electioneering communication regardless of whether the |
communication is made in concert or cooperation with or at the |
request, suggestion, or knowledge of a candidate, a candidate's |
authorized local political committee, a State political |
|
committee, a political committee in support of or opposition to |
a question of public policy, or any of their agents;
|
(2) the purchase of tickets for fund-raising events, |
including but
not limited to dinners, luncheons, cocktail |
parties, and rallies made in
connection with the nomination for |
election, or election, of any person
to public office, in |
connection with the election of any person as ward or
township |
committeeman in counties of 3,000,000 or more population, or in
|
connection with any question of public policy;
|
(3) a transfer of funds between political committees; and
|
(4) the services of an employee donated by an employer, in |
which
case the contribution shall be listed in the name of the |
employer,
except that any individual services provided |
voluntarily and without
promise or expectation of compensation |
from any source shall not be deemed
a contribution; but
|
(5) does not include--
|
(a) the use of real or personal property and the cost |
of invitations,
food,
and beverages, voluntarily provided |
by an individual in rendering voluntary
personal services |
on the individual's residential premises for
|
candidate-related
activities; provided the value of the |
service provided does not exceed an
aggregate of $150 in a |
reporting period;
|
(b) the sale of any food or beverage by a vendor for |
use in a candidate's
campaign at a charge less than the |
normal comparable charge, if such charge
for use in a |
candidate's campaign is at least equal to the cost of such
|
food or beverage to the vendor.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-405, eff. 11-8-95.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-1.14)
|
Sec. 9-1.14. Electioneering communication defined.
|
(a) "Electioneering communication" means, for the purposes |
of this Article,
any form of communication, in whatever medium, |
including but not limited to a newspaper, radio, television, or |
Internet communication, that (1) refers to a
clearly
identified |
|
candidate or candidates who will appear on the ballot, refers |
to a clearly identified political party, or refers to a clearly |
identified question of public policy that will appear on the |
ballot and (2) is made within (i) 60
days before a general |
election
or consolidated election or (ii) 30 days before a |
primary
election.
|
(b) "Electioneering communication" does not include:
|
(1) A communication, other than an advertisement, |
appearing in a news
story,
commentary, or editorial
|
distributed through the facilities of any legitimate news |
organization, unless
the
facilities are owned or |
controlled by any political party, political committee,
or |
candidate.
|
(2) A communication made solely to promote a candidate |
debate or forum
that is made by or on behalf of the person |
sponsoring the debate or forum.
|
(3) A communication made as part of a non-partisan |
activity designed to
encourage individuals to vote or to |
register to vote.
|
(4) A communication by an organization operating and |
remaining in good
standing under Section 501(c)(3) of the |
Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
|
(5) A communication exclusively between a labor |
organization, as defined under federal or State law, and |
its members.
|
(6) A communication exclusively between an |
organization formed under Section 501(c)(6) of the |
Internal Revenue Code and its members.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; |
93-847, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(10 ILCS 5/9-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 9-3) |
Sec. 9-3. Every state political committee and every local
|
political committee shall file with the State Board of |
Elections, and
every local political committee shall file with |
the county clerk, 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 5 |
business days. A
political committee that acts as both a state |
political
committee and a local political committee shall file |
a copy of each
statement of organization with the State Board |
of Elections and the
county clerk.
The Board shall impose a |
civil penalty of $25 per business day upon political
committees |
for failing to file or late filing of a statement of |
organization,
except that for committees formed to support |
candidates for statewide office,
the civil penalty shall be $50 |
per business day. 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 affected |
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.
|
The statement of organization shall include -
|
(a) the name
and address of the political committee (the |
name of the
political committee must include the name of any |
sponsoring entity);
|
(b) the scope, area of activity, party affiliation, |
candidate
affiliation and his county of residence, and purposes |
of the political
committee;
|
(c) the name, address, and position of each custodian of |
the
committee's books and accounts;
|
(d) 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;
|
(e) (Blank);
|
(f) a statement of what specific disposition of residual |
fund will
be made in the event of the dissolution or
|
termination of the committee;
|
(g) a listing of all banks or other financial institutions, |
safety
deposit boxes, and any other repositories or custodians |
of funds used by
the committee;
|
(h) 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,
political committee, 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 ; except that a |
political committee is not a "sponsoring entity" for purposes |
of this Section if it is a political committee organized by (i) |
an established political party as defined in Section 10-2, (ii) |
a partisan caucus of either house of the General Assembly, or |
(iii) the Speaker or Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives or the President or Minority Leader of the |
Senate, in his or her capacity as a legislative leader of the |
House of Representatives or Senate and not as a candidate for |
Representative or Senator .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; 93-615, eff. 11-19-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-7.5)
|
Sec. 9-7.5. Nonprofit organization registration and |
disclosure.
|
(a) Each nonprofit organization, except for a labor union ,
|
(i) registered
under the Lobbyist
Registration Act or for which |
lobbying is undertaken by persons registered
under that Act, |
(ii) that has not established a political committee, and (iii)
|
|
that accepts contributions , makes contributions, or makes |
expenditures during any 12-month period in
an aggregate amount |
exceeding $5,000 (I) on behalf of or in opposition to
public |
officials, candidates for public office, or a question of |
public policy or (II) for electioneering communications
and |
(II) for the purpose of influencing legislative, executive, or
|
administrative action as defined in the Lobbyist Registration |
Act shall
register with the State Board of Elections. The Board |
by rule shall prescribe
the registration procedure and form. |
The registration form shall require the
following information:
|
(1) The registrant's name, address, and purpose.
|
(2) The name, address, and position of each custodian |
of the registrant's
financial books, accounts, and |
records.
|
(3) The name, address, and position of each of the |
registrant's principal
officers.
|
(b) Each nonprofit organization required to register under |
subsection (a)
shall file contribution and expenditure reports |
with the Board. The Board by
rule shall prescribe the form, |
which shall require the following information:
|
(1) The organization's name, address, and purpose.
|
(2) The amount of funds on hand at the beginning of the |
reporting period.
|
(3) The full name and address of each person who has |
made one or more
contributions to or for the organization |
within the reporting period in an
aggregate amount or value |
in excess of $150, together with the amount and date
of the |
contributions, and if a contributor is an individual who |
contributed
more than $500, the occupation and employer of |
the contributor or, if the
occupation and employer of the |
contributor are unknown, a statement that the
organization |
has made a good faith effort to ascertain this information.
|
(4) The total sum of individual contributions made to |
or for the
organization during the reporting period and not |
reported in item (3).
|
(5) The name and address of each organization and |
|
political committee from
which the reporting organization |
received, or to which that organization made,
any transfer |
of funds in an aggregate amount or value in excess of $150,
|
together with the amounts and dates of the transfers.
|
(6) The total sum of transfers made to or from the |
organization during the
reporting period and not reported |
in item (5).
|
(7) Each loan to or from any person within the |
reporting period by or to
the organization in an aggregate |
amount or value in excess of $150, together
with the full |
names and mailing addresses of the lender and endorsers, if |
any,
and the date and amount of the loans, and if a lender |
or endorser is an
individual who loaned or endorsed a loan |
of more than $500, the occupation and
employer of the |
individual or, if the occupation and employer of the |
individual
are unknown, a statement that the organization |
has made a good faith effort to
ascertain this information.
|
(8) The total amount of proceeds received by the |
organization from (i) the
sale of tickets for each dinner, |
luncheon, cocktail party, rally, and other
fundraising |
event, (ii) mass collections made at those events, and |
(iii) sales
of items such as buttons, badges, flags, |
emblems, hats, banners, literature,
and
similar materials.
|
(9) Each contribution, rebate, refund, or other |
receipt in excess of $150
received by the organization not |
otherwise listed under items (3) through (8),
and if a |
contributor is an individual who contributed
more than |
$500, the occupation and employer of the contributor or, if |
the
occupation and employer of the contributor are unknown, |
a statement that the
organization has made a good faith |
effort to ascertain this information.
|
(10) The total sum of all receipts by or for the |
organization during the
reporting period.
|
(11) The full name and mailing address of each person |
to whom expenditures
have been made by the organization |
within the reporting period in an aggregate
amount or value |
|
in excess of $150, the amount, date, and purpose of each
|
expenditure, and the question of public policy on behalf of |
which the
expenditure
was made.
|
(12) The full name and mailing address of each person |
to whom an
expenditure for personal services, salaries, and |
reimbursed expenses in excess
of $150 has been made and |
which is not otherwise reported, including the
amount,
|
date, and purpose of the expenditure.
|
(13) The total sum of expenditures made by the |
organization during the
reporting period.
|
(14) The full name and mailing address of each person |
to whom the
organization owes debts or obligations in |
excess of $150 and the amount of the
debts or obligations.
|
The State Board by rule shall define a "good faith effort".
|
(c) The reports required under subsection (b) shall be |
filed at the same
times and for the same reporting periods as |
reports of campaign contributions
and semi-annual reports of |
campaign contributions and expenditures required by
this |
Article of political committees. The reports required under |
subsection
(b)
shall be available for public inspection and |
copying in the same manner as
reports filed by political |
committees.
The Board may charge a fee that covers the costs of |
copying and distribution,
if any.
|
(d) An organization required to file reports under |
subsection (b) shall
include a statement on all literature and |
advertisements soliciting funds
stating the following:
|
"A copy of our report filed with the State Board of |
Elections is (or will be)
available for purchase from the State |
Board of Elections, Springfield,
Illinois".
|
(Source: P.A. 90-737, eff. 1-1-99.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-9.5)
|
Sec. 9-9.5. Disclosures in political communications.
Any |
political committee, organized under the Election Code, that
|
makes an expenditure for a pamphlet, circular, handbill, |
Internet or telephone communication, radio, television,
or |
|
print advertisement,
or other communication directed at voters |
and
mentioning the name of a candidate in the next upcoming |
election shall ensure
that the name of the political committee |
paying for any part of the
communication, including, but not |
limited to, its preparation and distribution,
is
identified |
clearly within the communication as the payor. This Section |
does
not apply to items that are too small to contain the |
required disclosure.
Nothing in this Section shall require |
disclosure on any telephone communication using random |
sampling or other scientific survey methods to gauge public |
opinion for or against any candidate or question of public |
policy.
|
Whenever any vendor or other person provides any of the |
services listed in this Section, other than any telephone |
communication using random sampling or other scientific survey |
methods to gauge public opinion for or against any candidate or |
question of public policy, the vendor or person shall keep and |
maintain records showing the name and address of the person who |
purchased or requested the services and the amount paid for the |
services. The records required by this Section shall be kept |
for a period of one year after the date upon which payment was |
received for the services.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/9-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 9-10)
|
Sec. 9-10. Financial reports.
|
(a) The treasurer of every state political committee and |
the
treasurer of every local political committee shall file |
with the
Board, and the treasurer of every local political |
committee shall file
with the county clerk, reports of campaign |
contributions, and semi-annual
reports of campaign |
contributions and expenditures on forms to be
prescribed or |
approved by the Board. The treasurer of every political
|
committee that acts as both a state political committee and a |
local
political committee shall file a copy of each report with |
the State Board
of Elections and the county clerk.
Entities |
|
subject to Section 9-7.5 shall file reports required by
that |
Section at times
provided in this Section and are subject to |
the penalties provided in this
Section.
|
(b) Reports of campaign contributions shall be filed no |
later than the
15th day next preceding each election including |
a primary election in
connection with which the political |
committee has accepted or is
accepting contributions or has |
made or is making expenditures. Such
reports shall be complete |
as of the 30th day next preceding each election
including a |
primary election. The Board shall assess a civil penalty not to
|
exceed $5,000 for a violation of this subsection, except that |
for State
officers and candidates
and political
committees |
formed for statewide office, the civil
penalty may not exceed |
$10,000.
The fine, however, shall not exceed $500 for a
first |
filing violation for filing less than 10 days after the |
deadline.
There shall be no fine if the report is mailed and |
postmarked at least 72 hours
prior to the filing deadline.
For |
the purpose of this subsection, "statewide
office" and "State |
officer" means the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney
|
General,
Secretary of State,
Comptroller, and Treasurer. |
However, a
continuing political committee that does not make
|
neither accepts contributions nor makes
expenditures in excess |
of $500 on behalf of or in opposition to any candidate or |
public
question on the ballot at an election shall not be |
required to file the
reports heretofore prescribed but may file |
in lieu thereof a Statement of
Nonparticipation in the Election |
with the Board or the Board and the county
clerk ; except that |
if the political committee, by the terms of its statement of |
organization filed in accordance with this Article, is |
organized to support or oppose a candidate or public question |
on the ballot at the next election or primary, that committee |
must file reports required by this subsection (b) and by |
subsection (b-5) .
|
(b-5) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) and
|
Section 1.25 of the Statute on Statutes, any contribution
of |
more than $500 received in the interim between the last date
of |
|
the period
covered by the last report filed under subsection |
(b) prior to the election and
the date of the election shall be |
filed with and must actually be received by
the State Board of |
Elections within 2 business days after
receipt of such |
contribution.
The State Board shall allow filings of reports of |
contributions of more than
$500 under this subsection (b-5) by |
political committees that are not
required to file |
electronically to be made by
facsimile transmission.
For the |
purpose of this subsection, a contribution is considered
|
received on the date the public official, candidate, or |
political committee (or
equivalent person
in the case of a
|
reporting entity other than a political committee) actually |
receives it or, in
the case of goods or services, 2 business |
days after the date the public
official,
candidate, committee,
|
or other reporting entity receives the certification required |
under subsection
(b) of Section 9-6.
Failure to report
each |
contribution is a separate violation of this subsection. In the |
final
disposition of any matter by the Board on or after the |
effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly, the Board
may
impose fines for violations of this |
subsection not to exceed 100% of the
total
amount of the |
contributions that were untimely reported, but in no case when |
a
fine is imposed shall it be less
than 10% of the total amount |
of the contributions that were untimely
reported.
When |
considering the amount of the fine to be imposed, the Board |
shall
consider, but is not limited to, the following factors:
|
(1) whether in the Board's opinion the violation was |
committed
inadvertently,
negligently, knowingly, or |
intentionally;
|
(2) the number of days the contribution was reported |
late; and
|
(3) past violations of Sections 9-3 and 9-10 of this |
Article by the
committee.
|
(c) In addition to such reports the treasurer of every |
political
committee shall file semi-annual reports of campaign |
contributions and
expenditures no later than July 31st, |
|
covering the period from January 1st
through June 30th |
immediately preceding, and no later than January 31st,
covering |
the period from July 1st through December 31st of the preceding
|
calendar year. Reports of contributions and expenditures must |
be filed to
cover the prescribed time periods even though no |
contributions or
expenditures may have been received or made |
during the period.
The Board shall assess a civil penalty not |
to exceed $5,000 for a violation
of this subsection, except |
that for State officers and candidates
and political
committees |
formed for statewide office, the civil
penalty may not exceed |
$10,000.
The fine, however, shall not exceed $500 for a
first |
filing violation for filing less than 10 days after the |
deadline.
There shall be no fine if the report is mailed and |
postmarked at least 72 hours
prior to the filing deadline.
For |
the purpose of this subsection, "statewide
office" and "State |
officer"
means the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney |
General, Secretary
of State,
Comptroller, and Treasurer.
|
(c-5) A political committee that acts as either (i) a State |
and local
political committee or (ii) a local political |
committee and that files reports
electronically under Section |
9-28 is not required to file copies of the reports
with the |
appropriate county clerk if the county clerk has a system that
|
permits access to, and duplication of, reports that are filed |
with the State
Board of Elections. A State and local political |
committee or
a local political committee shall file with the |
county clerk a copy of its
statement of organization pursuant |
to Section 9-3.
|
(d) A copy of each report or statement filed under this |
Article
shall be
preserved by the person filing it for a period |
of two years from the
date of filing.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; 93-615, eff. 11-19-03; |
revised 12-17-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/10-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-9)
|
Sec. 10-9. The following electoral boards are designated |
for the
purpose of hearing and passing upon the objector's |
|
petition described in
Section 10-8.
|
1. The State Board of Elections will hear and pass upon |
objections
to the nominations of candidates for State offices,
|
nominations of candidates for congressional, legislative and |
judicial
offices of districts , subcircuits, or circuits |
situated in more than one county, nominations
of candidates for |
the offices of State's attorney or regional superintendent
of |
schools to be elected from more than one county, and petitions |
for
proposed amendments to the Constitution of the State of |
Illinois as
provided for in Section 3 of Article XIV of the |
Constitution.
|
2. The county officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for county |
offices,
for congressional, legislative and judicial offices |
of a district , subcircuit, or
circuit coterminous with or less |
than a county, for school trustees to be
voted for by the |
electors of the county or by the electors of a township of
the |
county, for the office of multi-township assessor where |
candidates for
such office are nominated in accordance with |
this Code, and for all special
district offices, shall be |
composed of the county clerk, or an assistant
designated by the |
county clerk, the State's attorney of the county or
an |
Assistant State's Attorney designated by the State's Attorney, |
and the
clerk of the circuit court, or an assistant designated |
by the clerk of
the circuit court, of the county, of whom the |
county clerk or his designee
shall be the chairman, except that |
in any county which has established a
county board of election |
commissioners that board
shall constitute the county officers |
electoral board ex-officio.
|
3. The municipal officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for officers |
of
municipalities shall be composed of the mayor or president |
of the board
of trustees of the city, village or incorporated |
town, and the city,
village or incorporated town clerk, and one |
member of the city council
or board of trustees, that member |
being designated who is eligible to
serve on the electoral |
|
board and has served the
greatest number of years as a member |
of the city council or board of
trustees, of whom the mayor or |
president of the board of trustees shall
be the chairman.
|
4. The township officers electoral board to pass upon |
objections to
the nominations of township officers shall be |
composed of the township
supervisor, the town clerk, and that |
eligible town trustee elected in the
township who has had the |
longest term of continuous service as town
trustee, of whom the |
township supervisor shall be the chairman.
|
5. The education officers electoral board to hear and pass |
upon
objections to the nominations of candidates for offices in |
school or
community college districts shall be composed of the |
presiding officer of
the school or community college district |
board, who shall be the chairman,
the secretary of the school |
or community college district board and the
eligible elected |
school or community college board member who has the
longest |
term of continuous service as a board member.
|
6. In all cases, however, where the Congressional or |
Legislative
district is wholly within the jurisdiction of a |
board of election
commissioners and in all cases where the |
school district or special
district is wholly within the |
jurisdiction of a municipal board of
election commissioners and |
in all cases where the municipality or
township is wholly or |
partially within the jurisdiction of a municipal
board of |
election commissioners, the board of election commissioners
|
shall ex-officio constitute the electoral board.
|
For special districts situated in more than one county, the |
county officers
electoral board of the county in which the |
principal office of the district
is located has jurisdiction to |
hear and pass upon objections. For purposes
of this Section, |
"special districts" means all political subdivisions other
|
than counties, municipalities, townships and school and |
community college
districts.
|
In the event that any member of the appropriate board is a |
candidate
for the office with relation to which the objector's |
petition is filed,
he shall not be eligible to serve on that |
|
board and shall not act as
a member of the board and his place |
shall be filled as follows:
|
a. In the county officers electoral board by the county
|
treasurer, and if he or she is ineligible to serve, by the |
sheriff of the
county.
|
b. In the municipal officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected city council or board of trustees member |
who has served the second
greatest number of years as a |
city council or board of trustees member.
|
c. In the township officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected town trustee who has had the second |
longest term of continuous service
as a town trustee.
|
d. In the education officers electoral board by the |
eligible
elected school or community college district |
board member who has had the
second longest term of |
continuous service as a board member.
|
In the event that the chairman of the electoral board is |
ineligible
to act because of the fact that he is a candidate |
for the office with
relation to which the objector's petition |
is filed, then the substitute
chosen under the provisions of |
this Section shall be the chairman; In
this case, the officer |
or board with whom the objector's petition is
filed, shall |
transmit the certificate of nomination or nomination papers
as |
the case may be, and the objector's petition to the substitute
|
chairman of the electoral board.
|
When 2 or more eligible individuals, by reason of their |
terms of service
on a city council or board of trustees, |
township board of
trustees, or school or community college |
district board, qualify to serve
on an electoral board, the one |
to serve shall be chosen by lot.
|
Any vacancies on an electoral board not otherwise filled |
pursuant to this
Section shall be filled by public members |
appointed by the Chief Judge of
the Circuit Court for the |
county wherein the electoral board hearing is
being held upon |
notification to the Chief Judge of such
vacancies. The Chief |
Judge shall be so notified by a member of the electoral
board |
|
or the officer or board with whom the objector's petition was |
filed.
In the event that none of the individuals designated by |
this Section to
serve on the electoral board are eligible, the |
chairman of an electoral
board shall be designated by the Chief |
Judge.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-570 .)
|
(10 ILCS 5/12-1) (from Ch. 46, par. 12-1)
|
Sec. 12-1. At least 60 days prior to each general and |
consolidated election,
the election authority shall provide |
public notice, calculated to reach
elderly and handicapped |
voters, of the availability of registration and
voting aids |
under the Federal Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and
|
Handicapped Act, of the availability of assistance in marking |
the ballot,
and procedures for voting by absentee ballot , and |
procedures for voting
early by personal appearance .
|
At least 30 days before any general election, and at least |
20 days
before any special congressional election, the
county |
clerk shall publish a notice of the election in 2 or more
|
newspapers published in the county, city, village,
|
incorporated town or town, as the case may be, or if there is |
no such
newspaper, then in any 2 or more newspapers published |
in the
county and having a general circulation throughout the |
community. The
notice may be substantially as follows:
|
Notice is hereby given that on (give date), at (give the |
place of
holding the election and the name of the precinct or |
district) in the
county of (name county), an election will be |
held for (give the title of
the several offices to be filled), |
which election will be open at 6:00
a.m. and continued open |
until 7:00 p.m. of that day.
|
Dated at .... on (insert date).
|
(Source: P.A. 90-358, eff. 1-1-98; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/Art. 12A heading new)
|
ARTICLE 12A. |
VOTERS' GUIDES
|
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-2 new)
|
Sec. 12A-2. Definitions. As used in this Article, unless |
the context
otherwise
requires:
|
"Board" means the State Board of Elections.
|
"Internet Guide" refers to information disseminated by the |
State Board of
Elections on a website, pursuant to Section |
12A-5.
|
"Local election authority" means a county clerk or board of |
election
commissioners.
|
"Public question" or "question" means any question, |
proposition, or
referendum
submitted to the voters under |
Article 28 of this Code.
|
"Statewide candidate" means any candidate who runs for a |
statewide office,
including Governor, Lieutenant Governor, |
Attorney General, Secretary of State,
Treasurer, Comptroller, |
United States President, or United States Senator.
|
"Voters' guide" means any information disseminated by the |
State Board of
Elections pursuant to
Section 12A-5.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-5 new)
|
Sec. 12A-5. Internet Guide.
The Board shall publish, no |
later than the 45th day before a general election
in which a
|
statewide candidate appears on the ballot, an Internet website |
with the
following
information:
|
(1) The date and time of the general election.
|
(2) Requirements for a citizen to qualify as an |
elector.
|
(3) The deadline for registering as an elector in the |
State of Illinois
for
the next
election.
|
(4) Contact information for local election |
authorities.
|
(5) A description of the following offices, when they |
appear on the
ballot,
including their term of office, basic |
duties, and base salary: United States
President,
United |
States Senator, United States Representative, Governor, |
|
Lieutenant
Governor,
Attorney
General, Secretary of State, |
Treasurer, Comptroller, Illinois Supreme Court Judge, and |
Illinois Appellate Court Judge. The Board shall not include |
information on any office other than the offices listed in |
this item (5).
|
(6) The names and party affiliations of qualified |
candidates for the
following
offices, when these offices |
appear on the ballot: United States President,
United |
States
Senator, United States Representative, Governor, |
Lieutenant Governor, Attorney
General,
Secretary of State, |
Treasurer, Comptroller, Illinois Supreme Court Judge, and |
Illinois Appellate Court Judge. The Board shall not include |
information on candidates for any office other than the |
offices listed in this item (6).
|
(7) Challenged candidates. Where a candidate's right |
to appear on the
general
election ballot has been |
challenged, and any appeal remains pending regarding
those
|
challenges, the challenged candidate may appear on the |
Internet Guide, subject
to the
other provisions of Section |
12A-10. In this instance, the Board may note that
the
|
candidate's
candidacy has been challenged and that he or |
she may be removed from the
ballot prior
to election day. |
If the candidate is removed from the ballot prior to |
election
day, the
Board shall remove the candidate's name |
and other information from the Internet
Guide.
|
(8) Any personal statement and photograph submitted by |
a candidate named
in
the
Internet Guide, subject to |
Sections 12A-10 and 12A-35.
|
(9) A means by which an elector may determine what type |
of balloting
equipment
is used by his or her local election |
authority, and the instructions for
properly
using that
|
equipment.
|
(10) The text of any public question that may appear on |
the ballot.
|
(11) A mechanism by which electors may determine in |
which congressional and judicial districts they reside. |
|
The Internet Guide shall allow
visitors to
search for |
candidates by office (e.g., Governor or United States |
Senator) and
candidate's name.
|
(12) Information concerning how to become an election |
judge.
|
The Board shall archive the contents of the Internet Guide |
for a period of at
least 5
years.
|
In addition, the Board has the discretion to publish a |
voters' guide before a general primary election in the manner |
provided in this Article.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-10 new)
|
Sec. 12A-10. Candidate statements and photographs in the |
Internet Guide.
|
(a) Any candidate whose name appears in the Internet Guide |
may submit a
written
statement and a photograph to appear in |
the Internet Guide, provided that:
|
(1) No personal statement may exceed a brief biography |
(name, age, education, and current employment) and an |
additional 400 words.
|
(2) Personal statements may include contact |
information for the candidate,
including the address and |
phone number of the campaign headquarters, and the
|
candidate's website.
|
(3) Personal statements may not mention a candidate's |
opponents by name.
|
(4) No personal statement may include language that may |
not be legally
sent
through the mail.
|
(5) The photograph shall be a conventional photograph |
with a plain
background
and show only the face, or the |
head, neck, and shoulders, of the candidate.
|
(6) The photograph shall not (i) show the candidate's |
hands, anything in
the
candidate's hands, or the candidate |
wearing a
judicial robe, a
hat, or a military, police, or |
fraternal uniform or (ii)
include the
uniform or insignia |
of any organization.
|
|
(b) The Board must note in the text of the Internet Guide |
that personal
statements were
submitted by the candidate or his |
or her designee and were not edited by the
Board.
|
(c) Where a candidate declines to submit a statement, the |
Board may note
that
the
candidate declined to submit a |
statement.
|
(d) The candidate must pay $600 for inclusion of his or her |
personal
statement
and
photograph, and the Board shall not |
include photographs or statements from
candidates
who do not |
pay the fee. The Board may adopt rules for refunding that fee |
at the
candidate's
request, provided that the Board may not |
include a statement or photograph from
a
candidate who has |
requested a refund of a fee. Fees collected pursuant to this |
subsection shall be deposited into the Voters' Guide Fund, a |
special fund created in the State treasury. Moneys in the |
Voters' Guide Fund shall be appropriated solely to the State |
Board of Elections for use in the implementation and |
administration of this Article 12A.
|
(e) Anyone other than the candidate submitting a statement |
or photograph
from a
candidate must attest that he or she is |
doing so on behalf and at the direction
of
the
candidate. The |
Board may assess a civil fine of no more than $1,000 against a
|
person or entity who falsely
submits a statement or photograph |
not authorized by the
candidate.
|
(f) Nothing in this Article makes the author of any |
statement exempt from
any
civil
or
criminal action because of |
any defamatory statements offered for posting or
contained in
|
the Internet Guide. The persons writing, signing, or offering a |
statement for
inclusion in
the Internet Guide are deemed to be |
its authors and publishers, and the
Board shall not
be liable |
in any case or action relating to the content of any material
|
submitted by any
candidate.
|
(g) The Board may set reasonable deadlines for the |
submission of personal
statements and
photographs, provided |
that a deadline may not be less than 5 business
days after
the |
last day for filing new party petitions.
|
|
(h) The Board may set formats for the submission of |
statements and
photographs. The
Board may require that |
statements and photographs are submitted in an
electronic |
format.
|
(i) Fees and fines collected pursuant to subsections (d) |
and (e), respectively, of this Section shall be deposited into |
the Voters' Guide Fund, a special fund created in the State |
treasury. Moneys in the Voters' Guide Fund shall be |
appropriated solely to the State Board of Elections for use in |
the implementation and administration of this Article 12A.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-15 new)
|
Sec. 12A-15. Language. The Board may translate all of the |
material it is
required to
provide for the Internet Guide into |
other languages as it deems necessary to
comply with
the |
federal Voting Rights Act or at its discretion. Visitors to the |
site shall
have the
option of viewing the Guide in all |
languages into which the Guide has been
translated.
Candidates |
may, at their option and expense, submit statements in |
languages
other than
English. The Board shall not be |
responsible for translating candidate
statements.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-35 new)
|
Sec. 12A-35. Board's review of candidate photograph and |
statement;
procedure
for
revision.
|
(a) If a candidate files a photograph and statement
under |
item (8) of Section 12A-5 in a voters' guide, the Board shall |
review the
photograph and
statement to ensure that they comply |
with the requirements of Section 12A-10. Review by the Board |
under this Section shall be limited
to
determining whether the |
photograph and statement comply with the requirements
of
|
Section 12A-10 and may not include any determination relating
|
to the
accuracy or truthfulness of the substance or contents of |
the materials filed.
|
(b) The Board shall review each photograph and statement |
not later than 3
business days
following the deadline for |
|
filing a photograph and statement. If the Board
determines
that |
the photograph or statement of a candidate must be revised in |
order to
comply with
the requirements of Section 12A-10, the |
Board
shall
attempt to contact the candidate not later than the |
5th day after the deadline
for filing a
photograph and |
statement. A candidate contacted by the Board under this |
Section
may
file a revised photograph or statement no later |
than the 7th business day
following the
deadline for filing a |
photograph and statement.
|
(c) If the Board is required to attempt to contact a |
candidate under
subsection (b) of this
Section, the Board shall |
attempt to contact the candidate by telephone or by
using an
|
electronic transmission facsimile machine, if such contact |
information is
provided by the
candidate.
|
(d) If the Board is unable to contact a candidate, if the |
candidate does
not file a
revised photograph or statement, or |
if the revised filing under subsection (b)
again
fails to meet |
the standards of review set by the Board:
|
(1) If a photograph does not comply with Section |
12A-10, the Board may modify the photograph. The candidate |
shall pay the
expense
of any modification before |
publication of the photograph in the voters' guide.
If the
|
photograph cannot be modified to comply with Section |
12A-10,
the photograph shall not be printed in the guide.
|
(2) If a statement does not comply with Section 12A-10, |
the statement shall not be published in the voters' guide.
|
(e) If the photograph or statement of a candidate filed |
under item (8)
of Section
12A-5 does not comply with a |
requirement
of Section 12A-10 and the Board does not attempt to |
contact the
candidate by
the deadline
specified in subsection |
(b) of this Section, then, for purposes of this Section
only, |
the
photograph or statement shall be published as filed.
|
(f) A candidate revising a photograph or statement under |
this Section shall
make only
those revisions necessary to |
comply with Section 12A-10.
|
(g) The Board may by rule define the term "contact" as used |
|
in this
Section.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-40 new)
|
Sec. 12A-40. Exemption from public records laws.
|
Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, materials filed by |
a candidate, political party, political
committee, or
other |
person for inclusion in a voters' guide are exempt from public |
inspection
until the
4th business day after the final date for |
filing the materials.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-45 new)
|
Sec. 12A-45. Material submitted for inclusion in any |
voters' guide may not
be
admitted
as evidence in any suit or |
action against the Board to restrain or enjoin the
publication |
of
a voters' guide.
|
(10 ILCS 5/12A-50 new)
|
Sec. 12A-50. Order of appearance within the guides. For all |
guides
disseminated
by the
Board, all information about offices |
and candidates on the ballot shall be
listed together
in the |
same part of the guide or insert. All candidates for one |
office,
together with their
statements and photographs if any,
|
shall be listed before information on other offices and |
candidates is listed.
To the extent
possible, offices and |
candidates shall be listed in the same order in which
they |
appear
on the ballot. |
(10 ILCS 5/12A-55 new)
|
Sec. 12A-55. Constitutional issues. If a constitutional |
amendment appears
on
the ballot,
the contents of the pamphlet |
issued by the Secretary of State under Section 2
of the |
Illinois Constitutional Amendment Act may be included in any |
guide
issued by the
Board.
|
(10 ILCS 5/13-2.5 new)
|
Sec. 13-2.5. Time off from work to serve as election judge.
|
|
Any person
who
is
appointed as an election judge under Section |
13-1 or 13-2 may, after giving his
or her
employer at least 20 |
days' written notice, be absent from his or her place of
work |
for the
purpose of serving as an election judge. An employer |
may not penalize an
employee for
that absence other than a |
deduction in salary for the time the employee was
absent from
|
his or her place of employment.
|
This Section does not apply to an employer with fewer than |
25 employees.
An employer with more than 25 employees
shall not |
be required to permit more than 10% of the employees to be |
absent
under this Section on the same election day.
|
(10 ILCS 5/14-4.5 new)
|
Sec. 14-4.5. Time off from work to serve as election judge.
|
Any person
who
is
appointed as an election judge under Section |
13-1 or 13-2 may, after giving his
or her
employer at least 20 |
days' written notice, be absent from his or her place of
work |
for the
purpose of serving as an election judge. An employer |
may not penalize an
employee for
that absence other than a |
deduction in salary for the time the employee was
absent from
|
his or her place of employment.
|
This Section does not apply to an employer with fewer than |
25 employees.
An employer with more than 25 employees
shall not |
be required to permit more than 10% of the employees to be |
absent
under this Section on the same election day.
|
(10 ILCS 5/17-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 17-9)
|
Sec. 17-9. Any person desiring to vote shall give his name |
and, if
required to do so, his residence to the judges of |
election, one of whom
shall thereupon announce the same in a |
loud and distinct tone of voice,
clear, and audible; the judges |
of elections shall check each application
for ballot against |
the list of voters registered in that precinct to
whom absentee
|
or early
ballots have been issued for that election, which |
shall be
provided by the election authority and which list |
shall be available for
inspection by pollwatchers. A voter |
|
applying to vote in the
precinct on election day whose name |
appears on the list as having
been issued an absentee
or early
|
ballot shall not be permitted to vote in the
precinct unless |
that voter submits to the judges of election, for
cancellation |
or revocation, his
absentee
ballot. In the case that the |
voter's absentee
ballot is not present
in the polling place, it |
shall be sufficient for any such voter to submit to
the judges |
of election in lieu of his absentee
ballot, either a portion
of |
such ballot if torn or mutilated, an affidavit executed before |
the
judges of election specifying that the voter never received |
an absentee
ballot, or an affidavit executed before the judges |
of election specifying
that the voter desires to cancel or |
revoke any absentee
ballot that may have
been cast in the |
voter's name . All applicable provisions of Articles
4, 5 or 6 |
shall be complied with and if such name is found on the |
register of
voters by the
officer having charge thereof, he |
shall likewise repeat said name, and
the voter shall be allowed |
to enter within the proximity of the voting
booths, as above |
provided. One of the judges shall give the voter one,
and only |
one of each ballot to be voted at the election, on the back of
|
which ballots such judge shall indorse his initials in such |
manner that
they may be seen when each such ballot is properly |
folded, and the
voter's name shall be immediately checked on |
the register list. In those
election jurisdictions where |
perforated ballot cards are utilized of the
type on which |
write-in votes can be cast above the perforation, the election
|
authority shall provide a space both above and below the |
perforation for
the judge's initials, and the judge shall |
endorse his or her initials in
both spaces. Whenever
a proposal |
for a constitutional amendment or for the calling of a
|
constitutional convention is to be voted upon at the election, |
the
separate blue ballot or ballots pertaining thereto shall, |
when being
handed to the voter, be placed on top of the other |
ballots to be voted
at the election in such manner that the |
legend appearing on the back
thereof, as prescribed in Section |
16-6 of this Act, shall be plainly
visible to the voter. At all |
|
elections, when a registry may be
required, if the name of any |
person so desiring to vote at such election
is not found on the |
register of voters, he or she shall not receive a ballot
until |
he or she shall have complied with the law prescribing the |
manner and
conditions of voting by unregistered voters. If any |
person desiring to
vote at any election shall be challenged, he |
or she shall not receive a ballot
until he or she shall have |
established his right to vote in the manner provided
|
hereinafter; and if he or she shall be challenged after he has |
received his
ballot, he shall not be permitted to vote until he |
or she has fully complied
with such requirements of the law |
upon being challenged. Besides the
election officer, not more |
than 2 voters in excess of the whole number
of voting booths |
provided shall be allowed within the proximity of the voting
|
booths at one
time. The provisions of this Act, so far as they |
require the
registration of voters as a condition to their |
being allowed to vote
shall not apply to persons otherwise |
entitled to vote, who are, at the
time of the election, or at |
any time within 60 days prior to such
election have been |
engaged in the military or naval service of the
United States, |
and who appear personally at the polling place on
election day |
and produce to the judges of election satisfactory evidence
|
thereof, but such persons, if otherwise qualified to vote, |
shall be
permitted to vote at such election without previous |
registration.
|
All such persons shall also make an affidavit which shall |
be in
substantially the following form:
|
State of Illinois,)
|
) ss.
|
County of ........)
|
............... Precinct .......... Ward
|
I, ...., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I am a citizen |
of the
United States, of the age of 18 years or over, and that |
within the past
60 days prior to the date of this election at |
which I am applying to
vote, I have been engaged in the .... |
(military or naval) service of the
United States; and I am |
|
qualified to vote under and by virtue of the
Constitution and |
laws of the State of Illinois, and that I am a legally
|
qualified voter of this precinct and ward except that I have, |
because of
such service, been unable to register as a voter; |
that I now reside at
.... (insert street and number, if any) in |
this precinct and ward; that I
have maintained a legal |
residence in this precinct and ward for 30 days
and in this |
State 30 days next preceding this election.
|
.........................
|
Subscribed and sworn to before me on (insert date).
|
.........................
|
Judge of Election.
|
The affidavit of any such person shall be supported by the |
affidavit
of a resident and qualified voter of any such |
precinct and ward, which
affidavit shall be in substantially |
the following form:
|
State of Illinois,)
|
) ss.
|
County of ........)
|
........... Precinct ........... Ward
|
I, ...., do solemnly swear (or affirm), that I am a |
resident of this
precinct and ward and entitled to vote at this |
election; that I am
acquainted with .... (name of the |
applicant); that I verily believe him
to be an actual bona fide |
resident of this precinct and ward and that I
verily believe |
that he or she has maintained a legal residence therein 30 days
|
and in this State 30 days next preceding this election.
|
.........................
|
Subscribed and sworn to before me on (insert date).
|
.........................
|
Judge of Election.
|
All affidavits made under the provisions of this Section |
shall be
enclosed in a separate envelope securely sealed, and |
shall be
transmitted with the returns of the elections to the |
|
county clerk or to
the board of election commissioners, who |
shall preserve the said
affidavits for the period of 6 months, |
during which period such
affidavits shall be deemed public |
records and shall be freely open to
examination as such.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/17-15) (from Ch. 46, par. 17-15)
|
Sec. 17-15. Any person entitled to vote at a general or |
special election or
at any election at which propositions are |
submitted to a popular vote in
this State, shall, on the day of |
such election, be entitled to absent
himself from any services |
or employment in which he is then engaged or
employed, for a |
period of 2 hours between the time of opening and closing
the |
polls; and such voter shall not because of so absenting himself |
be
liable to any penalty; Provided, however, that application |
for such leave
of absence shall be made prior to the day of |
election. The employer may
specify the hours during which said |
employee may absent himself as
aforesaid , except that the |
employer must permit a 2-hour absence during working hours if |
the employee's working hours begin less than 2 hours after the |
opening of the polls and end less than 2 hours before the |
closing of the polls . No person or corporation shall refuse to |
an employee the
privilege hereby conferred, nor shall subject |
an employee to a penalty , including a reduction in compensation |
due to an absence under this Section,
because of the exercise |
of such privilege, nor shall directly or indirectly
violate the |
provisions of this section.
|
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 2532.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/17-23) (from Ch. 46, par. 17-23)
|
Sec. 17-23. Pollwatchers in a general election shall be |
authorized in
the following manner:
|
(1) Each established political party shall be entitled to |
appoint
two pollwatchers per precinct. Such pollwatchers must |
be affiliated
with the political party for which they are |
pollwatching. For all
elections, the pollwatchers must be
|
|
registered to vote in Illinois.
|
(2) Each candidate shall be entitled to appoint two |
pollwatchers per
precinct. For all elections, the pollwatchers |
must be
registered to vote
in Illinois.
|
(3) Each organization of citizens within the county or |
political
subdivision, which has among its purposes or |
interests the investigation
or prosecution of election frauds, |
and which shall have registered its
name and address and the |
name and addresses of its principal officers
with the proper |
election authority at least 40 days before the election,
shall |
be entitled to appoint one pollwatcher per precinct. For all
|
elections, the pollwatcher must be registered to vote in
|
Illinois.
|
(4) In any general election held to elect candidates for |
the offices of
a municipality of less than 3,000,000 population |
that is situated in 2 or
more counties, a pollwatcher who is a |
resident of Illinois shall be eligible to serve as a
|
pollwatcher in any poll located within such
municipality, |
provided that such pollwatcher otherwise complies with the
|
respective requirements of subsections (1) through (3) of this |
Section and
is a registered voter in Illinois.
|
(5) Each organized group of proponents or opponents of a |
ballot
proposition, which shall have registered the name and |
address of its
organization or committee and the name and |
address of its chairman with the
proper election authority at |
least 40 days before the election, shall be
entitled to appoint |
one pollwatcher per precinct. The pollwatcher
must be
|
registered to vote in Illinois.
|
All pollwatchers shall be required to have proper |
credentials. Such
credentials shall be printed in sufficient |
quantities, shall be issued
by and under the facsimile |
signature(s) of the election authority and
shall be available |
for distribution at least 2 weeks prior to the
election. Such |
credentials shall be authorized by the real or facsimile
|
signature of the State or local party official or the candidate |
or the
presiding officer of the civic organization or the |
|
chairman of the
proponent or opponent group, as the case may |
be.
|
Pollwatcher credentials shall be in substantially the |
following form:
|
POLLWATCHER CREDENTIALS
|
TO THE JUDGES OF ELECTION:
|
In accordance with the provisions of the Election
Code, the |
undersigned hereby appoints .......... (name of pollwatcher)
|
who resides at ........... (address) in the county
of |
..........., .......... (township or municipality)
of |
........... (name), State of Illinois and who is duly |
registered
to vote from this address, to act as a pollwatcher |
in the
........... precinct of the ........... ward (if |
applicable)
of the ........... (township or municipality) of |
........... at the
........... election to be held on (insert |
date).
|
........................ (Signature of Appointing Authority)
|
......................... TITLE (party official, candidate,
|
civic organization president,
|
proponent or opponent group chairman)
|
Under penalties provided by law pursuant to Section 29-10 |
of the
Election Code, the undersigned pollwatcher certifies |
that he or she resides
at ................ (address) in the |
county of ............, .........
(township or municipality) |
of ........... (name), State of Illinois, and is
duly |
registered to vote in Illinois.
|
.......................... .......................
|
(Precinct and/or Ward in (Signature of Pollwatcher)
|
Which Pollwatcher Resides)
|
Pollwatchers must present their credentials to the Judges |
of Election
upon entering the polling place. Pollwatcher |
credentials properly
executed and signed shall be proof of the |
qualifications of the
pollwatcher authorized thereby. Such |
|
credentials are retained by the
Judges and returned to the |
Election Authority at the end of the day of
election with the |
other election materials. Once a pollwatcher has
surrendered a |
valid credential, he may leave and reenter the polling place
|
provided that such continuing action does not disrupt the |
conduct of the
election. Pollwatchers may be substituted during |
the course of the day, but
established political parties, |
candidates and qualified civic organizations
can have only as |
many pollwatchers at any given time as are authorized in
this |
Article. A substitute must present his signed credential to the
|
judges of election upon entering the polling place. Election |
authorities
must provide a sufficient number of credentials to |
allow for substitution
of pollwatchers. After the polls have |
closed pollwatchers shall be allowed
to remain until the |
canvass of votes is completed; but may leave and
reenter only |
in cases of necessity, provided that such action is not so
|
continuous as to disrupt the canvass of votes.
|
Candidates seeking office in a district or municipality |
encompassing 2
or more counties shall be admitted to any and |
all polling places throughout
such district or municipality |
without regard to the counties in which such
candidates are |
registered to vote. Actions of such candidates shall be
|
governed in each polling place by the same privileges and |
limitations that
apply to pollwatchers as provided in this |
Section. Any such candidate who
engages in an activity in a |
polling place which could reasonably be
construed by a majority |
of the judges of election as campaign activity
shall be removed |
forthwith from such polling place.
|
Candidates seeking office in a district or municipality |
encompassing 2 or
more counties who desire to be admitted to |
polling places on election day
in such district or municipality |
shall be required to have proper
credentials. Such credentials |
shall be printed in sufficient quantities,
shall be issued by |
and under the facsimile signature of the
election authority of |
the election jurisdiction where the polling place in
which the |
candidate seeks admittance is located, and shall be available |
|
for
distribution at least 2 weeks prior to the election. Such |
credentials shall
be signed by the candidate.
|
Candidate credentials shall be in substantially the |
following form:
|
CANDIDATE CREDENTIALS
|
TO THE JUDGES OF ELECTION:
|
In accordance with the provisions of the Election Code, I |
...... (name of
candidate) hereby certify that I am a candidate |
for ....... (name of
office) and seek admittance to ....... |
precinct of the ....... ward (if
applicable) of the ....... |
(township or municipality) of ....... at the
....... election |
to be held on (insert date).
|
......................... .......................
|
(Signature of Candidate) OFFICE FOR WHICH
|
CANDIDATE SEEKS
|
NOMINATION OR
|
ELECTION
|
Pollwatchers shall be permitted to observe all proceedings |
and view all reasonably requested records relating
to the |
conduct of the election , provided the secrecy of the ballot is |
not impinged, and to station themselves in a position
in the |
voting room as will enable them to observe the judges making |
the
signature comparison between the voter application and the |
voter
registration record card; provided, however, that such |
pollwatchers
shall not be permitted to station themselves in |
such close proximity to
the judges of election so as to |
interfere with the orderly conduct of
the election and shall |
not, in any event, be permitted to handle
election materials. |
Pollwatchers may challenge for cause the voting
qualifications |
of a person offering to vote and may call to the
attention of |
the judges of election any incorrect procedure or apparent
|
violations of this Code.
|
If a majority of the judges of election determine that the |
polling
place has become too overcrowded with pollwatchers so |
|
as to interfere
with the orderly conduct of the election, the |
judges shall, by lot,
limit such pollwatchers to a reasonable |
number, except that each
established or new political party |
shall be permitted to have at least
one pollwatcher present.
|
Representatives of an election authority, with regard to an |
election
under its jurisdiction, the State Board of Elections, |
and law
enforcement agencies, including but not limited to a |
United States
Attorney, a State's attorney, the Attorney |
General, and a State, county,
or local police department, in |
the performance of their official
election duties, shall be |
permitted at all times to enter and remain in
the polling |
place. Upon entering the polling place, such
representatives |
shall display their official credentials or other
|
identification to the judges of election.
|
Uniformed police officers assigned to polling place duty |
shall follow
all lawful instructions of the judges of election.
|
The provisions of this Section shall also apply to |
supervised casting of
absentee ballots as provided in Section |
19-12.2 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/17-100 new)
|
Sec. 17-100. Definition of a vote.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the |
purpose of this
Article, a person casts a valid vote on a punch |
card ballot when:
|
(1) A chad on the card has at least one corner detached |
from the card;
|
(2) The fibers of paper on at least one edge of the |
chad are broken in a
way that permits unimpeded light to be |
seen through the card; or
|
(3) An indentation on the chad from the stylus or other |
object is present
and indicates a clearly ascertainable |
intent of the voter to vote based on the
totality of the |
circumstances, including but not limited to any pattern or
|
frequency of indentations on other ballot positions from |
|
the same ballot
card.
|
(b) Write-in votes shall be counted in a manner consistent |
with the existing
provisions of this Code.
|
(c) For purposes of this Section, a "chad" is that portion |
of a ballot card
that a voter punches or perforates with a |
stylus or other designated marking
device to manifest his or |
her vote for a particular ballot position on a ballot
card as |
defined in subsection (a).
|
(d) Prior to the original counting of any punch card |
ballots, an election judge may not alter a punch card ballot in |
any manner, including, but not limited to, the removal or |
manipulation of chads.
|
(10 ILCS 5/18-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 18-5)
|
Sec. 18-5. Any person desiring to vote and whose name is |
found upon
the register of voters by the person having charge |
thereof, shall then
be questioned by one of the judges as to |
his nativity, his term of
residence at present address, |
precinct, State and United States, his
age, whether naturalized |
and if so the date of naturalization papers and
court from |
which secured, and he shall be asked to state his residence
|
when last previously registered and the date of the election |
for which
he then registered. The judges of elections shall |
check each application
for ballot against the list of voters |
registered in that precinct to whom
absentee and early ballots |
have been issued for that election, which shall
be provided
by |
the election authority and which list shall be available for |
inspection
by pollwatchers. A voter applying to vote in
the |
precinct on
election day whose name appears on the list as |
having been issued an absentee
or early ballot shall not be |
permitted to vote in the precinct unless that
voter
submits to |
the judges of election, for cancellation or revocation, his
|
absentee ballot. In the case that the voter's absentee ballot |
is not
present in the polling place, it shall be
sufficient for |
any such voter to submit to the judges of election in lieu
of |
his absentee ballot, either a portion of such ballot if torn or
|
|
mutilated, an affidavit executed before the judges of election
|
specifying that the voter never received an absentee ballot, or |
an
affidavit
executed before the judges of election specifying |
that the voter desires to
cancel or revoke any absentee ballot |
that may have been cast in
the voter's
name .
If such person
so |
registered shall be challenged as disqualified, the party |
challenging
shall assign his reasons therefor, and thereupon |
one of the judges shall
administer to him an oath to answer |
questions, and if he shall take the
oath he shall then be |
questioned by the judge or judges touching such cause
of |
challenge, and touching any other cause of disqualification. |
And he may
also be questioned by the person challenging him in |
regard to his
qualifications and identity. But if a majority of |
the judges are of the
opinion that he is the person so |
registered and a qualified voter, his vote
shall then be |
received accordingly. But if his vote be rejected by such
|
judges, such person may afterward produce and deliver an |
affidavit to such
judges, subscribed and sworn to by him before |
one of the judges, in which
it shall be stated how long he has |
resided in such precinct, and state;
that he is a citizen of |
the United States, and is a duly qualified voter in
such |
precinct, and that he is the identical person so registered.
In |
addition to such an affidavit, the person so challenged shall |
provide
to the judges of election proof of residence by |
producing 2 forms of
identification showing the person's |
current residence address, provided
that such identification |
to the person at his current residence address and
postmarked |
not earlier than 30 days prior to the date of the
election, or |
the person shall procure a witness personally known to the
|
judges of election, and resident in the precinct (or district), |
or who
shall be proved by some legal voter of such precinct or |
district, known to
the judges to be such, who shall take the |
oath following, viz:
|
I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I am a resident of |
this election
precinct (or district), and entitled to vote at |
this election, and that I
have been a resident of this State |
|
for 30 days last past, and am well
acquainted with the person |
whose vote is now offered; that he is an actual
and bona fide |
resident of this election precinct (or district), and has
|
resided herein 30 days, and as I verily believe, in this State, |
30 days
next preceding this election.
|
The oath in each case may be administered by one of the |
judges of
election, or by any officer, resident in the precinct |
or district,
authorized by law to administer oaths. Also |
supported by an affidavit by a
registered voter residing in |
such precinct, stating his own residence, and
that he knows |
such person; and that he does reside at the place mentioned
and |
has resided in such precinct and state for the length of time |
as stated
by such person, which shall be subscribed and sworn |
to in the same way.
Whereupon the vote of such person shall be |
received, and entered as other
votes. But such judges, having |
charge of such registers, shall state in
their respective books |
the facts in such case, and the affidavits, so
delivered to the |
judges, shall be preserved and returned to the office of
the |
commissioners of election. Blank affidavits of the character |
aforesaid
shall be sent out to the judges of all the precincts, |
and the judges of
election shall furnish the same on demand and |
administer the oaths without
criticism. Such oaths, if |
administered by any other officer than such judge
of election, |
shall not be received. Whenever a proposal for a
constitutional |
amendment or for the calling of a constitutional convention
is |
to be voted upon at the election, the separate blue ballot or |
ballots
pertaining thereto shall be placed on top of the other |
ballots to be voted
at the election in such manner that the |
legend appearing on the back
thereof, as prescribed in Section |
16-6 of this Act, shall be plainly
visible to the voter, and in |
this fashion the ballots shall be handed to
the voter by the |
judge.
|
The voter shall, upon quitting the voting booth, deliver to |
one of
the judges of election all of the ballots, properly |
folded, which he
received. The judge of election to whom the |
voter delivers his ballots
shall not accept the same unless all |
|
of the ballots given to the voter
are returned by him. If a |
voter delivers less than all of the ballots
given to him, the |
judge to whom the same are offered shall advise him in
a voice |
clearly audible to the other judges of election that the voter
|
must return the remainder of the ballots. The statement of the |
judge to
the voter shall clearly express the fact that the |
voter is not required
to vote such remaining ballots but that |
whether or not he votes them he
must fold and deliver them to |
the judge. In making such statement the
judge of election shall |
not indicate by word, gesture or intonation of
voice that the |
unreturned ballots shall be voted in any particular
manner. No |
new voter shall be permitted to enter the voting booth of a
|
voter who has failed to deliver the total number of ballots |
received by
him until such voter has returned to the voting |
booth pursuant to the
judge's request and again quit the booth |
with all of the ballots
required to be returned by him. Upon |
receipt of all such ballots the
judges of election shall enter |
the name of the voter, and his number, as
above provided in |
this section, and the judge to whom the ballots are
delivered |
shall immediately put the ballots into the ballot box. If any
|
voter who has failed to deliver all the ballots received by him |
refuses
to return to the voting booth after being advised by |
the judge of
election as herein provided, the judge shall |
inform the other judges of
such refusal, and thereupon the |
ballot or ballots returned to the judge
shall be deposited in |
the ballot box, the voter shall be permitted to
depart from the |
polling place, and a new voter shall be permitted to
enter the |
voting booth.
|
The judge of election who receives the ballot or ballots |
from the
voter shall announce the residence and name of such |
voter in a loud
voice. The judge shall put the ballot or |
ballots received from the voter
into the ballot box in the |
presence of the voter and the judges of
election, and in plain |
view of the public. The judges having charge of
such registers |
shall then, in a column prepared thereon, in the same
line of, |
the name of the voter, mark "Voted" or the letter "V".
|
|
No judge of election shall accept from any voter less than |
the full
number of ballots received by such voter without first |
advising the
voter in the manner above provided of the |
necessity of returning all of
the ballots, nor shall any such |
judge advise such voter in a manner
contrary to that which is |
herein permitted, or in any other manner
violate the provisions |
of this section; provided, that the acceptance by
a judge of |
election of less than the full number of ballots delivered to
a |
voter who refuses to return to the voting booth after being |
properly
advised by such judge shall not be a violation of this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-653, eff. 8-14-96.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/18-100 new)
|
Sec. 18-100. Definition of a vote.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the |
purpose of this
Article, a person casts a valid vote on a punch |
card ballot when:
|
(1) A chad on the card has at least one corner detached |
from the card;
|
(2) The fibers of paper on at least one edge of the |
chad are broken in a
way that permits unimpeded light to be |
seen through the card; or
|
(3) An indentation on the chad from the stylus or other |
object is present
and indicates a clearly ascertainable |
intent of the voter to vote based on the
totality of the |
circumstances, including but not limited to any pattern or
|
frequency of indentations on other ballot positions from |
the same ballot
card.
|
(b) Write-in votes shall be counted in a manner consistent |
with the existing
provisions of this Code.
|
(c) For purposes of this Section, a "chad" is that portion |
of a ballot card
that a voter punches or perforates with a |
stylus or other designated marking
device to manifest his or |
her vote for a particular ballot position on a ballot
card as |
defined in subsection (a).
|
|
(d) Prior to the original counting of any punch card |
ballots, an election judge may not alter a punch card ballot in |
any manner, including, but not limited to, the removal or |
manipulation of chads.
|
(10 ILCS 5/18A-5)
|
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 93-1071 )
|
Sec. 18A-5. Provisional voting; general provisions.
|
(a) A person who claims to be a registered voter is |
entitled to cast a
provisional ballot under the following |
circumstances:
|
(1) The person's name does not appear on the official |
list of eligible
voters , whether a list of active or |
inactive voters, for the precinct in which
the person seeks |
to vote . The official list is the centralized statewide |
voter registration list established and maintained in |
accordance with Section 1A-25 ;
|
(2) The person's voting status has been challenged by |
an election judge, a
pollwatcher, or any legal voter and |
that challenge has been sustained by a
majority of the |
election judges; or
|
(3) A federal or State court order extends the time for |
closing the polls
beyond the time period established by |
State law and the person votes during the
extended time |
period ; or .
|
(4) The voter registered to vote by mail and is |
required by law to
present identification when voting |
either in person or by absentee ballot, but
fails to do so. |
(b) The procedure for obtaining and casting a provisional |
ballot at the
polling place
shall be as follows:
|
(1) After first verifying through an examination of the |
precinct register that the person's address is within the |
precinct boundaries, an
An election judge at the polling |
place shall notify a person who is
entitled to cast a |
provisional ballot pursuant to subsection (a)
that he or |
she may cast a provisional ballot in that election.
An |
|
election judge
must accept any information provided by a |
person who casts a provisional ballot
that the person |
believes supports his or her claim that he or she is a duly
|
registered voter and qualified to vote in the election. |
However, if the person's residence address is outside the |
precinct boundaries, the election judge shall inform the |
person of that fact, give the person the appropriate |
telephone number of the election authority in order to |
locate the polling place assigned to serve that address, |
and instruct the person to go to the proper polling place |
to vote.
|
(2) The person shall execute a written form provided by |
the
election judge that shall state or contain all of the |
following that is available :
|
(i) an affidavit stating the following:
|
State of Illinois, County of ................, |
Township
.............,
Precinct ........, Ward |
........, I, ......................., do solemnly
|
swear (or affirm) that: I am a citizen of the United |
States; I am 18 years of
age or older; I have resided |
in this State and in this precinct for 30 days
|
preceding this election; I have not voted in this |
election; I am a duly
registered voter in every |
respect; and I am eligible to vote in this election.
|
Signature ...... Printed Name of Voter ....... Printed |
Residence
Address of Voter ...... City
...... State |
.... Zip Code ..... Telephone Number ...... Date of |
Birth .......
and Illinois Driver's License Number |
....... or Last 4 digits of Social
Security
Number |
...... or State Identification Card
Number issued to |
you by the Illinois Secretary of State....... .
|
(ii) Written instruction stating the following:
|
In order to expedite the verification of your voter |
registration
status, the .... (insert name of county |
clerk of board of election
commissioners here) |
requests that you include your phone number and
both |
|
the last four digits of your social security number and |
your driver's
license number or State Identification |
Card Number
issued to you by the Secretary of State.
At |
minimum, you are required to include either (A) your |
driver's license
number or State Identification Card |
Number
issued to you by the Secretary of State
or (B) |
the last
4 digits of your social security number.
|
(ii)
(iii) A box for the election judge to check one of |
the 4
3 reasons why the
person was given a provisional |
ballot under subsection (a) of Section 18A-5.
|
(iii)
(iv) An area for the election judge to affix his |
or her signature and to
set forth any facts that support or |
oppose the allegation that the person is
not qualified to |
vote in the precinct in which the person is seeking to |
vote.
|
The written affidavit form described in this subsection |
(b)(2) must be
printed on a multi-part form prescribed by the |
county clerk or board of
election commissioners, as the case |
may be.
|
(3) After the person executes the portion of the written |
affidavit described
in subsection (b)(2)(i) of this Section, |
the election judge shall complete the
portion of the written |
affidavit described in subsection (b)(2)(iii) and
(b)(2)(iv).
|
(4) The election judge shall give a copy of the completed |
written affidavit
to the person. The election judge shall place |
the original written affidavit in
a self-adhesive clear plastic |
packing list envelope that must be attached to a
separate |
envelope marked as a "provisional ballot envelope". The |
election judge
shall also place any information provided by the |
person who casts a provisional
ballot in the clear plastic |
packing list envelope. Each county clerk or board
of election |
commissioners, as the case may be,
must design, obtain or |
procure self-adhesive clear plastic packing list
envelopes and |
provisional ballot envelopes that are suitable for |
implementing
this subsection (b)(4) of this Section.
|
(5) The election judge shall provide the person with a |
|
provisional ballot,
written instructions for casting a |
provisional ballot, and the provisional
ballot envelope with |
the clear plastic packing list envelope affixed to it,
which |
contains the person's original written affidavit and, if any, |
information
provided by the provisional voter to support his or |
her claim that he or she is
a duly registered voter. An |
election judge must also give the person written
information |
that states that any person who casts a provisional ballot |
shall be
able to ascertain, pursuant to guidelines established |
by the State Board of
Elections, whether the provisional vote |
was counted in the official canvass of
votes for that election |
and, if the provisional vote was not counted, the
reason that |
the vote was not counted.
|
(6) After the person has completed marking his or her |
provisional ballot, he
or she shall place the marked ballot |
inside of the provisional ballot envelope,
close and seal the |
envelope, and return the envelope to an election judge, who
|
shall then deposit the sealed provisional ballot envelope into |
a securable
container separately identified and utilized for |
containing sealed provisional
ballot envelopes. Ballots that |
are provisional because they are cast after 7:00 p.m. by court
|
order shall be kept separate from other provisional ballots. |
Upon the closing of the polls, the securable container shall
be
|
sealed with filament tape provided for that purpose, which |
shall be wrapped
around the box lengthwise and crosswise, at |
least twice each way, and each of
the election judges shall |
sign the seal.
|
(c) Instead of the affidavit form described in subsection |
(b), the county
clerk or board of election commissioners, as |
the case may be, may design and
use a multi-part affidavit form |
that is imprinted upon or attached to the
provisional ballot |
envelope described in subsection (b). If a county clerk or
|
board of election commissioners elects to design and use its |
own multi-part
affidavit form, then the county clerk or board |
of election commissioners shall
establish a mechanism for |
accepting any information the provisional voter has
supplied to |
|
the election judge to support his or her claim that he or she |
is a
duly registered voter. In all other respects, a county |
clerk or board of
election commissioners shall establish |
procedures consistent with subsection
(b).
|
(d) The county clerk or board of election commissioners, as |
the case may be,
shall use the completed affidavit form |
described in subsection (b) to update
the person's voter |
registration information in the State voter registration
|
database and voter registration database of the county clerk or |
board of
election commissioners, as the case may be. If a |
person is later determined not
to be a registered voter based |
on Section 18A-15 of this Code, then the
affidavit shall be |
processed by the county clerk or board of election
|
commissioners, as the case may be, as a voter registration |
application.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 93-1071 )
|
Sec. 18A-5. Provisional voting; general provisions.
|
(a) A person who claims to be a registered voter is |
entitled to cast a
provisional ballot under the following |
circumstances:
|
(1) The person's name does not appear on the official |
list of eligible
voters for the precinct in which
the |
person seeks to vote. The official list is the centralized |
statewide voter registration list established and |
maintained in accordance with Section 1A-25;
|
(2) The person's voting status has been challenged by |
an election judge, a
pollwatcher, or any legal voter and |
that challenge has been sustained by a
majority of the |
election judges; or
|
(3) A federal or State court order extends the time for |
closing the polls
beyond the time period established by |
State law and the person votes during the
extended time |
period ; or .
|
(4) The voter registered to vote by mail and is |
|
required by law to
present identification when voting |
either in person or by absentee ballot, but
fails to do so.
|
(b) The procedure for obtaining and casting a provisional |
ballot at the
polling place
shall be as follows:
|
(1) After first verifying through an examination of the |
precinct register that the person's address is within the |
precinct boundaries, an
An election judge at the polling |
place shall notify a person who is
entitled to cast a |
provisional ballot pursuant to subsection (a)
that he or |
she may cast a provisional ballot in that election.
An |
election judge
must accept any information provided by a |
person who casts a provisional ballot
that the person |
believes supports his or her claim that he or she is a duly
|
registered voter and qualified to vote in the election. |
However, if the person's residence address is outside the |
precinct boundaries, the election judge shall inform the |
person of that fact, give the person the appropriate |
telephone number of the election authority in order to |
locate the polling place assigned to serve that address, |
and instruct the person to go to the proper polling place |
to vote.
|
(2) The person shall execute a written form provided by |
the
election judge that shall state or contain all of the |
following that is available :
|
(i) an affidavit stating the following:
|
State of Illinois, County of ................, |
Township
.............,
Precinct ........, Ward |
........, I, ......................., do solemnly
|
swear (or affirm) that: I am a citizen of the United |
States; I am 18 years of
age or older; I have resided |
in this State and in this precinct for 30 days
|
preceding this election; I have not voted in this |
election; I am a duly
registered voter in every |
respect; and I am eligible to vote in this election.
|
Signature ...... Printed Name of Voter ....... Printed |
Residence
Address of Voter ...... City
...... State |
|
.... Zip Code ..... Telephone Number ...... Date of |
Birth .......
and Illinois Driver's License Number |
....... or Last 4 digits of Social
Security
Number |
...... or State Identification Card
Number issued to |
you by the Illinois Secretary of State....... .
|
(ii) Written instruction stating the following:
|
In order to expedite the verification of your voter |
registration
status, the .... (insert name of county |
clerk of board of election
commissioners here) |
requests that you include your phone number and
both |
the last four digits of your social security number and |
your driver's
license number or State Identification |
Card Number
issued to you by the Secretary of State.
At |
minimum, you are required to include either (A) your |
driver's license
number or State Identification Card |
Number
issued to you by the Secretary of State
or (B) |
the last
4 digits of your social security number.
|
(ii)
(iii) A box for the election judge to check one of |
the 3 reasons why the
person was given a provisional ballot |
under subsection (a) of Section 18A-5.
|
(iii)
(iv) An area for the election judge to affix his |
or her signature and to
set forth any facts that support or |
oppose the allegation that the person is
not qualified to |
vote in the precinct in which the person is seeking to |
vote.
|
The written affidavit form described in this subsection |
(b)(2) must be
printed on a multi-part form prescribed by the |
county clerk or board of
election commissioners, as the case |
may be.
|
(3) After the person executes the portion of the written |
affidavit described
in subsection (b)(2)(i) of this Section, |
the election judge shall complete the
portion of the written |
affidavit described in subsection (b)(2)(iii) and
(b)(2)(iv).
|
(4) The election judge shall give a copy of the completed |
written affidavit
to the person. The election judge shall place |
the original written affidavit in
a self-adhesive clear plastic |
|
packing list envelope that must be attached to a
separate |
envelope marked as a "provisional ballot envelope". The |
election judge
shall also place any information provided by the |
person who casts a provisional
ballot in the clear plastic |
packing list envelope. Each county clerk or board
of election |
commissioners, as the case may be,
must design, obtain or |
procure self-adhesive clear plastic packing list
envelopes and |
provisional ballot envelopes that are suitable for |
implementing
this subsection (b)(4) of this Section.
|
(5) The election judge shall provide the person with a |
provisional ballot,
written instructions for casting a |
provisional ballot, and the provisional
ballot envelope with |
the clear plastic packing list envelope affixed to it,
which |
contains the person's original written affidavit and, if any, |
information
provided by the provisional voter to support his or |
her claim that he or she is
a duly registered voter. An |
election judge must also give the person written
information |
that states that any person who casts a provisional ballot |
shall be
able to ascertain, pursuant to guidelines established |
by the State Board of
Elections, whether the provisional vote |
was counted in the official canvass of
votes for that election |
and, if the provisional vote was not counted, the
reason that |
the vote was not counted.
|
(6) After the person has completed marking his or her |
provisional ballot, he
or she shall place the marked ballot |
inside of the provisional ballot envelope,
close and seal the |
envelope, and return the envelope to an election judge, who
|
shall then deposit the sealed provisional ballot envelope into |
a securable
container separately identified and utilized for |
containing sealed provisional
ballot envelopes. Ballots that |
are provisional because they are cast after 7:00 p.m. by court
|
order shall be kept separate from other provisional ballots. |
Upon the closing of the polls, the securable container shall
be
|
sealed with filament tape provided for that purpose, which |
shall be wrapped
around the box lengthwise and crosswise, at |
least twice each way, and each of
the election judges shall |
|
sign the seal.
|
(c) Instead of the affidavit form described in subsection |
(b), the county
clerk or board of election commissioners, as |
the case may be, may design and
use a multi-part affidavit form |
that is imprinted upon or attached to the
provisional ballot |
envelope described in subsection (b). If a county clerk or
|
board of election commissioners elects to design and use its |
own multi-part
affidavit form, then the county clerk or board |
of election commissioners shall
establish a mechanism for |
accepting any information the provisional voter has
supplied to |
the election judge to support his or her claim that he or she |
is a
duly registered voter. In all other respects, a county |
clerk or board of
election commissioners shall establish |
procedures consistent with subsection
(b).
|
(d) The county clerk or board of election commissioners, as |
the case may be,
shall use the completed affidavit form |
described in subsection (b) to update
the person's voter |
registration information in the State voter registration
|
database and voter registration database of the county clerk or |
board of
election commissioners, as the case may be. If a |
person is later determined not
to be a registered voter based |
on Section 18A-15 of this Code, then the
affidavit shall be |
processed by the county clerk or board of election
|
commissioners, as the case may be, as a voter registration |
application.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03; 93-1071, eff. 6-1-05.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/18A-15)
|
Sec. 18A-15. Validating and counting provisional ballots.
|
(a) The county clerk or board of election commissioners |
shall complete the
validation and counting of provisional |
ballots within 14 calendar days of
the day of the election. The |
county clerk or board of election commissioners
shall have 7 |
calendar days from the completion of the validation and
|
counting of provisional ballots to conduct its final canvass. |
The State Board
of Elections shall complete within 31 calendar |
|
days of the election or sooner
if all the returns are received, |
its final canvass of the vote for all public
offices.
|
(b) If a county clerk or board of election commissioners |
determines that all
of the following apply, then a provisional |
ballot is valid and shall be counted
as a vote:
|
(1) The provisional voter cast the provisional ballot |
in the correct
precinct based on the address provided by |
the provisional voter . The provisional voter's affidavit |
shall serve as a change of address request by that voter |
for registration purposes for the next ensuing election if |
it bears an address different from that in the records of |
the election authority ;
|
(2) The affidavit executed by the provisional voter |
pursuant to subsection
(b)(2) of Section 18A-5 contains, at |
a minimum, the provisional voter's first and last name, |
house number and street name, and signature or mark
18A-10 |
is properly executed ; and
|
(3) the provisional voter is a registered voter based |
on information
available to the county clerk or board of |
election commissioners provided by or
obtained from any of |
the following:
|
i. the provisional voter;
|
ii. an election judge;
|
iii. the statewide voter registration database |
maintained by the State
Board of Elections;
|
iv. the records of the county clerk or board of |
election commissioners'
database; or
|
v. the records of the Secretary of State.
|
(c) With respect to subsection (b)(3) of this Section, the |
county clerk or
board of election commissioners shall |
investigate and record whether or not the specified
each of the |
5
types of information is available from each of the 5 |
identified sources
and record whether this information is or is
|
not available . If the
one or more types of information is |
available from one or more of the identified sources , then the
|
county clerk or board of election commissioners shall seek to |
|
obtain the
all relevant
information from each of those sources |
until satisfied, with information from at least one of those |
sources, that the provisional voter is registered and entitled |
to vote
all sources identified in subsection (b)(3) . The county |
clerk
or board of election commissioners shall use any |
information it obtains as the
basis for determining the voter |
registration status of the provisional voter.
If a conflict |
exists among the information available to the county clerk or
|
board of election commissioners as to the registration status |
of the
provisional voter, then the county clerk or board of |
election commissioners
shall make a
determination based on the |
totality of the circumstances. In a case where the
above |
information equally supports or opposes the registration |
status of the
voter, the county clerk or board of election |
commissioners shall decide in
favor of the provisional voter as |
being duly registered to vote. If the
statewide voter |
registration database maintained by the State Board of
|
Elections indicates that the provisional voter is registered to |
vote, but the
county clerk's or board of election |
commissioners' voter registration database
indicates that the |
provisional voter is not registered to vote, then the
|
information found in the statewide voter registration database |
shall control
the matter and the provisional voter shall be |
deemed to be registered to vote.
If the records of the county |
clerk or board of election commissioners indicates
that the |
provisional
voter is registered to vote, but the statewide |
voter registration database
maintained by the State Board of |
Elections indicates that the provisional voter
is not |
registered to vote, then the information found in the records |
of the
county clerk or board of election commissioners shall |
control the matter and
the provisional voter shall be deemed to |
be registered to vote. If the
provisional voter's signature on |
his or her provisional ballot request varies
from the signature |
on
an otherwise valid registration application solely because |
of the substitution
of initials for the first or middle name, |
the election authority may not reject
the provisional ballot.
|
|
(d) In validating the registration status of a person |
casting a provisional
ballot, the county clerk or board of |
election commissioners shall not require a
provisional voter to |
complete any form other than the affidavit executed by the
|
provisional voter under subsection (b)(2) of Section 18A-5. In |
addition,
the
county clerk or board of election commissioners |
shall not require all
provisional voters or
any particular |
class or group of provisional voters to appear personally |
before
the county clerk or board of election commissioners or |
as a matter of policy
require provisional voters to submit |
additional information to verify or
otherwise support the |
information already submitted by the provisional voter.
The |
provisional voter may, within 2 calendar days after the |
election, submit
additional information to the county clerk or |
board of election commissioners.
This information must be |
received by the county clerk or board of election
commissioners |
within the 2-calendar-day period.
|
(e) If the county clerk or board of election commissioners |
determines that
subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or (b)(3) does not |
apply, then the provisional
ballot is not valid
and may not be |
counted. The provisional ballot envelope containing the ballot
|
cast by the provisional voter may not be opened. The county |
clerk or board of
election commissioners shall write on the |
provisional ballot envelope the
following: "Provisional ballot |
determined invalid.".
|
(f) If the county clerk or board of election commissioners |
determines that a
provisional ballot is valid under this |
Section, then the provisional ballot
envelope shall be opened. |
The outside of each provisional ballot
envelope shall
also be
|
marked to identify the precinct and the date of the election.
|
(g) The provisional ballots determined to be valid shall be |
added to the
vote
totals for the precincts from which they were |
cast in the order in which the
ballots were opened.
The county |
clerk or board of election commissioners may, in the |
alternative,
create a separate provisional-voter precinct for |
the purpose of counting and
recording provisional ballots and |
|
adding the recorded votes to its official
canvass.
The |
validation and counting of provisional ballots shall be subject |
to the
provisions of this Code that apply to pollwatchers.
If |
the provisional ballots are a ballot of a punch card
voting |
system, then the provisional ballot shall be counted in a |
manner
consistent with Article 24A. If the provisional ballots
|
are a ballot of optical scan or other type of approved |
electronic voting
system, then the provisional ballots shall be |
counted in a manner consistent
with Article 24B.
|
(h) As soon as the ballots have been counted, the election |
judges or
election officials shall, in
the presence of the |
county clerk or board of election commissioners, place each
of |
the following items in a separate envelope or bag: (1) all |
provisional
ballots, voted or spoiled; (2)
all provisional |
ballot envelopes of provisional ballots voted or spoiled; and
|
(3) all executed affidavits
of the provisional ballots voted or |
spoiled.
All provisional ballot envelopes for provisional |
voters who have been
determined
not to be registered to vote |
shall remain sealed. The county clerk or board of
election |
commissioners shall treat the provisional ballot envelope |
containing
the written affidavit as a voter registration |
application for that person for
the next election and process |
that application.
The election judges or election officials |
shall then
securely
seal each envelope or bag, initial the |
envelope or bag, and plainly mark on the
outside of the |
envelope or bag in ink the precinct in which the provisional
|
ballots were cast. The election judges or election officials |
shall then place
each sealed envelope or
bag into a box, secure |
and seal it in the same manner as described in
item (6) of |
subsection (b) of Section 18A-5. Each election judge or |
election
official shall take and subscribe an oath
before the |
county clerk or
board of election commissioners that the |
election judge or election official
securely kept the
ballots |
and papers in the box, did not permit any person to open the |
box or
otherwise touch or tamper with the ballots and papers in |
the box, and has no
knowledge of any other person opening the |
|
box.
For purposes of this Section, the term "election official" |
means the county
clerk, a member of the board of election |
commissioners, as the case may be, and
their respective |
employees.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-2.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-2.1)
|
Sec. 19-2.1. At the consolidated primary, general primary,
|
consolidated, and general elections, electors entitled
to vote
|
by absentee ballot under the provisions of Section 19-1
may |
vote in person at the office of the municipal clerk, if the |
elector
is a resident of a municipality not having a board of |
election commissioners,
or at the office of the township clerk |
or, in counties not under township
organization, at the office |
of the road district clerk if the elector is
not a resident of |
a municipality; provided, in each case that the municipal,
|
township or road district clerk, as the case may be, is |
authorized to conduct
in-person absentee voting pursuant to |
this Section. Absentee voting in such
municipal and township |
clerk's offices under this Section shall be
conducted from the |
22nd day through the day before the election.
|
Municipal and township clerks (or road district clerks) who |
have regularly
scheduled working hours at regularly designated |
offices other than a place
of residence and whose offices are |
open for business during the same hours
as the office of the |
election authority shall conduct in-person absentee
voting for |
said elections. Municipal and township clerks (or road district
|
clerks) who have no regularly scheduled working hours but who |
have regularly
designated offices other than a place of |
residence shall conduct in-person
absentee voting for said |
elections during the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. or 9:00 |
a.m. to 5:00 p.m., weekdays, and 9:00 a.m. to 12:00
noon on |
Saturdays, but not during such hours as the office of the |
election
authority is closed, unless the clerk files a written |
waiver with the
election authority not later than July 1 of |
each year stating that he or
she is unable to conduct such |
|
voting and the reasons therefor. Such clerks
who conduct |
in-person absentee voting may extend their hours for that
|
purpose to include any hours in which the election authority's |
office is
open. Municipal and township clerks (or
road district |
clerks) who have no regularly scheduled office hours and no
|
regularly designated offices other than a place of residence |
may not conduct
in-person absentee voting for said elections. |
The election authority may
devise alternative methods for |
in-person absentee voting before said elections
for those |
precincts located within the territorial area of a municipality
|
or township (or road district) wherein the clerk of such |
municipality or
township (or road district) has waived or is |
not entitled to conduct such
voting.
In addition, electors may |
vote by absentee ballot under the provisions of
Section 19-1 at |
the office of the election authority having jurisdiction
over |
their residence.
|
In conducting absentee voting under this Section, the |
respective
clerks shall not be required to verify the signature |
of the absentee
voter by comparison with the signature on the |
official registration
record card. However, the clerk shall |
reasonably ascertain the identity
of such applicant, shall |
verify that each such applicant is a registered
voter, and |
shall verify the precinct in which he or she is registered
and |
the proper ballots of the political subdivisions in which the
|
applicant resides and is entitled to vote, prior to providing |
any
absentee ballot to such applicant. The clerk shall verify |
the
applicant's registration and from the most recent poll list |
provided by
the county clerk, and if the applicant is not |
listed on that poll list
then by telephoning the office of the |
county clerk.
|
Absentee voting procedures in the office of the municipal, |
township
and road district clerks shall be subject to all of |
the applicable
provisions of this Article 19.
Pollwatchers may |
be appointed to observe in-person absentee voting
procedures |
and view all reasonably requested records relating to the |
conduct of the election, provided the secrecy of the ballot is |
|
not impinged, at the office of the municipal, township or road |
district
clerks' offices where such absentee voting is |
conducted. Such pollwatchers
shall qualify and be appointed in |
the same manner as provided in Sections
7-34 and 17-23, except |
each candidate, political party or
organization of citizens may |
appoint only one pollwatcher for each location
where in-person |
absentee voting is conducted. Pollwatchers must
be registered |
to vote in Illinois and possess
valid pollwatcher credentials.
|
All requirements in this Article
applicable to election |
authorities shall apply to the respective local
clerks, except |
where inconsistent with this Section.
|
The sealed absentee ballots in their carrier envelope shall |
be
delivered by the respective clerks, or by the election |
authority on behalf of
a clerk if the clerk and the election
|
authority agree, to the proper polling place
before the close |
of the polls on the day of the general primary,
consolidated |
primary, consolidated, or general election.
|
Not more than 23 days before the nonpartisan, general and |
consolidated
elections, the county clerk shall make available |
to those
municipal, township and road district clerks |
conducting in-person absentee
voting within such county, a |
sufficient
number of applications, absentee ballots, |
envelopes, and printed voting
instruction slips for use by |
absentee voters in the offices of such
clerks. The respective |
clerks shall receipt for all ballots received,
shall return all |
unused or spoiled ballots to the county clerk on the
day of the |
election and shall strictly account for all ballots received.
|
The ballots delivered to the respective clerks shall |
include absentee
ballots for each precinct in the municipality, |
township or road
district, or shall include such separate |
ballots for each political
subdivision conducting an election |
of officers or a referendum on that
election day as will permit |
any resident of the municipality, township
or road district to |
vote absentee in the office of the proper clerk.
|
The clerks of all municipalities, townships and road |
districts may
distribute applications for absentee ballot for |
|
the use of voters who
wish to mail such applications to the |
appropriate election authority.
Such applications for absentee |
ballots shall be made on forms provided
by the election |
authority. Duplication of such forms by the municipal,
township |
or road district clerk is prohibited.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-4)
(from Ch. 46, par. 19-4)
|
Sec. 19-4. Mailing or delivery of ballots - Time.) |
Immediately upon
the receipt of such application either by |
mail, not more than 40 days
nor less than 5 days prior to such |
election, or by personal delivery not
more than 40 days nor |
less than one day prior to such election, at the
office of such |
election authority, it shall be the duty of such election
|
authority to examine the records to ascertain whether or not |
such
applicant is lawfully entitled to vote as
requested, and |
if found so to be, to post within one business day thereafter
|
the name, street address,
ward and precinct number or township |
and district number, as the case may be,
of such applicant |
given on a list, the pages of which are to be numbered
|
consecutively to be kept by such election authority for such |
purpose in a
conspicuous, open and public place accessible to |
the public at the entrance of
the office of such election |
authority, and in such a manner that such list may
be viewed |
without necessity of requesting permission therefor . Within |
one
business day after posting the name and other information |
of an applicant for
an absentee ballot, the election authority |
shall transmit that name and other
posted information to the |
State Board of Elections, which shall maintain those
names and |
other information in an electronic format on its website, |
arranged by
county and accessible to State and local political |
committees. , and Within 2
business days after posting a name |
and other information on the list within
its
office, the |
election authority shall
thereafter to mail,
postage prepaid, |
or deliver in person in such office an official ballot
or |
ballots if more than one are to be voted at said election. Mail |
|
delivery
of Temporarily Absent Student ballot applications |
pursuant to Section
19-12.3 shall be by nonforwardable mail. |
However,
for the consolidated election, absentee ballots for |
certain precincts may
be delivered to applicants not less than |
25 days before the election if
so much time is required to have |
prepared and printed the ballots containing
the names of |
persons nominated for offices at the consolidated primary.
The |
election authority shall enclose with each absentee ballot or
|
application written instructions on how voting assistance |
shall be provided
pursuant to Section 17-14 and a document, |
written and approved by the State
Board of Elections,
|
enumerating
the circumstances under which a person is |
authorized to vote by absentee
ballot pursuant to this Article; |
such document shall also include a
statement informing the |
applicant that if he or she falsifies or is
solicited by |
another to falsify his or her
eligibility to cast an absentee |
ballot, such applicant or other is subject
to
penalties |
pursuant to Section 29-10 and Section 29-20 of the Election |
Code.
Each election authority shall maintain a list of the |
name, street address,
ward and
precinct, or township and |
district number, as the case may be, of all
applicants who have |
returned absentee ballots to such authority, and the name of |
such absent voter shall be added to such list
within one |
business day from receipt of such ballot.
If the absentee |
ballot envelope indicates that the voter was assisted in
|
casting the ballot, the name of the person so assisting shall |
be included on
the list. The list, the pages of which are to be |
numbered consecutively,
shall be kept by each election |
authority in a conspicuous, open, and public
place accessible |
to the public at the entrance of the office of the election
|
authority and in a manner that the list may be viewed without |
necessity of
requesting permission for viewing.
|
Each election authority shall maintain a list for each |
election
of the
voters to whom it has issued absentee ballots. |
The list shall be
maintained for each precinct within the |
jurisdiction of the election
authority. Prior to the opening of |
|
the polls on election day, the
election authority shall deliver |
to the judges of election in each
precinct the list of |
registered voters in that precinct to whom absentee
ballots |
have been issued by mail.
|
Each election authority shall maintain a list for each |
election of
voters to whom it has issued temporarily absent |
student ballots. The list
shall be maintained for each election |
jurisdiction within which such voters
temporarily abide. |
Immediately after the close of the period during which
|
application may be made by mail for absentee ballots, each |
election
authority shall mail to each other election authority |
within the State a
certified list of all such voters |
temporarily abiding within the
jurisdiction of the other |
election authority.
|
In the event that the return address of an
application for |
ballot by a physically incapacitated elector
is that of a |
facility licensed or certified under the Nursing Home Care
Act, |
within the jurisdiction of the election authority, and the |
applicant
is a registered voter in the precinct in which such |
facility is located,
the ballots shall be prepared and |
transmitted to a responsible judge of
election no later than 9 |
a.m. on the Saturday, Sunday or Monday immediately
preceding |
the election as designated by the election authority under
|
Section 19-12.2. Such judge shall deliver in person on the |
designated day
the ballot to the applicant on the premises of |
the facility from which
application was made. The election |
authority shall by mail notify the
applicant in such facility |
that the ballot will be delivered by a judge of
election on the |
designated day.
|
All applications for absentee ballots shall be available at |
the office
of the election authority for public inspection upon |
request from the
time of receipt thereof by the election |
authority until 30 days after the
election, except during the |
time such applications are kept in the
office of the election |
authority pursuant to Section 19-7, and except during
the time |
such applications are in the possession of the judges of |
|
election.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-653, eff. 8-14-96; 90-101, eff. 7-11-97.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/19-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 19-10)
|
Sec. 19-10. Pollwatchers may be appointed to observe |
in-person absentee
voting procedures and view all reasonably |
requested records relating to the conduct of the election, |
provided the secrecy of the ballot is not impinged, at the |
office of the election authority as well as at
municipal, |
township or road district clerks' offices where such absentee
|
voting is conducted. Such pollwatchers shall qualify and be |
appointed in
the same manner as provided in Sections 7-34 and |
17-23, except each
candidate, political party or organization |
of citizens may appoint only one
pollwatcher for each location |
where in-person absentee voting is conducted.
Pollwatchers |
must be registered to vote in Illinois and possess valid
|
pollwatcher credentials.
|
In the polling place on election day, pollwatchers shall be |
permitted
to be present during the casting of the absent |
voters' ballots and the vote
of any absent voter may be |
challenged for cause the same as if he were
present and voted |
in person, and the judges of the election or a majority
thereof |
shall have power and authority to hear and determine the |
legality
of such ballot; Provided, however, that if a challenge |
to any absent
voter's right to vote is sustained, notice of the |
same must be given by the
judges of election by mail addressed |
to the voter's place of residence.
|
Where certain absent voters' ballots are counted on the day |
of the election
in the office of the election authority as |
provided in Section 19-8 of this
Act, each political party, |
candidate and qualified civic organization shall
be entitled to |
have present one pollwatcher for each panel of election judges
|
therein assigned. Such pollwatchers shall be subject to the |
same provisions
as are provided for pollwatchers in Sections |
7-34 and 17-23 of this Code,
and shall be permitted to observe |
the election judges making the signature
comparison between |
|
that which is on the ballot envelope and that which is
on the |
permanent voter registration record card taken from the master |
file.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/Art. 19A heading new)
|
ARTICLE 19A. |
EARLY VOTING BY PERSONAL APPEARANCE
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-5 new)
|
Sec. 19A-5. Issuance of ballots; voting booths.
|
(a) If a request is made to vote early by a registered |
voter in person, the
election
authority shall issue a ballot |
for early voting to the voter. The ballot must
be voted on the
|
premises of the election authority, except as otherwise |
provided in this Article, and returned to the election |
authority.
|
(b) On the dates for early voting prescribed in Section |
19A-15, each
election authority shall provide voting booths, |
with suitable equipment for
voting, on the premises of the |
election authority and any other early voting polling place for |
use by registered voters
who are issued ballots for early |
voting in accordance with this Article.
|
(c) The election authority must maintain a list for each |
election of the
voters to whom it has issued early ballots. The |
list must be maintained for
each precinct within the election |
authority's jurisdiction. Before the opening
of the polls on |
election day, the
election authority shall deliver to the |
judges of election in each precinct the
list of registered |
voters who have voted by early ballot.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-10 new)
|
Sec. 19A-10. Permanent polling places for early voting.
|
(a) An election authority may establish permanent polling |
places for early
voting by personal appearance at locations |
throughout the election authority's
jurisdiction, including |
|
but not limited to a municipal clerk's office, a township |
clerk's office, a road district clerk's office, or a county or |
local public agency office. Except as otherwise provided in |
subsection (b), any person
entitled to vote early by personal |
appearance may do so at any polling place
established for early |
voting.
|
(b) If it is impractical for the election authority to |
provide at each
polling place for early voting a ballot in |
every form required in the election
authority's jurisdiction, |
the election authority may:
|
(1) provide appropriate forms of ballots to the office |
of the municipal
clerk in a municipality not having a board |
of election commissioners; the
township clerk; or in |
counties not under township organization, the road
|
district clerk; and
|
(2) limit voting at that polling place to registered |
voters in that
municipality, ward or group of wards, |
township, or road district.
|
If the early voting polling place does not have the correct |
ballot form for a person seeking to vote early, the election |
judge or election official conducting early voting at that |
polling place shall inform the person of that fact, give the |
person the appropriate telephone number of the election |
authority in order to locate an early voting polling place with |
the correct ballot form for use in that person's assigned |
precinct, and instruct the person to go to the proper early |
voting polling place to vote early.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-15 new)
|
Sec. 19A-15. Period for early voting; hours.
|
(a) The period for early voting by personal appearance |
begins the 22nd day preceding a general primary, consolidated |
primary, consolidated, or
general election and extends through |
the 5th day before election day.
|
(b) A permanent polling place for early voting must remain |
open during the
hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., or 9:00 a.m. |
|
to 5:00 p.m., on weekdays and
9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. on |
Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-20 new)
|
Sec. 19A-20. Temporary branch polling places.
|
(a) In addition to permanent polling places for early |
voting, the election
authority may establish temporary branch |
polling places for early voting.
|
(b) The provisions of subsection (b) of Section 19A-15 do |
not apply to a
temporary polling place. Voting at a temporary |
branch polling place may be
conducted on any one or more days |
and during any hours within the period for
early voting by |
personal appearance that are determined by the election
|
authority.
|
(c) The schedules for conducting voting do not need to be |
uniform among the
temporary branch polling places.
|
(d) The legal rights and remedies which inure to the owner |
or lessor of
private property are not impaired or otherwise |
affected by the leasing of the
property for use as a temporary |
branch polling place for early voting, except
to the extent |
necessary to conduct early voting at that location.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-25 new)
|
Sec. 19A-25. Schedule of locations and times for early |
voting.
|
(a) The election authority shall publish during the week |
before the period
for early voting and at least once each week |
during the period for early voting
in a newspaper of general |
circulation in the election authority's jurisdiction
a |
schedule stating:
|
(1) the location of each permanent and temporary |
polling place for early
voting and the precincts served by |
each location; and
|
(2) the dates and hours that early voting will be |
conducted at each
location.
|
(b) The election authority shall post a copy of the |
|
schedule at any office
or other location that is to be used as |
a polling place for early voting. The
schedule must be posted |
continuously for a period beginning not later than the
5th day |
before the first day of the
period for early voting by personal |
appearance and ending on the last day of
that period.
|
(c) The election authority must make copies of the schedule |
available to the
public in reasonable quantities without charge |
during the period of posting.
|
(d) If the election authority maintains a website, it shall |
make the schedule available on its website.
|
(e) No additional polling places for early voting may be |
established after
the schedule is published under this Section.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-25.5 new)
|
Sec. 19A-25.5. Voting machines, automatic tabulating |
equipment, and
precinct
tabulation optical scan technology |
voting equipment.
|
(a) In all jurisdictions in which voting machines are used, |
the provisions
of this Code that are not inconsistent with this |
Article relating to the
furnishing of ballot boxes, printing |
and furnishing ballots and supplies, the
canvassing of ballots, |
and the making of returns, apply with full force and
effect to |
the extent necessary to make this Article effective, provided |
that
the number of ballots to be printed shall be in the |
discretion of the election
authority, and provided further that |
early ballots shall not be counted until after the polls are |
closed on election day.
|
(b) If the election authority has adopted the use of |
automatic tabulating
equipment under Article 24A of this Code, |
and the provisions of that Article
are in conflict with the
|
provisions of this Article 19A, the provisions of Article 24A |
shall govern the
procedures followed by the election authority, |
its judges of election, and all
employees and agents; provided |
that early ballots shall not be counted until after the polls |
are closed on election day.
|
(c) If the election authority has adopted the use of |
|
precinct tabulation
optical scan technology voting equipment |
under Article 24B of this Code, and
the provisions of that |
Article are in conflict with the provisions of this
Article |
19A, the provisions of Article 24B shall govern the procedures |
followed
by the election authority, its judges of election, and |
all employees and
agents; provided that early ballots shall not |
be counted until after the polls are closed on election day.
|
(d) If the election authority has adopted the use of Direct |
Recording Electronic Voting Systems under Article 24C of this |
Code, and the provisions of that Article are in conflict with |
the provisions of this Article 19A, the provisions of Article |
24C shall govern the procedures followed by the election |
authority, its judges of election, and all employees and |
agents; provided that early ballots shall not be counted until |
after the polls are closed on election day.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-30 new)
|
Sec. 19A-30. Persons conducting early voting.
|
(a) The election authority (i) must use election judges to |
conduct early voting at an early voting polling place or (ii) |
must appoint an employee or, if appropriate, designate a |
municipal clerk, township clerk, or road district clerk to |
serve as the election
official in charge of a polling place for |
early voting.
|
(b) If the election authority uses an employee or |
designates a municipal, township, or road district clerk under |
subsection (a), then the election authority may also appoint as |
many additional election
officials as it deems necessary for |
the proper conduct of the election.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-35 new)
|
Sec. 19A-35. Procedure for voting.
|
(a) Not more than 23 days before the start of early voting, |
the county clerk
shall make available to the election authority |
conducting early voting by
personal
appearance a sufficient |
number of early ballots, envelopes, and printed voting
|
|
instruction slips for the use of early voters. The election |
authority shall
receipt for all ballots received and shall |
return unused or spoiled ballots at
the close of the early |
voting period to the county clerk and must strictly
account for |
all ballots received. The ballots delivered to the election
|
authority must include early ballots for each precinct in the |
election
authority's jurisdiction and must include separate |
ballots for each political
subdivision conducting an election |
of officers or a referendum at that
election.
|
(b) In conducting early voting under this Article, the |
election judge or official is
not required to verify the |
signature of the early voter by comparison with the
signature |
on the
official registration card, however, the judge or |
official must verify (i) the identity
of the applicant, (ii) |
that the applicant is a registered voter, (iii) the
precinct in |
which the applicant is registered, and (iv) the proper ballots |
of
the political subdivision in which the applicant resides and |
is entitled to
vote before providing an early ballot to the |
applicant. The applicant's identity must be verified by the |
applicant's presentation of an Illinois driver's license, a |
non-driver identification card issued by the Illinois |
Secretary of State, or another government-issued |
identification document containing the applicant's photograph. |
The election judge or official
must verify the applicant's |
registration from the most recent poll list
provided by the
|
election authority, and if the applicant is not listed on that |
poll list, by
telephoning the office of the election authority.
|
(c) The sealed early ballots in their carrier envelope |
shall be delivered by
the election authority to the proper |
polling place before the close of the
polls on the day of the |
election.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-40 new)
|
Sec. 19A-40. Enclosure of ballots in envelope. It is the |
duty of the election judge or official 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 the
ballot or ballots in an envelope unsealed to be |
furnished by him or her, 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 the .... precinct of the |
(1)
*township of .... (2) *City of .... or (3) *.... ward in |
the city of
.... residing at .... in that city or town in the |
county of .... and
State of Illinois, that I have lived at that |
address for .... months
last past; that I am lawfully entitled |
to vote in that 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 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 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 the printed slips |
to each of such applicants at
the same time the ballot is |
delivered to him or her.
The instructions shall include the |
following statement: "In signing the
certification on the early |
ballot envelope, you are attesting that you
personally marked |
this early ballot in secret.
If you are physically unable to |
mark the ballot, a friend or relative may
assist you. Federal |
and State laws prohibit your employer, your employer's
agent, |
or an officer or agent of your union from assisting physically |
|
disabled
voters."
|
In addition to the above, if a ballot to be provided to a |
voter
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 the |
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 voter at the same |
time the ballot is delivered to the
voter.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-45 new)
|
Sec. 19A-45. Certification. The voter shall make and |
subscribe the
certification provided for on the return envelope |
of the ballot, and the ballot
or ballots shall be folded by the |
voter in the manner required to be folded
before
depositing the |
ballot in the ballot box, and shall be deposited in the |
envelope
and the envelope securely sealed. The voter shall then |
endorse his or her
certificate on the back of the envelope and |
the envelope shall be returned to
the election judge or |
official conducting the early voting.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-50 new)
|
Sec. 19A-50. Receipt of ballots. Upon receipt of the |
voter's ballot, the
election judge or official shall enclose |
the unopened ballot in a large or carrier
envelope that shall |
be securely sealed and endorsed with the name and official
|
title of the election judge or official and the words, "This |
envelope contains a ballot
and must be opened on election day", |
together with the number and description
of the precinct in |
which the ballot is to be voted, and the election authority
|
shall safely keep the envelope in its office until delivered to |
the judges of
election as provided in Section 19A-35.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-55 new)
|
|
Sec. 19A-55. Casting the ballots. At the close of the |
regular balloting and at the close of the
polls the judges of |
election of each voting precinct shall proceed to cast the
|
early voter's ballot separately, and as each early voter's |
ballot is taken
shall open the outer or carrier envelope, |
announce the early voter's name, and
compare the signature upon |
the official registration card with the signature
upon the
|
certification on the ballot envelope. In case the judges find |
the
certification properly executed, that the signatures |
correspond, that the
applicant is a duly qualified voter in the |
precinct, and the voter has
not been present and voted
on the |
election day, they shall open the envelope
containing the early |
voter's ballot in a manner that does not deface or
destroy the |
certification thereon, or mark or tear the ballots therein and
|
take out the ballot or ballots therein contained without |
unfolding or
permitting the same to be unfolded or examined, |
and having endorsed the
ballot in like manner as other ballots |
are required to be endorsed, shall
deposit the same in the |
proper ballot box or boxes and enter the early
voter's name in |
the poll book the same as if he or she had voted on election
|
day.
The judges shall place the early ballot certification
|
envelopes in a separate envelope as per the direction of the |
election
authority. The envelope containing the early ballot |
certification
envelopes shall be returned to the election |
authority and preserved in like
manner as the official poll |
record.
|
In case the signatures do not correspond, or the applicant |
is not
a duly qualified voter in the precinct or the ballot |
envelope is
open or has been opened and resealed, or the voter |
has
voted on election day, the
previously cast
vote shall not |
be allowed, but without opening the early voter's envelope
the |
judge of the election shall mark across the face thereof, |
"Rejected",
giving the reason therefor.
|
In case the ballot envelope contains more than one ballot |
of any kind,
the ballots shall not be counted, but shall be |
marked "Rejected", giving
the reason therefor.
|
|
The early voters' envelopes and affidavits and the early |
voters'
envelope with its contents unopened, when the early |
vote is rejected,
shall be retained and preserved in the manner |
as now provided for the
retention and preservation of official |
ballots rejected at the election.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-60 new)
|
Sec. 19A-60. Pollwatchers. Pollwatchers may be appointed |
to observe early
voting by personal appearance at each |
permanent and temporary polling place
where early voting is |
conducted. The pollwatchers shall qualify and be
appointed in |
the same manner as provided in Sections 7-34 and 17-23, except
|
that
each candidate, political party, or organization of |
citizens may appoint only
one pollwatcher for each location |
where early voting by
personal appearance is conducted. |
Pollwatchers must be residents of the State
and possess valid |
pollwatcher credentials.
|
In the polling place on election day, pollwatchers are |
permitted to be
present during the casting of the early ballots |
and the vote of an early voter
may be challenged for cause the |
same as if the voter were present and voted on
election day. |
The judges of election or election authority personnel |
conducting early voting, or a majority of either of these, have |
the power
and authority to hear and determine the legality of |
the early ballot, provided that if a challenge to any early |
voter's right to vote is sustained,
notice of the challenge |
must be given by the judges of election or election authority |
by mail
addressed to the voter's place of residence.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-65 new)
|
Sec. 19A-65. Death of voter before opening of polls. |
Whenever due proof
is made to the judges of election or |
election authority personnel counting early ballots that any |
voter who has marked an early ballot
as provided in this |
Article has died before the opening of the polls on the
date of |
the election, the ballot of the deceased voter shall be |
|
returned in the same manner provided for rejected ballots; but |
the
casting of the ballot of a deceased voter shall not |
invalidate the election.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-70 new)
|
Sec. 19A-70. Advertising or campaigning in proximity of |
polling place;
penalty. During the period prescribed in Section |
19A-15 for early voting by
personal appearance, no advertising |
pertaining to any candidate or proposition
to be voted on may |
be displayed in or within 100 feet of any polling place used
by |
voters under this Article. No person may engage in |
electioneering in or
within 100 feet of any polling place used |
by voters under this Article. The provisions of Section 17-29 |
with respect to establishment of a campaign free zone apply to |
polling places under this Article.
|
Any person who violates this Section may be punished for |
contempt of court.
|
(10 ILCS 5/19A-75 new)
|
Sec. 19A-75. Early voting in jurisdictions using Direct |
Recording Electronic Voting Systems under Article 24C. |
Election authorities that have adopted for use Direct Recording |
Electronic Voting Systems under Article 24C may either use |
those voting systems to conduct early voting or, so long as at |
least one Direct Recording Electronic Voting System device is |
available at each early voting polling place, use whatever |
method the election authority uses for absentee balloting |
conducted by mail; provided that no early ballots are counted |
before the polls close on election day.
|
(10 ILCS 5/20-4)
(from Ch. 46, par. 20-4)
|
Sec. 20-4. Immediately upon the receipt of the official |
postcard or
an application as provided in Section 20-3 within |
the times heretofore
prescribed, the election authority shall |
ascertain whether or not such
applicant is legally entitled to |
vote as requested. If the election
authority ascertains that |
|
the applicant
is lawfully entitled to vote, it shall enter the |
name, street address,
ward and precinct number of such |
applicant on a list to be posted in his
or its office in a place |
accessible to the public.
Within one business day after posting |
the name and other information of an
applicant for a ballot, |
the election authority shall transmit that name and
posted |
information to the State Board of Elections, which shall |
maintain the
names and other information in an electronic |
format on its website, arranged by
county and accessible to |
State and local political committees.
As soon as the
official |
ballot is prepared the election authority shall immediately
|
deliver the same to the applicant in person or by mail, in the |
manner
prescribed in Section 20-5.
|
If any such election authority receives a second or |
additional
application which it believes is from the same |
person, he or it shall
submit it to the chief judge of the |
circuit court or any judge of that
court designated by the |
chief judge. If the chief judge or his designate
determines |
that the application submitted to him is a second or
additional |
one, he shall so notify the election authority who shall
|
disregard the second or additional application.
|
The election authority shall maintain a list for each |
election of the
voters to whom it has issued absentee ballots. |
The list
shall be maintained for each precinct within the |
jurisdiction of the
election authority. Prior to the opening of |
the polls on election day,
the election authority shall deliver |
to the judges of election in each
precinct the list of |
registered voters in that precinct to whom absentee
ballots |
have been issued.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-0155; 81-0953; 81-1509.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-1)
(from Ch. 46, par. 22-1)
|
Sec. 22-1. Abstracts of votes. Within 21 days after the
|
close of the
election at which candidates for offices |
hereinafter named in this Section are
voted upon, the county |
clerks of the respective counties, with the assistance
of the |
|
chairmen of the county central committees of the Republican and
|
Democratic parties of the county, shall open the returns and |
make abstracts of
the votes on a separate sheet for each of the |
following:
|
A. For Governor and Lieutenant Governor;
|
B. For State officers;
|
C. For presidential electors;
|
D. For United States Senators and Representatives to |
Congress;
|
E. For judges of the Supreme Court;
|
F. For judges of the Appellate Court;
|
G. For judges of the circuit court;
|
H. For Senators and Representatives to the General |
Assembly;
|
I. For State's Attorneys elected from 2 or more counties;
|
J. For amendments to the Constitution, and for other |
propositions
submitted to the electors of the entire State;
|
K. For county officers and for propositions submitted to |
the
electors of the county only;
|
L. For Regional Superintendent of Schools;
|
M. For trustees of Sanitary Districts; and
|
N. For Trustee of a Regional Board of School Trustees.
|
Each sheet shall report the returns by precinct or ward.
|
Multiple originals of each of the sheets shall be prepared |
and one of
each shall be turned over to the chairman of the |
county central
committee of each of the then existing |
established political parties, as
defined in Section 10-2, or |
his duly authorized representative
immediately after the |
completion of the entries on the sheets and before
the totals |
have been compiled.
|
The foregoing abstracts shall be preserved by the county |
clerk in his office.
|
Whenever any county chairman is also county clerk or |
whenever any
county chairman is unable to serve as a member of |
such canvassing board
the vice-chairman or secretary of his |
county central committee, in that
order, shall serve in his |
|
place as member of such canvassing board;
provided, that if |
none of these persons is able to serve, the county
chairman may |
appoint a member of his county central committee to serve
as a |
member of such canvassing board.
|
The powers and duties of the county canvassing board are |
limited to
those specified in this Section. In no event shall |
such canvassing board
open any package in which the ballots |
have been wrapped or any envelope
containing "defective" or |
"objected to" ballots, or in any manner
undertake to examine |
the ballots used in the election, except as
provided in Section |
22-9.1 or when directed by a court in an election
contest. Nor |
shall such canvassing board call in the precinct judges of
|
election or any other persons to open or recount the ballots.
|
No person who is shown by the canvassing board's |
proclamation to have been elected at the consolidated election |
or general election as a write-in candidate shall take office |
unless that person has first filed with the certifying office |
or board a statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10 or |
Section 10-5, a statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1, and a |
receipt for filing a statement of economic interests in |
relation to the unit of government to which he or she has been |
elected. For officers elected at the consolidated election, the |
certifying officer shall notify the election authority of the |
receipt of those documents, and the county clerk shall issue |
the certification of election under the provisions of Section |
22-18.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 22-5)
|
Sec. 22-5. Immediately after the completion of the |
abstracts of votes by precinct or ward , the county
clerk shall |
make 2 correct copies of the abstracts of votes for Governor,
|
Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, State Comptroller, |
Treasurer,
Attorney General, both of which said copies he shall |
envelope and seal up,
and endorse upon the envelopes in |
substance, "Abstracts of votes for State
Officers from .... |
|
County"; and shall seal up a copy of each of the
abstracts of |
votes for other officers and amendments to the Constitution
and |
other propositions voted on, and endorse the same so as to show |
the
contents of the package, and address the same to the State |
Board of
Elections. The several packages shall then be placed |
in one envelope and
addressed to the State Board of Elections.
|
The county clerk shall send the sealed envelope addressed to |
the State Board
of Elections
via overnight mail so it arrives |
at the address the following calendar day.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-7)
(from Ch. 46, par. 22-7)
|
Sec. 22-7. Canvass of votes; declaration and proclamation |
of result. The State Board of Elections, shall proceed within |
31 days
after the election,
and sooner if all the returns are |
received, to canvass the votes given
for United States Senators |
and Representatives to Congress, State
executive officers, |
judges of the Supreme Court, judges of the Appellate
Court, |
judges of the Circuit Court, Senators, Representatives to the
|
General Assembly, State's Attorneys and Regional |
Superintendents of Schools
elected from 2 or more counties, |
respectively, and the persons
having the highest number of |
votes for the respective offices shall be
declared duly |
elected, but if it appears that more than the number of
persons |
to be elected have the highest and an equal number of votes for
|
the same office, the electoral board shall decide by lot which |
of such
persons shall be elected; and to each person duly |
elected, the Governor
shall give a certificate of election or |
commission, as the case may
require, and shall cause |
proclamation to be made of the result of the
canvass, and they |
shall at the same time and in the same manner, canvass
the vote |
cast upon amendments to the Constitution, and upon other
|
propositions submitted to the electors of the entire State; and |
the
Governor shall cause to be made such proclamation of the |
result of the
canvass as the statutes elsewhere provide. The |
State Board of Elections
shall transmit to the State |
|
Comptroller a list of the persons elected to
the various |
offices. The State Board of Elections shall also transmit to
|
the Supreme Court the names of persons elected to judgeships in
|
adversary elections and the names of judges who fail to win |
retention in
office.
|
No person who is shown by the canvassing board's |
proclamation to have been elected at the consolidated election |
or general election as a write-in candidate shall take office |
unless that person has first filed with the certifying office |
or board a statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10 or |
Section 10-5, a statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1, and a |
receipt for filing a statement of economic interests in |
relation to the unit of government to which he or she has been |
elected. For officers elected at the consolidated election, the |
certifying officer shall notify the election authority of the |
receipt of those documents, and the county clerk shall issue |
the certification of election under the provisions of Section |
22-18.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-8)
(from Ch. 46, par. 22-8)
|
Sec. 22-8. In municipalities operating under Article 6 of |
this Act,
within 21 days after the close of such election, a |
judge of
the circuit
court, with the assistance of the city |
attorney and the board of election
commissioners, who are |
hereby declared a canvassing board for such city,
shall open |
all returns left respectively, with the election |
commissioners,
the county clerk, and city comptroller, and |
shall make abstracts or
statements of the votes in the |
following manner, as the case may require,
viz: All votes for |
Governor and Lieutenant Governor on one sheet; all votes
for |
other State officers on another sheet; all votes for |
presidential
electors on another sheet; all votes for United |
States Senators and
Representatives to Congress on another |
sheet; all votes for judges of the
Supreme Court on another |
sheet; all votes for judges of the Appellate Court
on another |
|
sheet; all votes for Judges of the Circuit Court on another
|
sheet; all votes for Senators and Representatives to the |
General Assembly
on another sheet; all votes for State's |
Attorneys where elected from 2 or
more counties on another |
sheet; all votes for County Officers on another
sheet; all |
votes for City Officers on another sheet; all votes for Town
|
Officers on another sheet; and all votes for any other office |
on a separate
and appropriate sheet; all votes for any |
proposition, which may be
submitted to a vote of the people, on |
another sheet, and all votes against
any proposition, submitted |
to a vote of the people, on another sheet.
|
Each sheet shall report the returns by precinct or ward.
|
Multiple originals of each of the sheets shall be prepared |
and one of
each shall be turned over to the chairman of the |
county central committee
of each of the then existing |
established political parties, as defined in
Section 10-2, or |
his duly authorized representative immediately after the
|
completion of the entries on the sheets and before the totals |
have been
compiled.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-9) (from Ch. 46, par. 22-9)
|
Sec. 22-9. It shall be the duty of such Board of Canvassers |
to canvass, and add up
and declare the result of every election |
hereafter held within the
boundaries of such city, village or |
incorporated town, operating under
Article 6 of this Act, and |
the judge of the circuit court shall thereupon
enter of record |
such abstract and result by precinct or ward , and a certified |
copy of such
record shall thereupon be filed with the County |
Clerk of the county; and
such abstracts or results shall be |
treated, by the County Clerk in all
respects, as if made by the |
Canvassing Board now provided by the foregoing
sections of this |
law, and he shall transmit the same to the State Board of
|
Elections, or other proper officer, as required hereinabove.
|
The county clerk or board of election commissioners, as the |
case may be,
shall send the
abstract by precinct or ward and |
|
result in a sealed envelope addressed to the State Board of
|
Elections via
overnight mail so it arrives at the address the |
following calendar day.
And such
abstracts or results so |
entered and declared by such judge, and a certified
copy |
thereof, shall be treated everywhere within the state, and by |
all
public officers, with the same binding force and effect as |
the abstract of
votes now authorized by the foregoing |
provisions of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-15) (from Ch. 46, par. 22-15)
|
Sec. 22-15. The county clerk or board of election |
commissioners shall, upon request,
and by mail if so requested, |
furnish free of charge to any candidate for
State office, |
including State Senator and Representative in the General
|
Assembly, and any candidate for congressional office, whose |
name appeared
upon the ballot within the jurisdiction of
the |
county clerk or board of election commissioners, a copy of the |
abstract
of votes by precinct or ward for all candidates for |
the office for which such
person was a candidate. Such abstract |
shall be furnished no later than 2
days after the receipt of |
the request or 8 days after the completing of the
canvass, |
whichever is later.
|
Within one calendar day following the canvass and
|
proclamation of each general
primary election and general |
election, each election authority shall transmit
to the |
principal office of the State Board of Elections copies of the |
abstracts
of votes by precinct or ward
for the above-named |
offices and for the offices of
ward, township, and precinct |
committeeman via overnight mail so that the
abstract of votes |
arrives at the address the following calendar day. Each
|
election authority shall
also transmit to the principal office |
of the State Board of Elections copies
of current precinct poll |
lists.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-15.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 22-15.1)
|
Sec. 22-15.1. (a) Within 60 days following the canvass
of |
the general election within each election jurisdiction, the |
election
authority shall
prepare, in typewritten or legible |
computer-generated form, a report of the
abstracts of votes by |
precinct for all offices and
questions of public policy in |
connection with which votes were cast within
the election |
jurisdiction at the general election. The report shall
include |
the total number of ballots cast within each precinct or ward |
and the
total
number of registered voters within each precinct |
or ward . The election
authority shall provide a copy of the |
report to the chairman of the county
central committee of each |
established political party in the county within
which the |
election jurisdiction is contained, and shall make a reasonable
|
number of copies of the report available for distribution to |
the public.
|
(b) Within 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
1985, each election authority shall prepare, |
in typewritten or legible
computer-generated form, a report of |
the type required
by subsection (a) concerning the general |
election of 1984. The election
authority shall provide a copy |
of the report to the chairman of the county
central committee |
of each established political party in the county in
which the |
election jurisdiction is contained, and shall make a reasonable
|
number of copies of the report available for distribution to |
the public.
|
(c) An election authority may charge a fee to reimburse the |
actual cost
of duplicating each copy of a report provided |
pursuant to subsection (a) or
(b).
|
(Source: P.A. 89-700, eff. 1-17-97.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/22-17)
(from Ch. 46, par. 22-17)
|
Sec. 22-17. (a) Except as provided in subsection (b),
the |
canvass of votes cast at the nonpartisan and consolidated |
election
elections
shall be conducted by the following |
canvassing boards within 21 days
after the close of such |
|
elections:
|
1. For city offices, by the mayor, the city attorney |
and the city
clerk.
|
2. For village and incorporated town offices, by the |
president of
the board of trustees, one member of the board |
of trustees, and the
village or incorporated town clerk.
|
3. For township offices, by the township supervisor, |
the eligible town
trustee elected in the township who has |
the longest term of continuous
service as town trustee, and |
the township clerk.
|
4. For road district offices, by the highway |
commissioner and the
road district clerk.
|
5. For school district or community college district |
offices, by the
school or community college district board.
|
6. For special district elected offices, by the board |
of the special
district.
|
7. For multi-county educational service region |
offices, by the
regional board of school trustees.
|
8. For township trustee of schools or land |
commissioner, by the
township trustees of schools or land |
commissioners.
|
9. For park district offices, by the president of the |
park board, one
member of the board of park commissioners |
and the secretary of the park
district.
|
10. For multi-township assessment districts, by the |
chairman,
clerk, and assessor of the multi-township |
assessment district.
|
(b) The city canvassing board provided in Section 22-8 |
shall canvass
the votes cast at the nonpartisan and |
consolidated election
elections for offices
of any political |
subdivision entirely within the jurisdiction of a
municipal |
board of election commissioners.
|
(c) The canvass of votes cast upon any public questions |
submitted to
the voters of any political subdivision, or any |
precinct or combination of
precincts within a political |
subdivision, at any regular election or at
any emergency |
|
referendum election, including votes cast by voters
outside of |
the political subdivision where the question is for
annexation |
thereto, shall be canvassed by the same board provided for in
|
this Section for the canvass of votes of the officers of such |
political
subdivision. However, referenda conducted throughout |
a county and
referenda of sanitary districts whose officers are |
elected at general
elections shall be canvassed by the county |
canvassing board. The votes
cast on a public question for the |
formation of a political subdivision
shall be canvassed by the |
circuit court that ordered the question
submitted, or by such |
officers of the court as may be appointed for such
purpose, |
except where in the formation or reorganization of a school
|
district or districts the regional superintendent of schools is
|
designated by law as the canvassing official.
|
(c-5) No person who is shown by the canvassing board's |
proclamation to have been elected at the consolidated election |
or general election as a write-in candidate shall take office |
unless that person has first filed with the certifying office |
or board a statement of candidacy pursuant to Section 7-10 or |
Section 10-5, a statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1, and a |
receipt for filing a statement of economic interests in |
relation to the unit of government to which he or she has been |
elected. For officers elected at the consolidated election, the |
certifying officer shall notify the election authority of the |
receipt of those documents, and the county clerk shall issue |
the certification of election under the provisions of Section |
22-18.
|
(d) The canvass of votes for offices of political |
subdivisions cast
at special elections to fill vacancies held |
on the day of any regular
election shall be conducted by the |
canvassing board which is responsible
for canvassing the votes |
at the regularly scheduled election for such office.
|
(e) Abstracts of votes prepared pursuant to canvasses under |
this Section shall report returns by precinct or ward.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
|
(10 ILCS 5/23-15.1)
|
Sec. 23-15.1. Production of ballot counting code and |
attendance of
witnesses. All voting-system vendors shall, |
within 90 days after the adoption
of rules or upon application |
for voting-system approval, place in escrow all
computer code |
for its voting system with the State Board of Elections. The
|
State Board of Elections shall promulgate rules to implement |
this Section. For
purposes of this Section, the term "computer |
code" includes, but is not limited
to, ballot counting source |
code, table structures, modules, program narratives,
and other |
human readable computer instructions used to count ballots.
Any |
computer code submitted by vendors to the State Board of |
Elections shall be
considered strictly confidential and the |
intellectual property of the vendors
and shall not be subject |
to public disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act.
|
The State Board of Elections shall determine which software |
components of a
voting system it deems necessary to enable the |
review and verification of the
computer. The State Board of |
Elections shall secure and
maintain all
proprietary computer |
codes in strict confidence and shall make a
computer code |
available to authorized persons in
connection with an election |
contest or pursuant to any State or federal court
order.
|
In an election contest, each party to the contest may |
designate one or more
persons who are authorized to receive the |
computer code of the
relevant voting systems. The person or |
persons authorized to receive the
relevant computer code shall |
enter into a confidentiality
agreement with the State Board of |
Elections and must exercise the highest
degree of reasonable |
care to maintain the confidentiality of all proprietary
|
information.
|
The State Board of Elections shall promulgate rules to |
provide for the
security, review, and verification of computer |
codes.
Verification
includes, but is not limited to, |
determining that the computer
code corresponds to computer |
instructions actually in use to count ballots.
The State Board |
of Elections shall hire, contract with, or otherwise provide |
|
sufficiently qualified resources, both human and capital, to |
conduct the reviews with the greatest possible expectation of |
thoroughness, completeness, and effectiveness. The resources |
shall be independent of and have no business, personal, |
professional, or other affiliation with any of the system |
vendors currently or prospectively supplying voting systems to |
any county in the State of Illinois. Nothing in this Section |
shall impair the obligation of any contract between a
|
voting-systems vendor and an election authority that provides |
access to
computer code that is equal to or greater than that |
provided by
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/23-50 new)
|
Sec. 23-50. Definition of a vote. For the purpose of any |
recount of votes under this Code, a vote is defined as provided |
in Sections 7-100, 17-100, 18-100, 24A-22, 24B-9.1, or 24C-10, |
depending upon the type of voting equipment or system used to |
cast the vote. |
(10 ILCS 5/24A-10) (from Ch. 46, par. 24A-10)
|
Sec. 24A-10. (1) In an election jurisdiction which has |
adopted an
electronic voting system, the election official in |
charge of the
election shall select one of the 3 following |
procedures for receiving,
counting, tallying, and return of the |
ballots:
|
(a) Two ballot boxes shall be provided for each polling |
place. The
first ballot box is for the depositing of votes cast |
on the electronic
voting system; and the second ballot box is |
for all votes cast on paper
ballots, including absentee paper |
and early paper ballots and any other
paper ballots
required to |
be voted other than on the electronic voting system.
Ballots, |
except absentee and early ballots for candidates and |
propositions
which
are listed on the electronic voting system, |
deposited in the second
ballot box shall be counted, tallied, |
and returned as is elsewhere
provided in "The Election Code," |
|
as amended, for the counting and
handling of paper ballots. |
Immediately after the closing of the polls
the absentee and |
early ballots delivered to the precinct judges of election
by |
the
election official in charge of the election shall be |
examined to
determine that such ballots comply with Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9 of
"The
Election Code," as amended, and |
are entitled to be deposited in the
ballot box provided |
therefor; those entitled to be deposited in this
ballot box |
shall be initialed by the precinct judges of election and
|
deposited therein. Those not entitled to be deposited in this |
ballot box
shall be marked "Rejected" and disposed of as |
provided in Sections
19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9. The precinct |
judges of election shall then open the
second ballot box and |
examine all paper absentee and early ballots which
are in
the |
ballot box to determine whether the absentee and early ballots |
bear the
initials of a precinct judge of election. If any |
absentee or early ballot
is not
so initialed, it shall be |
marked on the back "Defective," initialed as
to such label by |
all judges immediately under such word "Defective," and
not |
counted, but placed in the envelope provided for that purpose
|
labeled "Defective Ballots Envelope." The judges of election, |
consisting
in each case of at least one judge of election of |
each of the two major
political parties, shall examine the |
paper absentee and early ballots which
were
in such ballot box |
and properly initialed so as to determine whether the
same |
contain write-in votes. Write-in votes, not causing an overvote |
for
an office otherwise voted for on the paper absentee or |
early ballot, and
otherwise properly voted, shall be counted, |
tallied and recorded on the
tally sheet provided for such |
record. A write-in vote causing an
overvote for an office shall |
not be counted for that office, but the
precinct judges shall |
mark such paper or early absentee ballot "Objected
To" on
the |
back thereof and write on its back the manner in which such |
ballot
is counted and initial the same. An overvote for one |
office shall
invalidate only the vote or count of that |
particular office. After
counting, tallying and recording the |
|
write-in votes on absentee and early
ballots,
the judges of |
election, consisting in each case of at least one judge of
|
election of each of the two major political parties, shall make |
a true
duplicate ballot of the remaining valid votes on each |
paper absentee or
early
ballot which was in the ballot box and |
properly initialed, by using the
electronic voting system used |
in the precinct and one of the marking
devices of the precinct |
so as to transfer the remaining valid votes of
the voter on the |
paper absentee ballot to an official ballot or a ballot
card of |
that kind used in the precinct at that election. The original
|
paper absentee or early ballot shall be clearly labeled |
"Absentee Ballot"
or "Early Ballot", as the case may be, and |
the
ballot card so produced "Duplicate Absentee Ballot , " or |
"Duplicate Early
Ballot", as the case may be, and each shall |
bear
the same serial number which shall be placed thereon by |
the judges of
election, commencing with number 1 and continuing |
consecutively for the
ballots of that kind in that precinct. |
The judges of election shall
initial the "Duplicate Absentee |
Ballot" and "Duplicate Early Ballot"
ballots or ballot cards |
and
shall place them in the first ballot box provided for |
return of the
ballots to be counted at the central counting |
location in lieu of the
paper absentee and early ballots. The |
paper absentee and early ballots
shall be
placed in an
envelope |
provided for that purpose labeled "Duplicate Ballots."
|
As soon as the absentee and early ballots have been |
deposited in the
first
ballot box, the judges of election shall |
make out a slip indicating the
number of persons who voted in |
the precinct at the election. Such slip
shall be signed by all |
the judges of election and shall be inserted by
them in the |
first ballot box. The judges of election shall thereupon
|
immediately lock the first ballot box; provided, that if
such |
box is not of a type which may be securely locked, such box |
shall be
sealed with filament tape provided for such purpose
|
which shall be wrapped around the box lengthwise and crosswise, |
at least
twice each way, and in such manner that the seal |
completely covers the
slot in the ballot box, and each of the |
|
judges shall sign such seal. Thereupon
two of the judges of |
election, of different political parties, shall
forthwith and |
by the most direct route transport both ballot boxes to
the |
counting location designated by the county clerk or board of
|
election commissioners.
|
Before the ballots of a precinct are fed to the electronic |
tabulating
equipment, the first ballot box shall be opened at |
the central counting
station by the two precinct transport |
judges. Upon opening a ballot box,
such team shall first count |
the number of ballots in the box. If 2 or
more are folded |
together so as to appear to have been cast by the same
person, |
all of the ballots so folded together shall be marked and
|
returned with the other ballots in the same condition, as near |
as may
be, in which they were found when first opened, but |
shall not be
counted. If the remaining ballots are found to |
exceed the number of
persons voting in the precinct as shown by |
the slip signed by the judges
of election, the ballots shall be |
replaced in the box, and the box
closed and well shaken and |
again opened and one of the precinct
transport judges shall |
publicly draw out so many ballots unopened as are
equal to such |
excess.
|
Such excess ballots shall be marked "Excess-Not Counted" |
and signed
by the two precinct transport judges and shall be |
placed in the "After
7:00 p.m. Defective Ballots Envelope". The |
number of excess ballots
shall be noted in the remarks section |
of the Certificate of Results.
"Excess" ballots shall not be |
counted in the total of "defective"
ballots.
|
The precinct transport judges shall then examine the |
remaining
ballots for write-in votes and shall count and |
tabulate the write-in
vote; or
|
(b) A single ballot box, for the deposit of all votes cast, |
shall be
used. All ballots which are not to be tabulated on the |
electronic voting
system shall be counted, tallied, and |
returned as elsewhere provided in
"The Election Code," as |
amended, for the counting and handling of paper
ballots.
|
All ballots to be processed and tabulated with the |
|
electronic voting
system shall be processed as follows:
|
Immediately after the closing of the polls the absentee and |
early ballots
delivered to the precinct judges of election by |
the election official in
charge of the election shall be |
examined to determine that such ballots
comply with Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9 of "The Election Code," as
amended,
and |
are entitled to be deposited in the ballot box; those entitled |
to be
deposited in the ballot box shall be initialed by the |
precinct judges of
election and deposited in the ballot box. |
Those not entitled to be
deposited in the ballot box shall be |
marked "Rejected" and disposed of
as provided in said Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9. The precinct judges of
election then |
shall open the ballot box and canvass the votes polled to
|
determine that the number of ballots therein agree with the |
number of
voters voting as shown by the applications for ballot |
or if the same do
not agree the judges of election shall make |
such ballots agree with the
applications for ballot in the |
manner provided by Section 17-18 of "The
Election Code." The |
judges of election shall then examine all paper
absentee and |
early ballots, ballot cards and ballot card envelopes which
are |
in
the ballot box to determine whether the paper ballots, |
ballot cards and
ballot card envelopes bear the initials of a |
precinct judge of election.
If any paper ballot, ballot card or |
ballot card envelope is not
initialed, it shall be marked on |
the back "Defective," initialed as to
such label by all judges |
immediately under such word "Defective," and
not counted, but |
placed in the envelope provided for that purpose
labeled |
"Defective Ballots Envelope." The judges of election, |
consisting
in each case of at least one judge of election of |
each of the two major
political parties, shall examine the |
paper absentee and early ballots which
were
in the ballot box |
and properly initialed so as to determine whether the
same |
contain write-in votes. Write-in votes, not causing an overvote |
for
an office otherwise voted for on the paper absentee or |
early ballot, and
otherwise properly voted, shall be counted, |
tallied and recorded on the
tally sheet provided for such |
|
record. A write-in vote causing an
overvote for an office shall |
not be counted for that office, but the
precinct judges shall |
mark such paper absentee or early ballot "Objected
To" on
the |
back thereof and write on its back the manner in which such |
ballot
is counted and initial the same. An overvote for one |
office shall
invalidate only the vote or count of that |
particular office. After
counting, tallying and recording the |
write-in votes on absentee and early
ballots,
the judges of |
election, consisting in each case of at least one judge of
|
election of each of the two major political parties, shall make |
a true
duplicate ballot of the remaining valid votes on each |
paper absentee
and early ballot which was in the ballot box and |
properly initialed, by
using the
electronic voting system used |
in the precinct and one of the marking
devices of the precinct |
so as to transfer the remaining valid votes of
the voter on the |
paper absentee or early ballot to an official ballot or a
|
ballot
card of that kind used in the precinct at that election. |
The original
paper absentee ballot shall be clearly labeled |
"Absentee Ballot" or "Early
Ballot", as the case may be, and |
the
ballot card so produced "Duplicate Absentee Ballot , " or |
"Duplicate Early
Ballot", as the case may be, and each shall |
bear
the same serial number which shall be placed thereon by |
the judges of
election, commencing with number 1 and continuing |
consecutively for the
ballots of that kind in that precinct. |
The judges of election shall
initial the "Duplicate Absentee |
Ballot" and "Duplicate Early Ballot"
ballots or ballot cards, |
and
shall place them in the box for return of the ballots with |
all other
ballots or ballot cards to be counted at the central |
counting location
in lieu of the paper absentee and early
|
ballots. The paper absentee and
early ballots
shall
be placed |
in an envelope provided for that purpose labeled "Duplicate
|
Ballots."
|
When an electronic voting system is used which utilizes a |
ballot
card, before separating the remaining ballot cards from |
their respective
covering envelopes, the judges of election |
shall examine the ballot card
envelopes for write-in votes. |
|
When the voter has voted a write-in vote,
the judges of |
election shall compare the write-in vote with the votes on
the |
ballot card to determine whether such write-in results in an
|
overvote for any office. In case of an overvote for any office, |
the
judges of election, consisting in each case of at least one |
judge of
election of each of the two major political parties, |
shall make a true
duplicate ballot of all votes on such ballot |
card except for the office
which is overvoted, by using the |
ballot label booklet of the precinct
and one of the marking |
devices of the precinct so as to transfer all
votes of the |
voter except for the office overvoted, to an official
ballot |
card of that kind used in the precinct at that election. The
|
original ballot card and envelope upon which there is an |
overvote shall
be clearly labeled "Overvoted Ballot", and each |
shall bear the same
serial number which shall be placed thereon |
by the judges of election,
commencing with number 1 and |
continuing consecutively for the ballots of
that kind in that |
precinct. The judges of election shall initial the
"Duplicate |
Overvoted Ballot" ballot cards and shall place them in the
box |
for return of the ballots. The "Overvoted Ballot" ballots and |
their
envelopes shall be placed in the "Duplicate Ballots" |
envelope. Envelopes
bearing write-in votes marked in the place |
designated therefor and
bearing the initials of a precinct |
judge of election and not resulting
in an overvote and |
otherwise complying with the election laws as to
marking shall |
be counted, tallied, and their votes recorded on a tally
sheet |
provided by the election official in charge of the election. |
The
ballot cards and ballot card envelopes shall be separated |
and all except
any defective or overvoted shall be placed |
separately in the box for
return of the ballots, along with all |
"Duplicate Absentee
Ballots , " ,"Duplicate Early Ballots", and
|
"Duplicate Overvoted Ballots." The judges of election shall |
examine the
ballots and ballot cards to determine if any is |
damaged or defective so
that it cannot be counted by the |
automatic tabulating equipment. If any
ballot or ballot card is |
damaged or defective so that it cannot properly
be counted by |
|
the automatic tabulating equipment, the judges of
election, |
consisting in each case of at least one judge of election of
|
each of the two major political parties, shall make a true |
duplicate
ballot of all votes on such ballot card by using the |
ballot label
booklet of the precinct and one of the marking |
devices of the precinct.
The original ballot or ballot card and |
envelope shall be clearly labeled
"Damaged Ballot" and the |
ballot or ballot card so produced "Duplicate
Damaged Ballot," |
and each shall bear the same number which shall be
placed |
thereon by the judges of election, commencing with number 1 and
|
continuing consecutively for the ballots of that kind in the |
precinct.
The judges of election shall initial the "Duplicate |
Damaged Ballot"
ballot or ballot cards, and shall place them in |
the box for return of
the ballots. The "Damaged Ballot" ballots |
or ballot cards and their
envelopes shall be placed in the |
"Duplicated Ballots" envelope. A slip
indicating the number of |
voters voting in person, number of absentee
votes deposited in |
the ballot box, and the total number of voters of the
precinct |
who voted at the election shall be made out, signed by all
|
judges of election, and inserted in the box for return of the |
ballots.
The tally sheets recording the write-in votes shall be |
placed in this
box. The judges of election thereupon |
immediately shall securely lock the
ballot box or other |
suitable
box furnished for return of the ballots by the |
election official in
charge of the election; provided that if |
such box is not of a type which
may be securely locked, such |
box shall be sealed with filament tape provided
for such |
purpose which shall be wrapped around the box lengthwise and |
crosswise,
at least twice each way. A separate adhesive seal |
label signed by each of
the judges of election of the precinct |
shall be affixed to the box so as
to cover any slot therein and |
to identify the box of the precinct; and
if such box is sealed |
with filament tape as provided herein rather than
locked, such |
tape shall be wrapped around the box as provided herein, but
in |
such manner that the separate adhesive seal label affixed to |
the box
and signed by the judges may not be removed without |
|
breaking the filament
tape and disturbing the signature of the |
judges. Thereupon, 2 of the
judges of election, of different |
major political parties, forthwith shall
by the most direct |
route transport the box for
return of the ballots and enclosed |
ballots and returns to the central
counting location designated |
by the election official in charge of the
election. If, |
however, because of the lack of adequate parking
facilities at |
the central counting location or for any other reason, it
is |
impossible or impracticable for the boxes from all the polling |
places
to be delivered directly to the central counting |
location, the election
official in charge of the election may |
designate some other location to
which the boxes shall be |
delivered by the 2 precinct judges. While at
such other |
location the boxes shall be in the care and custody of one or
|
more teams, each consisting of 4 persons, 2 from each of the |
two major
political parties, designated for such purpose by the |
election official
in charge of elections from recommendations |
by the appropriate political
party organizations. As soon as |
possible, the boxes shall be transported
from such other |
location to the central counting location by one or more
teams, |
each consisting of 4 persons, 2 from each of the 2 major
|
political parties, designated for such purpose by the election |
official
in charge of elections from recommendations by the |
appropriate political
party organizations.
|
The "Defective Ballots" envelope, and "Duplicated Ballots" |
envelope
each shall be securely sealed and the flap or end |
thereof of each signed
by the precinct judges of election and |
returned to the central counting
location with the box for |
return of the ballots, enclosed ballots and
returns.
|
At the central counting location, a team of tally judges |
designated
by the election official in charge of the election |
shall check the box
returned containing the ballots to |
determine that all seals are intact,
and thereupon shall open |
the box, check the voters' slip and compare the
number of |
ballots so delivered against the total number of voters of the
|
precinct who voted, remove the ballots or ballot cards and |
|
deliver them
to the technicians operating the automatic |
tabulating equipment. Any
discrepancies between the number of |
ballots and total number of voters
shall be noted on a sheet |
furnished for that purpose and signed by the
tally judges; or
|
(c) A single ballot box, for the deposit of all votes cast, |
shall be used.
Immediately after the closing of the polls the |
judges of election
shall examine the absentee and early ballots |
received by the precinct
judges of election
from the election |
authority of voters in that precinct to determine that
they |
comply with the provisions of Sections 19-9, 19A-55, 20-8 , and
|
20-9 of the Election
Code, as amended, and are entitled to be |
deposited in the ballot box; those
entitled to be deposited in |
the ballot box shall be initialed by the precinct
judges and |
deposited in the ballot box. Those not entitled to be deposited
|
in the ballot box, in accordance with Sections 19-9, 19A-55,
|
20-8 , and
20-9 of the
Election Code, as amended, shall be |
marked "Rejected" and preserved in the
manner provided in The |
Election Code for the retention and preservation
of official |
ballots rejected at such election. Immediately upon the |
completion
of the absentee and early balloting, the precinct |
judges of election shall
securely
lock the ballot box; provided |
that if such box is not of a
type which may be securely locked, |
such box shall be sealed with filament
tape provided for such |
purpose which shall be wrapped around the box lengthwise
and |
crosswise, at least twice each way.
A separate adhesive seal |
label signed by each of the judges of election
of the precinct |
shall be affixed to the box so as to cover any slot therein
and |
to identify the box of the precinct; and if such box is sealed |
with
filament tape as provided herein rather than locked, such |
tape shall be
wrapped around the box as provided herein, but in |
such manner that the separate
adhesive seal label affixed to |
the box and signed by the judges may not
be removed without |
breaking the filament tape and disturbing the signature
of the |
judges. Thereupon, 2 of the judges
of election, of different
|
major political parties, shall forthwith by the most direct |
route transport
the box for return of the ballots and enclosed |
|
absentee and early ballots
and returns
to the central counting |
location designated by the election official
in charge of the |
election. If however, because of the lack of adequate
parking |
facilities at the central counting location or for some other |
reason,
it is impossible or impracticable for the boxes from |
all the polling places
to be delivered directly to the central |
counting location, the election
official in charge of the |
election may designate some other location to
which the boxes |
shall be delivered by the 2 precinct judges. While at
such |
other location the boxes shall be in the care and custody of |
one or
more teams, each consisting of 4 persons, 2 from each of |
the two major
political
parties, designated for such purpose by |
the election official in charge
of elections from |
recommendations by the appropriate political party
|
organizations.
As soon as possible, the boxes shall be |
transported from such other location
to the central counting |
location by one or more teams, each consisting of
4 persons, 2 |
from each of the 2 major political parties, designated for
such |
purpose by the election official in charge of the election from
|
recommendations
by the appropriate political party |
organizations.
|
At the central counting location there shall be one or more |
teams of tally
judges who possess the same qualifications as |
tally judges in election
jurisdictions
using paper ballots. The |
number of such teams shall be determined by the
election |
authority. Each team shall consist of 5 tally judges, 3 |
selected
and approved by the county board from a certified list |
furnished by the
chairman of the county central committee of |
the party with the majority
of members on the county board and |
2 selected and approved by the county
board from a certified |
list furnished by the chairman of the county central
committee |
of the party with the second largest number of members
on the |
county board. At the central counting location a team of tally |
judges
shall open the ballot box and canvass the votes polled |
to determine that
the number of ballot sheets
therein agree |
with the number of voters voting as shown by the applications
|
|
for ballot and for absentee and early
ballot; and, if the same |
do not agree, the tally judges shall make such
ballots agree |
with the number of applications for ballot in the manner |
provided
by Section 17-18 of the Election Code. The tally |
judges shall then examine
all ballot sheets which are in the |
ballot box to determine whether they
bear the initials of the |
precinct judge of election. If any ballot is not
initialed, it |
shall be marked on the back "Defective", initialed as to such
|
label by all tally judges immediately under such word |
"Defective", and not
counted, but placed in the envelope |
provided for that purpose labeled
"Defective
Ballots |
Envelope". Write-in votes, not causing an overvote for an
|
office otherwise voted for on the absentee and early ballot |
sheet, and
otherwise properly
voted, shall be counted, tallied |
and recorded by the central counting location
judges on the |
tally sheet provided for such record. A write-in vote causing
|
an overvote for an office shall not be counted for that office, |
but the
tally judges shall mark such absentee ballot sheet |
"Objected
To" on the back thereof and write on its back the |
manner in which such ballot
is counted and initial the same. An |
overvote for one office shall invalidate
only the vote or count |
of that particular office.
|
At the central counting location, a team of tally judges |
designated
by the election official in charge of the election |
shall deliver the ballot
sheets to the technicians operating |
the automatic tabulating equipment.
Any discrepancies between |
the number of ballots and total number of voters
shall be noted |
on a sheet furnished for that purpose and signed by the tally
|
judges.
|
(2) Regardless of which procedure described in subsection |
(1) of this
Section is used,
the judges of election designated |
to transport the ballots, properly signed
and sealed as |
provided herein, shall ensure that the ballots are delivered
to |
the central counting station no later than 12 hours after the |
polls close.
At the central counting station a team of tally |
judges designated by the
election official in charge of the |
|
election shall examine the ballots so
transported and shall not |
accept ballots for tabulating which are not signed
and sealed |
as provided in subsection (1) of this Section until the
judges |
transporting the
same make and sign the necessary corrections. |
Upon acceptance of the ballots
by a team of tally judges at the |
central counting station, the election
judges transporting the |
same shall take a receipt signed by the election
official in |
charge of the election and stamped with the date and time of
|
acceptance. The election judges whose duty it is to transport |
any ballots
shall, in the event
such ballots cannot be found |
when needed, on proper request, produce the
receipt which they |
are to take as above provided.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-1362.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24A-10.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 24A-10.1)
|
Sec. 24A-10.1. In an election jurisdiction where |
in-precinct counting
equipment is utilized, the following |
procedures for counting and
tallying the ballots shall apply:
|
Immediately after the closing of the polls, the absentee |
and early ballots delivered
to the precinct judges of election |
by the election authority shall be examined
to determine that |
such ballots comply with
Sections 19-9 and 20-9 of this Act and |
are entitled to be deposited in the
ballot box; those entitled |
to be deposited in the ballot box shall be initialed
by the |
precinct judges of election and deposited
in the ballot box. |
Those not entitled to be deposited in the ballot box
shall be |
marked "Rejected" and disposed of as provided in said Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55,
and 20-9.
|
The precinct judges of election shall open the ballot box |
and count the
number of ballots therein
to determine if such |
number agrees with the number of voters voting as shown
by the |
applications for ballot or, if the same do not agree, the |
judges
of election shall make such ballots agree with the |
applications for ballot
in the manner provided by Section 17-18 |
of this Act.
The judges of election shall then examine all |
ballot cards and ballot card
envelopes which are in the ballot |
|
box to determine whether the ballot cards
and ballot card |
envelopes contain the initials of a precinct judge of
election. |
If any ballot card or ballot card envelope is not initialed, it
|
shall be marked on the back "Defective", initialed as to such |
label by all
judges immediately under the word "Defective" and |
not counted. The judges of
election shall place an initialed |
blank official ballot card in the place of
the defective ballot |
card, so that the count of the ballot cards to be counted
on |
the automatic tabulating equipment will be the same, and each |
"Defective
Ballot" card and "Replacement" card shall contain |
the same serial number
which shall be placed thereon by the |
judges of election, commencing with
number 1 and continuing |
consecutively for the ballots of that kind in that
precinct. |
The original "Defective" card shall be placed in the "Defective
|
Ballot Envelope" provided for that purpose.
|
When an electronic voting system is used which utilizes a |
ballot card,
before separating the remaining ballot cards from |
their respective covering
envelopes, the judges of election |
shall examine the ballot card envelopes
for write-in votes. |
When the voter has cast a write-in vote, the judges
of election |
shall compare the write-in vote with the votes on the ballot
|
card to determine whether such write-in results in an overvote |
for any office.
In case of an overvote for any office, the |
judges of election, consisting
in each case of at least
one |
judge of election of each of the 2 major political parties, |
shall make
a true duplicate ballot of all votes on such ballot |
card except for the
office which is overvoted, by using the |
ballot label booklet of the precinct
and one of the marking |
devices of the precinct so as to transfer all votes
of the |
voter, except for the office overvoted, to a duplicate card. |
The
original ballot card and envelope upon which there is an |
overvote shall
be clearly labeled
"Overvoted Ballot", and each |
such "Overvoted Ballot" as well as its
"Replacement" shall |
contain the same serial number which shall be placed thereon by |
the
judges of election, commencing with number 1 and continuing |
consecutively
for the ballots of that kind in that precinct.
|
|
The "Overvoted Ballot" card and ballot envelope shall be placed |
in an envelope
provided for that purpose labeled "Duplicate |
Ballot" envelope, and the judges
of election shall initial the |
"Replacement" ballot
cards and shall place them with the other |
ballot cards to be counted on
the automatic tabulating
|
equipment. Envelopes containing write-in votes marked in the |
place designated
therefor and containing the initials of a |
precinct judge of election and
not resulting in an overvote and |
otherwise complying with the election laws
as to marking shall |
be counted and tallied and their votes recorded on a
tally |
sheet provided by the election authority.
|
The ballot cards and ballot card envelopes shall be |
separated in preparation
for counting by the automatic |
tabulating equipment provided for that
purpose by the election |
authority.
|
Before the ballots are entered into the automatic |
tabulating
equipment, a precinct identification card provided |
by the election authority
shall be entered into the device to |
ensure that the totals are all zeroes
in the count column on |
the printing unit. A precinct judge of election
shall then |
count the ballots
by entering each ballot card into the |
automatic tabulating
equipment, and if any ballot or ballot |
card is damaged or defective so that
it cannot properly be |
counted by the automatic tabulating equipment, the
judges of |
election, consisting in each case of at least one judge of |
election
of each of the
2 major political parties, shall make a |
true duplicate ballot of all votes
on such ballot card by using |
the ballot label booklet of the precinct and
one of the marking |
devices of the precinct. The original ballot or ballot
card and |
envelope shall be clearly labeled "Damaged Ballot" and the |
ballot
or ballot card so produced shall be clearly labeled |
"Duplicate Damaged Ballot",
and each shall contain the same |
serial number which shall be placed
thereon by the judges of |
election, commencing with number 1 and continuing
|
consecutively for the ballots of
that kind in the precinct. The |
judges of election shall initial the "Duplicate
Damaged Ballot" |
|
ballot or ballot cards and shall enter the
duplicate damaged |
cards into the automatic tabulating equipment. The "Damaged
|
Ballot" cards
shall be placed in the "Duplicated Ballots" |
envelope; after all ballot cards
have been successfully read, |
the judges of election shall check to make certain that
the |
last number printed by the printing unit is the same as the |
number of
voters making application for ballot in that |
precinct.
The number shall be listed on the "Statement of |
Ballots" form provided by
the election authority.
|
The totals for all candidates and propositions shall be |
tabulated; 4 sets
shall be attached to the 4 sets of |
"Certificate of Results" provided by
the election authority; |
one set shall be posted in a conspicuous place inside
the |
polling place; and every effort shall be made by the judges of |
election
to provide a set for each authorized pollwatcher or |
other official authorized
to be present in the polling place to |
observe the counting of ballots; but
in no case shall the |
number of sets to be made available to pollwatchers
be fewer |
than 4, chosen by lot by the judges of election. In addition,
|
sufficient
time shall be provided by the judges of election to |
the pollwatchers to
allow them to copy information from the set |
which has been posted.
|
The judges of election shall count all unused ballot cards |
and enter the
number on the "Statement of Ballots". All |
"Spoiled", "Defective" and
"Duplicated" ballot cards shall be |
counted and the number entered on the
"Statement of Ballots".
|
The precinct judges of election shall select a bi-partisan |
team of 2 judges,
who shall immediately return the ballots in a |
sealed container, along with
all other election materials as |
instructed by the election authority;
provided, however, that |
such container must first be sealed by the election
judges with |
filament tape provided for such purpose which shall be wrapped
|
around the container lengthwise and crosswise, at least twice |
each way, in
such manner that the ballots cannot be removed |
from such container without
breaking the seal and filament tape |
and disturbing any signatures affixed
by the election judges to |
|
the container. The election authority shall keep
the office of |
the election authority, or any receiving stations designated
by |
such authority, open for at least 12 consecutive hours after |
the polls
close or until the ballots from all precincts with |
in-precinct counting
equipment within the jurisdiction of the |
election authority have been
returned to the election |
authority. Ballots returned to the office of the
election |
authority which are not signed and sealed as required by law |
shall
not be accepted by the election authority until the |
judges returning the
same make and sign the necessary |
corrections. Upon acceptance of the ballots
by the election |
authority, the judges returning the same shall take a
receipt |
signed by the election authority and stamped with the time and |
date
of such return. The election judges whose duty it is to |
return any ballots
as herein provided shall, in the event such |
ballots cannot be found when
needed, on proper request, produce |
the receipt which they are to take as above provided.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-1362.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24A-15.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 24A-15.1)
|
Sec. 24A-15.1. Except as herein provided, discovery |
recounts and election
contests shall be conducted as otherwise |
provided for in "The Election Code",
as amended. The automatic |
tabulating equipment shall be tested prior to the
discovery |
recount or election contest as provided in Section 24A-9, and
|
then the official ballots or ballot cards shall be recounted on |
the
automatic tabulating equipment. In addition, (1) the ballot |
or ballot cards
shall be checked for the presence or absence of |
judges' initials and other
distinguishing marks, and (2) the |
ballots marked "Rejected", "Defective",
Objected to", and
|
"Absentee Ballot" , and "Early Ballot" shall be
examined
to |
determine the
propriety of the such labels, and (3) the |
"Duplicate Absentee Ballots",
"Duplicate Early Ballots",
|
"Duplicate Overvoted Ballots" and "Duplicate
Damaged Ballots" |
shall be
compared with their respective originals to determine |
the correctness of
the duplicates.
|
|
Any person who has filed a petition for discovery recount |
may request that
a redundant count be conducted in those |
precincts in which the discovery
recount is being conducted. |
The additional costs of such a redundant count
shall be borne |
by the requesting party.
|
The log of the computer operator and all materials retained |
by the election
authority in relation to vote tabulation and |
canvass shall be made available
for any discovery recount or |
election contest.
|
(Source: P.A. 82-1014.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24A-22)
|
Sec. 24A-22. Definition of a vote.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for the |
purpose of this
Article, a person casts a valid vote on a punch |
card ballot when:
|
(1) A chad on the card has at least one corner detached |
from the card;
|
(2) The fibers of paper on at least one edge of the |
chad are broken in a
way that permits unimpeded light to be |
seen through the card; or
|
(3) An indentation on the chad from the stylus or other |
object is present
and indicates a clearly ascertainable |
intent of the voter to vote based on the
totality of the |
circumstances, including but not limited to any pattern or
|
frequency of indentations on other ballot positions from |
the same ballot
card.
|
(b) Write-in votes shall be counted in a manner consistent |
with the existing
provisions of this Code.
|
(c) For purposes of this Section, a "chad" is that portion |
of a ballot card
that a voter punches or perforates with a |
stylus or other designated marking
device to manifest his or |
her vote for a particular ballot position on a ballot
card as |
defined in subsection (a). Chads shall be removed from ballot |
cards
prior to their processing and tabulation in election |
jurisdictions that
utilize a ballot card as a means of |
|
recording votes at an election. Election
jurisdictions that |
utilize a mechanical means or device for chad removal as a
|
component of their tabulation shall use that means or device |
for chad
removal.
|
(d) Prior to the original counting of any punch card |
ballots, an election judge may not alter a punch card ballot in |
any manner, including, but not limited to, the removal or |
manipulation of chads.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24B-10)
|
Sec. 24B-10. Receiving, Counting, Tallying and Return of
|
Ballots; Acceptance of Ballots by Election Authority.
|
(a) In an election jurisdiction which has adopted an |
electronic Precinct
Tabulation Optical Scan Technology voting |
system, the election
official in charge of the election shall |
select one of the 3
following procedures for receiving, |
counting, tallying, and
return of the ballots:
|
(1) Two ballot boxes shall be provided for each polling
|
place. The first ballot box is for the depositing of votes |
cast
on the electronic voting system; and the second ballot |
box is for
all votes cast on other ballots, including |
absentee paper and early paper ballots
and any other paper |
ballots required to be voted other than on
the Precinct |
Tabulation Optical Scan Technology electronic voting
|
system. Ballots, except absentee and early ballots for |
candidates and
propositions which are listed on the |
Precinct Tabulation Optical
Scan Technology electronic |
voting system, deposited in the second
ballot box shall be |
counted, tallied, and returned as is
elsewhere provided in |
this Code for the
counting and handling of paper ballots. |
Immediately after the
closing of the polls the absentee and |
early ballots delivered to the
precinct judges of election |
by the election official in charge of
the election shall be |
examined to determine that the ballots
comply with Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9 of this Code and are entitled to be |
|
inserted
into the counting
equipment and deposited into the |
ballot box provided;
those entitled to be deposited in this |
ballot box shall be
initialed by the precinct judges of |
election and deposited.
Those not entitled to be deposited |
in this ballot box
shall be marked "Rejected" and disposed |
of as provided in
Sections 19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9. The |
precinct judges of election shall
then open the second |
ballot box and examine all paper absentee and early
ballots |
which are in the ballot box to determine whether the
|
absentee or early ballots bear the initials of a precinct |
judge of
election. If any absentee or early ballot is not |
so initialed, it shall
be marked on the back "Defective", |
initialed as to the label by
all judges immediately under |
the word "Defective", and not
counted, but placed in the |
envelope provided for that purpose
labeled "Defective |
Ballots Envelope". The judges of election,
consisting in |
each case of at least one judge of election of each
of the |
2 major political parties, shall examine the paper
absentee |
and early ballots which were in such ballot box and |
properly
initialed to determine whether the same contain |
write-in
votes. Write-in votes, not causing an overvote for |
an office
otherwise voted for on the paper absentee or |
early ballot, and otherwise
properly voted, shall be |
counted, tallied and recorded on the
tally sheet provided |
for the record. A write-in vote causing an
overvote for an |
office shall not be counted for that office, but
the |
precinct judges shall mark such paper absentee or early
|
ballot
"Objected To" on the back and write on its back the
|
manner in which the ballot is counted and initial the same. |
An
overvote for one office shall invalidate only the vote |
or count
of that particular office. After counting, |
tallying and
recording the write-in votes on absentee and |
early ballots, the judges of
election, consisting in each |
case of at least one judge of
election of each of the 2 |
major political parties, shall make a
true duplicate ballot |
of the remaining valid votes on each paper
absentee and |
|
early ballot which was in the ballot box and properly
|
initialed, by using the electronic Precinct Tabulation |
Optical
Scan Technology voting system used in the precinct |
and one of the
marking devices, or equivalent marking |
device or equivalent ballot, of the
precinct to transfer |
the remaining
valid votes of the voter on the paper |
absentee or early ballot to an
official ballot or a ballot |
card of that kind used in the
precinct at that election. |
The original paper absentee ballot
shall be clearly labeled |
"Absentee Ballot" or "Early Ballot", as the case may be,
|
and the ballot card so
produced "Duplicate Absentee Ballot" |
or "Duplicate Early Ballot", as the case may be , and each |
shall bear the
same serial number which shall be placed |
thereon by the judges of
election, beginning with number 1 |
and continuing consecutively
for the ballots of that kind |
in that precinct. The judges of
election shall initial the |
"Duplicate Absentee Ballot" and "Duplicate Early Ballot"
|
ballots
and shall place them in the first ballot box |
provided for return
of the ballots to be counted at the |
central counting location in
lieu of the paper absentee and |
early ballots. The paper absentee and early ballots
shall |
be placed in an envelope provided for that purpose labeled
|
"Duplicate Ballots".
|
As soon as the absentee and early ballots have been |
deposited in the
first ballot box, the judges of election |
shall make out a slip
indicating the number of persons who |
voted in the precinct at the
election. The slip shall be |
signed by all the judges of
election and shall be inserted |
by them in the first ballot box.
The judges of election |
shall thereupon immediately lock the first
ballot box; |
provided, that if the box is not of a type which may
be |
securely locked, the box shall be sealed with filament tape
|
provided for the purpose that shall be wrapped around the |
box
lengthwise and crosswise, at least twice each way, and |
in a
manner that the seal completely covers the slot in the |
ballot
box, and each of the judges shall sign the seal. Two
|
|
of the judges of election, of different political parties, |
shall
by the most direct route transport both ballot
boxes |
to the counting location designated by the county clerk or
|
board of election commissioners.
|
Before the ballots of a precinct are fed to the |
electronic
Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology |
tabulating equipment,
the first ballot box shall be opened |
at the central counting
station by the 2 precinct transport |
judges. Upon opening a
ballot box, the team shall first |
count the number of ballots in
the box. If 2 or more are |
folded together to appear to
have been cast by the same |
person, all of the ballots folded
together shall be marked |
and returned with the other ballots in
the same condition, |
as near as may be, in which they were found
when first |
opened, but shall not be counted. If the remaining
ballots |
are found to exceed the number of persons voting in the
|
precinct as shown by the slip signed by the judges of |
election,
the ballots shall be replaced in the box, and the |
box closed and
well shaken and again opened and one of the |
precinct transport
judges shall publicly draw out so many |
ballots unopened as are
equal to the excess.
|
The excess ballots shall be marked "Excess-Not |
Counted" and
signed by the 2 precinct transport judges and |
shall be placed
in the "After 7:00 p.m. Defective Ballots |
Envelope". The number
of excess ballots shall be noted in |
the remarks section of the
Certificate of Results. "Excess" |
ballots shall not be counted in
the total of "defective" |
ballots.
|
The precinct transport judges shall then examine the
|
remaining ballots for write-in votes and shall count and |
tabulate
the write-in vote.
|
(2) A single ballot box, for the deposit of all votes |
cast,
shall be used. All ballots which are not to be |
tabulated on the
electronic voting system shall be counted, |
tallied, and returned
as elsewhere provided in this Code |
for the
counting and handling of paper ballots.
|
|
All ballots to be processed and tabulated with the |
electronic
Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology |
voting system shall
be processed as follows:
|
Immediately after the closing of the polls the absentee |
and early
ballots delivered to the precinct judges of |
election by the
election official in charge of the election |
shall be examined to
determine that such ballots comply |
with Sections 19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9 of
this Code and are |
entitled to be deposited
in the ballot box; those entitled |
to be deposited in the ballot
box shall be initialed by the |
precinct judges of election and
deposited in the ballot |
box. Those not entitled to be deposited
in the ballot box |
shall be marked "Rejected" and disposed of as
provided in |
Sections 19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9. The precinct judges of
|
election then shall open the ballot box and canvass the |
votes
polled to determine that the number of ballots agree |
with
the number of voters voting as shown by the |
applications for
ballot, or if the same do not agree the |
judges of election shall
make such ballots agree with the |
applications for ballot in the
manner provided by Section |
17-18 of this Code. The
judges of election shall then |
examine all paper absentee and early ballots and ballot
|
envelopes which are in the ballot
box to determine whether |
the ballots and ballot envelopes bear the initials of
a |
precinct judge of election. If any ballot or ballot
|
envelope is not initialed, it shall be marked on the back
|
"Defective", initialed as to the label by all judges |
immediately
under the word "Defective", and not counted, |
but placed in the
envelope provided for that purpose |
labeled "Defective Ballots
Envelope". The judges of |
election, consisting in each case of at
least one judge of |
election of each of the 2 major political
parties, shall |
examine the paper absentee and early ballots which were in
|
the ballot box and properly initialed to determine whether
|
the same contain write-in votes. Write-in votes, not |
causing an
overvote for an office otherwise voted for on |
|
the paper absentee or early
ballot, and otherwise properly |
voted, shall be counted, tallied
and recorded on the tally |
sheet provided for the record. A
write-in vote causing an |
overvote for an office shall not be
counted for that |
office, but the precinct judges shall mark the
paper |
absentee or early ballot "Objected To" on the back and |
write
on its back the manner the ballot is counted and
|
initial the same. An overvote for one office shall |
invalidate
only the vote or count of that particular |
office. After
counting, tallying and recording the |
write-in votes on absentee and early
ballots, the judges of |
election, consisting in each case of at
least one judge of |
election of each of the 2 major political
parties, shall |
make a true duplicate ballot of the remaining
valid votes |
on each paper absentee and early ballot which was in the |
ballot
box and properly initialed, by using the electronic |
voting system
used in the precinct and one of the marking |
devices of the
precinct to transfer the remaining valid |
votes of the voter
on the paper absentee or early ballot to |
an official ballot of that kind used in the
precinct at |
that election. The
original paper absentee or early ballot |
shall be clearly labeled "Absentee
Ballot" or "Early |
Ballot", as the case may be, and the ballot so produced |
"Duplicate Absentee
Ballot" or "Duplicate Early Ballot", |
as the case may be , and each shall bear the same serial |
number which shall
be placed thereon by the judges of |
election, commencing with
number 1 and continuing |
consecutively for the ballots of that
kind in that |
precinct. The judges of election shall initial the
|
"Duplicate Absentee Ballot" and "Duplicate Early Ballot" |
ballots and shall
place them in the box for return of the |
ballots with all other
ballots to be counted at the central |
counting
location in lieu of the paper absentee and early |
ballots. The paper
absentee ballots shall be placed in an |
envelope provided for that
purpose labeled "Duplicate |
Ballots".
|
|
In case of an overvote for any office, the judges of
|
election, consisting in each case of at least one judge of
|
election of each of the 2 major political parties, shall |
make a
true duplicate ballot of all votes on the ballot |
except for
the office which is overvoted, by using the |
ballot of the
precinct and one of the marking devices, or |
equivalent ballot, of the
precinct to
transfer all votes of |
the voter except for the office overvoted,
to an official |
ballot of that kind used in the precinct at
that election. |
The original ballot upon which there is an
overvote shall |
be clearly labeled "Overvoted Ballot", and each
shall bear |
the same serial number which shall be placed thereon
by the |
judges of election, beginning with number 1 and
continuing |
consecutively for the ballots of that kind in that
|
precinct. The judges of election shall initial the |
"Duplicate
Overvoted Ballot" ballots and shall place them |
in the box for
return of the ballots. The "Overvoted |
Ballot" ballots shall be
placed in the "Duplicate Ballots" |
envelope. The ballots except
any defective or overvoted |
ballot shall be placed separately in
the box for return of |
the ballots, along with all "Duplicate
Absentee Ballots" , |
"Duplicate Early Ballots" , and "Duplicate Overvoted |
Ballots". The judges
of election shall examine the ballots |
to determine if any is
damaged or defective so that it |
cannot be counted by the
automatic tabulating equipment. If |
any ballot is
damaged or defective so that it cannot |
properly be counted by the
automatic tabulating equipment, |
the judges of election,
consisting in each case of at least |
one judge of election of each
of the 2 major political |
parties, shall make a true duplicate
ballot of all votes on |
such ballot by using the ballot of
the precinct and one of |
the marking devices, or equivalent ballot, of the
precinct. |
The
original ballot and ballot envelope shall be clearly
|
labeled "Damaged Ballot" and the ballot so
produced |
"Duplicate Damaged Ballot", and each shall bear the same
|
number which shall be placed thereon by the judges of |
|
election,
commencing with number 1 and continuing |
consecutively for the
ballots of that kind in the precinct. |
The judges of election
shall initial the "Duplicate Damaged |
Ballot" ballot and shall place them in
the box for return |
of the ballots.
The "Damaged Ballot" ballots
shall be |
placed in the "Duplicated Ballots" envelope. A slip
|
indicating the number of voters voting in person, number of
|
absentee and early votes deposited in the ballot box, and |
the total number
of voters of the precinct who voted at the |
election shall be made
out, signed by all judges of |
election, and inserted in the box
for return of the |
ballots. The tally sheets recording the write-in votes |
shall
be placed in this box. The judges of election |
immediately shall
securely lock the ballot box or other |
suitable box furnished for return of the
ballots by the |
election official in charge of the election; provided that |
if
the box is not of a type which may be securely locked, |
the box shall be
sealed with filament tape provided for the |
purpose which shall
be wrapped around the box lengthwise |
and crosswise, at least
twice each way. A separate adhesive |
seal label signed by each of
the judges of election of the |
precinct shall be affixed to the
box to cover any slot |
therein and to identify the box of
the precinct; and if the |
box is sealed with filament tape as
provided rather than |
locked, such tape shall be wrapped
around the box as |
provided, but in such manner that the
separate adhesive |
seal label affixed to the box and signed by the
judges may |
not be removed without breaking the filament tape and
|
disturbing the signature of the judges. Two of the
judges |
of election, of different major political parties,
shall by |
the most direct route transport the box for
return of the |
ballots and enclosed ballots and returns to the
central |
counting location designated by the election official in
|
charge of the election. If, however, because of the lack of
|
adequate parking facilities at the central counting |
location or
for any other reason, it is impossible or |
|
impracticable for the
boxes from all the polling places to |
be delivered directly to the
central counting location, the |
election official in charge of the
election may designate |
some other location to which the boxes
shall be delivered |
by the 2 precinct judges. While at the other
location the |
boxes shall be in the care and custody of one or
more |
teams, each consisting of 4 persons, 2 from each of the 2
|
major political parties, designated for such purpose by the
|
election official in charge of elections from |
recommendations by
the appropriate political party |
organizations. As soon as
possible, the boxes shall be |
transported from the other location
to the central counting |
location by one or more teams, each
consisting of 4 |
persons, 2 from each of the 2 major political
parties, |
designated for the purpose by the election official in
|
charge of elections from recommendations by the |
appropriate
political party organizations.
|
The "Defective Ballots" envelope, and "Duplicated |
Ballots"
envelope each shall be securely sealed and the |
flap or end
of each envelope signed by the precinct judges |
of election and
returned to the central counting location |
with the box for return
of the ballots, enclosed ballots |
and returns.
|
At the central counting location, a team of tally |
judges
designated by the election official in charge of the |
election
shall check the box returned containing the |
ballots to determine
that all seals are intact, and shall |
open the box,
check the voters' slip and compare the number |
of ballots so
delivered against the total number of voters |
of the precinct who
voted, remove the ballots and deliver |
them to the
technicians operating the automatic tabulating |
equipment. Any
discrepancies between the number of ballots |
and total number of
voters shall be noted on a sheet |
furnished for that purpose and
signed by the tally judges.
|
(3) A single ballot box, for the deposit of all votes |
cast,
shall be used. Immediately after the closing of the |
|
polls the
judges of election shall examine the absentee and |
early ballots received by
the precinct judges of election |
from the election authority of
voters in that precinct to |
determine that they comply with the
provisions of Sections |
19-9, 19A-55, 20-8 , and 20-9 of this Code and are entitled |
to be
deposited in the ballot box;
those entitled to be |
deposited in the ballot box shall be
initialed by the |
precinct judges and deposited in the ballot box.
Those not |
entitled to be deposited in the ballot box, in
accordance |
with Sections 19-9, 19A-55, 20-8 , and 20-9 of this Code
|
shall be marked "Rejected" and preserved in the
manner |
provided in this Code for the retention and
preservation of |
official ballots rejected at such election.
Immediately |
upon the completion of the absentee and early balloting, |
the
precinct judges of election shall securely lock the |
ballot box;
provided that if such box is not of a type |
which may be securely
locked, the box shall be sealed with |
filament tape provided for
the purpose which shall be |
wrapped around the box lengthwise and
crosswise, at least |
twice each way. A separate adhesive seal
label signed by |
each of the judges of election of the precinct
shall be |
affixed to the box to cover any slot therein and
to |
identify the box of the precinct; and if the box is sealed
|
with filament tape as provided rather than locked, such
|
tape shall be wrapped around the box as provided, but in
a |
manner that the separate adhesive seal label affixed to the
|
box and signed by the judges may not be removed without |
breaking
the filament tape and disturbing the signature of |
the judges.
Two of the judges of election, of different |
major
political parties, shall by the most direct route
|
transport the box for return of the ballots and enclosed |
absentee and early
ballots and returns to the central |
counting location designated
by the election official in |
charge of the election. If however,
because of the lack of |
adequate parking facilities at the central
counting |
location or for some other reason, it is impossible or
|
|
impracticable for the boxes from all the polling places to |
be
delivered directly to the central counting location, the |
election
official in charge of the election may designate |
some other
location to which the boxes shall be delivered |
by the 2 precinct
judges. While at the other location the |
boxes shall be in the
care and custody of one or more |
teams, each consisting of 4
persons, 2 from each of the 2 |
major political parties,
designated for the purpose by the |
election official in charge of
elections from |
recommendations by the appropriate political party
|
organizations. As soon as possible, the boxes shall be
|
transported from the other location to the central counting
|
location by one or more teams, each consisting of 4 |
persons, 2
from each of the 2 major political parties, |
designated for the
purpose by the election official in |
charge of the election from
recommendations by the |
appropriate political party organizations.
|
At the central counting location there shall be one or |
more
teams of tally judges who possess the same |
qualifications as
tally judges in election jurisdictions |
using paper ballots. The
number of the teams shall be |
determined by the election
authority. Each team shall |
consist of 5 tally judges, 3 selected
and approved by the |
county board from a certified list furnished
by the |
chairman of the county central committee of the party with
|
the majority of members on the county board and 2 selected |
and
approved by the county board from a certified list |
furnished by
the chairman of the county central committee |
of the party with
the second largest number of members on |
the county board. At the
central counting location a team |
of tally judges shall open the
ballot box and canvass the |
votes polled to determine that the
number of ballot sheets |
therein agree with the number of voters
voting as shown by |
the applications for ballot and for absentee and early
|
ballot; and, if the same do not agree, the tally judges |
shall
make such ballots agree with the number of |
|
applications for
ballot in the manner provided by Section |
17-18 of this
Code. The tally judges shall then examine all |
ballot sheets
that are in the ballot box to determine |
whether they bear the
initials of the precinct judge of |
election. If any ballot is not
initialed, it shall be |
marked on the back "Defective", initialed
as to that label |
by all tally judges immediately under the word
"Defective", |
and not counted, but placed in the envelope provided
for |
that purpose labeled "Defective Ballots Envelope". |
Write-in
votes, not causing an overvote for an office |
otherwise voted for
on the absentee or early ballot sheet, |
and otherwise properly voted, shall
be counted, tallied, |
and recorded by the central counting location
judges on the |
tally sheet provided for the record. A write-in
vote |
causing an overvote for an office shall not be counted for
|
that office, but the tally judges shall mark the absentee |
or early ballot
sheet "Objected To" and write the
manner in |
which the ballot is counted on its back and initial the |
sheet. An
overvote for one office shall invalidate only the |
vote or count
for that particular office.
|
At the central counting location, a team of tally |
judges
designated by the election official in charge of the |
election
shall deliver the ballot sheets to the technicians |
operating the
automatic Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan |
Technology tabulating
equipment. Any discrepancies between |
the number of ballots and
total number of voters shall be |
noted on a sheet furnished for
that purpose and signed by |
the tally judges.
|
(b) Regardless of which procedure described in subsection
|
(a) of this Section is used, the judges of election designated |
to
transport the ballots properly signed and sealed,
shall |
ensure that the ballots are delivered to the
central counting |
station no later than 12 hours after the polls
close. At the |
central counting station, a team of tally judges
designated by |
the election official in charge of the election
shall examine |
the ballots so transported and shall not accept
ballots for |
|
tabulating which are not signed and sealed as
provided in |
subsection (a) of this Section until the judges
transporting |
the ballots make and sign the necessary corrections.
Upon |
acceptance of the ballots by a team of tally judges at the
|
central counting station, the election judges transporting the
|
ballots shall take a receipt signed by the election official in
|
charge of the election and stamped with the date and time of
|
acceptance. The election judges whose duty it is to transport
|
any ballots shall, in the event the ballots cannot be found |
when
needed, on proper request, produce the receipt which they |
are to
take as above provided.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24B-10.1)
|
Sec. 24B-10.1. In-Precinct Counting Equipment; Procedures |
for Counting and
Tallying Ballots. In an election
jurisdiction |
where Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology
counting |
equipment is used, the following procedures for
counting and |
tallying the ballots shall apply:
|
Before the opening of the polls, and before the ballots are
|
entered into the automatic tabulating equipment, the judges of
|
election shall be sure that the totals are all zeros in the
|
counting column. Ballots may then be counted by entering or |
scanning
each ballot into the automatic tabulating equipment.
|
Throughout the election day and before the closing of the |
polls, no person
may check any vote totals for any candidate or |
proposition on the automatic
tabulating equipment. Such |
automatic tabulating equipment shall be programmed
so that no |
person may reset the equipment for refeeding of ballots unless
|
provided a code from an authorized representative of the |
election
authority.
At the option of the election authority, |
the ballots may be fed into the
Precinct Tabulation Optical |
Scan Technology
equipment by the voters under the direct
|
supervision of the judges of elections.
|
Immediately after the closing of the polls, the absentee or |
early
ballots delivered to the precinct judges of election by |
|
the
election authority shall be examined to determine that the
|
ballots comply with Sections 19-9 , 19A-55, and 20-9 of this |
Code and are
entitled to be scanned by the Precinct Tabulation |
Optical Scan
Technology equipment and then deposited in the |
ballot box;
those entitled to be scanned and deposited in the |
ballot box
shall be initialed by the precinct judges of |
election and
then scanned and deposited in the ballot box. |
Those not
entitled to be deposited in the ballot box shall be |
marked
"Rejected" and disposed of as provided in said Sections |
19-9 , 19A-55, and
20-9.
|
The precinct judges of election shall open the ballot box
|
and count the number of ballots to determine if the
number |
agrees with the number of voters voting as shown on the
|
Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology equipment and by |
the
applications for ballot or, if the same do not agree, the |
judges
of election shall make the ballots agree with the |
applications
for ballot in the manner provided by Section 17-18 |
of this Code.
The judges of election shall then examine all |
ballots which are
in the ballot box to determine whether the |
ballots contain the
initials of a precinct judge of election. |
If any ballot is not
initialed, it shall be marked on the back |
"Defective", initialed
as to such label by all judges |
immediately under the word
"Defective" and not counted. The |
judges of election shall place
an initialed blank official |
ballot in the place of the defective
ballot, so that the count |
of the ballots to be counted
on the automatic tabulating |
equipment will be the same, and each
"Defective Ballot" and |
"Replacement" ballot shall contain the
same serial number which |
shall be placed thereon by the judges of
election, beginning |
with number 1 and continuing consecutively
for the ballots of |
that kind in that precinct. The original
"Defective" ballot |
shall be placed in the "Defective Ballot
Envelope" provided for |
that purpose.
|
If the judges of election have removed a ballot pursuant to |
Section 17-18,
have labeled "Defective" a ballot which is not |
initialed, or have otherwise
determined under this Code to not |
|
count a ballot originally deposited into a
ballot box, the |
judges of election shall be sure that the totals on the
|
automatic tabulating equipment are reset to all zeros in the |
counting column.
Thereafter the judges of election shall enter |
or otherwise scan each ballot
to be counted in the
automatic |
tabulating equipment. Resetting the automatic tabulating |
equipment
to all zeros and re-entering of ballots to be counted |
may occur at the precinct
polling place, the office of the |
election authority, or any receiving station
designated by the |
election authority. The election authority shall designate
the |
place for resetting and re-entering or re-scanning.
|
When a Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology
|
electronic voting system is used which uses a paper ballot,
the |
judges of election shall examine the ballot for write-in
votes. |
When the voter has cast a write-in vote, the judges of
election |
shall compare the write-in vote with the votes on the
ballot to |
determine whether the write-in results in an overvote
for any |
office, unless the Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan
Technology |
equipment has already done so. In case of an overvote
for any |
office, the judges of election, consisting in each case
of at |
least one judge of election of each of the 2 major
political |
parties, shall make a true duplicate ballot of all
votes on |
such ballot except for the office which is
overvoted, by using |
the ballot of the precinct and one of the
marking devices, or |
equivalent ballot, of the precinct so as to transfer
all votes
|
of
the voter, except for the office overvoted, to a duplicate
|
ballot. The original ballot upon which there is an overvote
|
shall be clearly labeled "Overvoted Ballot", and each such
|
"Overvoted Ballot" as well as its "Replacement" shall contain |
the
same serial number which shall be placed thereon by the |
judges of
election, beginning with number 1 and continuing |
consecutively
for the ballots of that kind in that precinct. |
The "Overvoted
Ballot" shall be placed in an envelope provided |
for that purpose
labeled "Duplicate Ballot" envelope, and the |
judges of election
shall initial the "Replacement" ballots and |
shall place them with
the other ballots to be counted on the |
|
automatic tabulating
equipment.
|
If any ballot is damaged or defective, or if any ballot
|
contains a Voting Defect, so that it cannot properly be counted
|
by the automatic tabulating equipment, the voter or the judges |
of
election, consisting in each case of at least one judge of
|
election of each of the 2 major political parties, shall make a
|
true duplicate ballot of all votes on such ballot by using the
|
ballot of the precinct and one of the marking devices of the
|
precinct, or equivalent. If a damaged ballot, the original |
ballot shall be
clearly labeled "Damaged Ballot" and the ballot |
so produced shall
be clearly labeled "Damaged Ballot" and the |
ballot
so produced shall be clearly labeled "Duplicate Damaged |
Ballot", and each
shall contain the same serial number which |
shall be placed
by the judges of election, beginning with |
number 1 and
continuing consecutively for the ballots of that |
kind in the
precinct. The judges of election shall initial the |
"Duplicate
Damaged Ballot" ballot and shall enter or otherwise |
scan the duplicate
damaged
ballot into the automatic tabulating |
equipment. The "Damaged
Ballots" shall be placed in the |
"Duplicated Ballots" envelope;
after all ballots have been |
successfully read, the judges of
election shall check to make |
certain that the Precinct Tabulation
Optical Scan Technology |
equipment readout agrees with the number
of voters making |
application for ballot in that precinct. The
number shall be |
listed on the "Statement of Ballots" form
provided by the |
election authority.
|
The totals for all candidates and propositions shall be
|
tabulated; and 4 copies of a "Certificate of Results" shall be
|
generated by the automatic tabulating equipment; one copy shall |
be
posted in a conspicuous place inside the polling place; and |
every
effort shall be made by the judges of election to provide |
a copy
for each authorized pollwatcher or other official |
authorized to
be present in the polling place to observe the |
counting of
ballots; but in no case shall the number of copies |
to be made
available to pollwatchers be fewer than 4, chosen by |
lot by the
judges of election. In addition, sufficient time |
|
shall be
provided by the judges of election to the pollwatchers |
to allow
them to copy information from the copy which has been |
posted.
|
The judges of election shall count all unused ballots and
|
enter the number on the "Statement of Ballots". All "Spoiled",
|
"Defective" and "Duplicated" ballots shall be counted and the
|
number entered on the "Statement of Ballots".
|
The precinct judges of election shall select a bi-partisan
|
team of 2 judges, who shall immediately return the ballots in a
|
sealed container, along with all other election materials as
|
instructed by the election authority; provided, however, that
|
such container must first be sealed by the election judges with
|
filament tape or other approved sealing devices provided for |
the
purpose which shall be wrapped around the container |
lengthwise
and crosswise, at least twice each way, in a manner |
that the
ballots cannot be removed from the container without |
breaking
the seal and filament tape and disturbing any |
signatures affixed
by the election judges to the container, or |
which other approved
sealing devices are affixed in a manner |
approved by the election
authority. The election authority |
shall keep the office of the
election authority or any |
receiving stations designated by the
authority, open for at |
least 12 consecutive hours after the polls
close or until the |
ballots from all precincts with in-precinct
counting equipment |
within the jurisdiction of the election
authority have been |
returned to the election authority. Ballots
returned to the |
office of the election authority which are not
signed and |
sealed as required by law shall not be accepted by the
election |
authority until the judges returning the ballots make and
sign |
the necessary corrections. Upon acceptance of the ballots
by |
the election authority, the judges returning the ballots shall
|
take a receipt signed by the election authority and stamped |
with
the time and date of the return. The election judges whose |
duty
it is to return any ballots as provided shall, in the
|
event the ballots cannot be found when needed, on proper
|
request, produce the receipt which they are to take as above
|
|
provided. The precinct judges of election shall also deliver
|
the Precinct Tabulation Optical Scan Technology equipment to |
the
election authority.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24B-15.1)
|
Sec. 24B-15.1. Discovery , recounts and election contests.
|
Except as provided, discovery recounts and election
contests |
shall be conducted as otherwise provided for in
this Code. The |
automatic Precinct Tabulation
Optical Scan Technology |
tabulating equipment shall be tested
prior to the discovery |
recount or election contest as provided in
Section 24B-9, and |
then the official ballots shall be recounted
on the automatic |
tabulating equipment. In addition, (a) the
ballots shall be |
checked for the presence or absence of judges'
initials and |
other distinguishing marks, and (b) the ballots
marked |
"Rejected", "Defective", "Objected To" , "Early Ballot", and |
"Absentee
Ballot" shall be examined to determine the propriety |
of the
labels, and (c) the "Duplicate Absentee Ballots", |
"Duplicate
Overvoted Ballots" , "Duplicate Early Ballot", and |
"Duplicate Damaged Ballots" shall be
compared with their |
respective originals to determine the
correctness of the |
duplicates.
|
Any person who has filed a petition for discovery recount
|
may request that a redundant count be conducted in those
|
precincts in which the discovery recount is being conducted. |
The
additional costs of a redundant count shall be borne by the
|
requesting party.
|
The log of the computer operator and all materials retained
|
by the election authority in relation to vote tabulation and
|
canvass shall be made available for any discovery recount or
|
election contest.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-394, eff. 1-1-97.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24C-2)
|
Sec. 24C-2. Definitions. As used in this Article:
|
|
"Audit trail" or "audit capacity" means a continuous trail
|
of evidence linking individual transactions related to the
|
casting of a vote, the vote count and the summary record of |
vote
totals, but which shall not allow for the identification |
of the
voter. It shall permit verification of the accuracy of |
the
count and detection and correction of problems and shall |
provide
a record of each step taken in: defining and producing |
ballots
and generating related software for specific |
elections;
installing ballots and software; testing system |
readiness;
casting and tabulating ballots; and producing |
images of votes
cast and reports of vote totals. The record |
shall incorporate
system status and error messages generated |
during election
processing, including a log of machine |
activities and routine
and unusual intervention by authorized |
and unauthorized
individuals. Also part of an audit trail is |
the documentation
of such items as ballots delivered and |
collected, administrative
procedures for system security, |
pre-election testing of voting
systems, and maintenance |
performed on voting equipment. All test plans, test results, |
documentation, and other records used to plan, execute, and |
record the results of the testing and verification, including |
all material prepared or used by independent testing |
authorities or other third parties, shall be made part of the |
public record and shall be freely available via the Internet |
and paper copy to anyone. "Audit trail" or "audit capacity"
It |
also
means that the voting system is capable of producing and |
shall
produce immediately after a ballot is cast a permanent |
paper
record of each ballot cast that shall be available as an
|
official record for any recount, redundant count, or
|
verification or retabulation of the vote count conducted with
|
respect to any election in which the voting system is used.
|
"Ballot" means an electronic audio or video display or any
|
other medium, including paper, used to record a voter's choices
|
for the candidates of their preference and for or against |
public
questions.
|
"Ballot configuration" means the particular combination of
|
|
political subdivision or district ballots including, for each
|
political subdivision or district, the particular combination |
of
offices, candidate names and public questions as it appears |
for
each group of voters who may cast the same ballot.
|
"Ballot image" means a corresponding representation in
|
electronic or paper form of the mark or vote position of a
|
ballot.
|
"Ballot label" or "ballot screen" means the display of
|
material containing the names of offices and candidates and
|
public questions to be voted on.
|
"Central counting" means the counting of ballots in one or
|
more locations selected by the election authority for the
|
processing or counting, or both, of ballots. A location for
|
central counting shall be within the territorial jurisdiction |
of
the election authority unless there is no suitable |
tabulating
equipment available within his territorial |
jurisdiction.
However, in any event a counting location shall |
be within this
State.
|
"Computer", "automatic tabulating equipment" or |
"equipment"
includes apparatus necessary to automatically |
examine and count
votes as designated on ballots, and data |
processing machines
which can be used for counting ballots and |
tabulating results.
|
"Computer operator" means any person or persons designated
|
by the election authority to operate the automatic tabulating
|
equipment during any portion of the vote tallying process in an
|
election, but shall not include judges of election operating
|
vote tabulating equipment in the precinct.
|
"Computer program" or "program" means the set of operating
|
instructions for the automatic tabulating equipment that
|
examines, records, displays, counts, tabulates, canvasses , or
|
and prints votes
recorded by a voter on a ballot or that |
displays any and all information, graphics, or other visual or |
audio information or images used in presenting voting |
information, instructions, or voter choices .
|
"Direct recording electronic voting system", "voting
|
|
system" or "system" means the total combination of mechanical,
|
electromechanical or electronic equipment, programs and
|
practices used to define ballots, cast and count votes, report
|
or display election results, maintain or produce any audit |
trail
information, identify all system components, test the |
system
during development, maintenance and operation, maintain |
records
of system errors and defects, determine specific system |
changes
to be made to a system after initial qualification, and |
make
available any materials to the voter such as notices,
|
instructions, forms or paper ballots.
|
"Edit listing" means a computer generated listing of the
|
names of each candidate and public question as they appear in
|
the program for each precinct.
|
"In-precinct counting" means the recording and counting of
|
ballots on automatic tabulating equipment provided by the
|
election authority in the same precinct polling place in which
|
those ballots have been cast.
|
"Marking device" means any device approved by the State
|
Board of Elections for marking a ballot so as to enable the
|
ballot to be recorded, counted and tabulated by automatic
|
tabulating equipment.
|
"Permanent paper record" means a paper record upon which
|
shall be printed in human readable form the votes cast for each
|
candidate and for or against each public question on each |
ballot
recorded in the voting system. Each permanent paper |
record
shall be printed by the voting device upon activation of |
the
marking device by the voter and shall contain a unique, |
randomly
assigned identifying number that shall correspond to |
the number
randomly assigned by the voting system to each |
ballot as it is
electronically recorded.
|
"Redundant count" means a verification of the original
|
computer count of ballots by another count using compatible
|
equipment or other means as part of a discovery recount,
|
including a count of the permanent paper record of each ballot
|
cast by using compatible equipment, different equipment |
approved
by the State Board of Elections for that purpose, or |
|
by hand.
|
"Separate ballot" means a separate page or display screen
|
of the ballot that is clearly defined and distinguishable from
|
other portions of the ballot.
|
"Voting device" or "voting machine" means an apparatus that
|
contains the ballot label or ballot screen and allows the voter
|
to record his or her vote.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24C-12)
|
Sec. 24C-12. Procedures for Counting and Tallying of
|
Ballots.
|
In an election jurisdiction where a Direct Recording
|
Electronic Voting System is used, the following procedures for
|
counting and tallying the ballots shall apply:
|
Before the opening of the polls, the judges of elections
|
shall assemble the voting equipment and devices and turn the
|
equipment on. The judges shall, if necessary, take steps to
|
activate the voting devices and counting equipment by inserting
|
into the equipment and voting devices appropriate data cards
|
containing passwords and data codes that will select the proper
|
ballot formats selected for that polling place and that will
|
prevent inadvertent or unauthorized activation of the |
poll-opening function.
Before voting begins and before ballots |
are
entered into the voting devices, the judges of election |
shall
cause to be printed a record of the following: the |
election's
identification data, the device's unit |
identification, the
ballot's format identification, the |
contents of each active
candidate register by office and of |
each active public question
register showing that they contain |
all zero votes, all ballot
fields that can be used to invoke |
special voting options, and
other information needed to ensure |
the readiness of the
equipment and to accommodate |
administrative reporting
requirements. The judges must also |
check to be sure that the
totals are all zeros in the counting |
columns and in the public
counter affixed to the voting |
|
devices.
|
After the judges have determined that a person is qualified
|
to vote, a voting device with the proper ballot to which the
|
voter is entitled shall be enabled to be used by the voter. The
|
ballot may then be cast by the voter by marking by appropriate
|
means the designated area of the ballot for the casting of a
|
vote for any candidate or for or against any public question.
|
The voter shall be able to vote for any and all candidates and
|
public measures appearing on the ballot in any legal number and
|
combination and the voter shall be able to delete, change or
|
correct his or her selections before the ballot is cast. The
|
voter shall be able to select candidates whose names do not
|
appear upon the ballot for any office by entering |
electronically
as many names of candidates as the voter is |
entitled to select
for each office.
|
Upon completing his or her selection of candidates or
|
public questions, the voter shall signify that voting has been
|
completed by activating the appropriate button, switch or |
active
area of the ballot screen associated with end of voting. |
Upon
activation, the voting system shall record an image of the
|
completed ballot, increment the proper ballot position
|
registers, and shall signify to the voter that the ballot has
|
been cast. Upon activation, the voting system shall also print
|
a permanent paper record of each ballot cast as defined in
|
Section 24C-2 of this Code. This permanent paper record shall
|
(i) be printed in a clear, readily readable format that can be |
easily reviewed by the voter for completeness and accuracy and |
(ii) either be self-contained within the voting device or shall |
be
deposited by the voter into a secure ballot box. No |
permanent
paper record shall be removed from the polling place |
except by
election officials as authorized by this Article. All |
permanent
paper records shall be preserved and secured by |
election
officials in the same manner as paper ballots and |
shall be
available as an official record for any recount, |
redundant
count, or verification or retabulation of the vote |
count
conducted with respect to any election in which the |
|
voting
system is used. The voter shall exit the voting station |
and
the voting system shall prevent any further attempt to vote
|
until it has been properly re-activated. If a voting device has
|
been enabled for voting but the voter leaves the polling place
|
without casting a ballot, 2 judges of election, one from each |
of
the 2 major political parties, shall spoil the ballot.
|
Throughout the election day and before the closing of the
|
polls, no person may check any vote totals for any candidate or
|
public question on the voting or counting equipment. Such
|
equipment shall be programmed so that no person may reset the
|
equipment for reentry of ballots unless provided the proper |
code
from an authorized representative of the election |
authority.
|
The precinct judges of election shall check the public
|
register to determine whether the number of ballots counted by
|
the voting equipment agrees with the number of voters voting as
|
shown by the applications for ballot. If the same do not agree,
|
the judges of election shall immediately contact the offices of
|
the election authority in charge of the election for further
|
instructions. If the number of ballots counted by the voting
|
equipment agrees with the number of voters voting as shown by
|
the application for ballot, the number shall be listed on the
|
"Statement of Ballots" form provided by the election authority.
|
The totals for all candidates and propositions shall be
|
tabulated; and 4 copies of a "Certificate of Results" shall be
|
printed by the automatic tabulating equipment; one copy shall |
be
posted in a conspicuous place inside the polling place; and
|
every effort shall be made by the judges of election to provide
|
a copy for each authorized pollwatcher or other official
|
authorized to be present in the polling place to observe the
|
counting of ballots; but in no case shall the number of copies
|
to be made available to pollwatchers be fewer than 4, chosen by
|
lot by the judges of election. In addition, sufficient time
|
shall be provided by the judges of election to the pollwatchers
|
to allow them to copy information from the copy which has been
|
posted.
|
|
If instructed by the election authority, the judges of
|
election shall cause the tabulated returns to be transmitted
|
electronically to the offices of the election authority via
|
modem or other electronic medium.
|
The precinct judges of election shall select a bi-partisan
|
team of 2 judges, who shall immediately return the ballots in a
|
sealed container, along with all other election materials and
|
equipment as instructed by the election authority; provided,
|
however, that such container must first be sealed by the
|
election judges with filament tape or other approved sealing
|
devices provided for the purpose in a manner that the ballots
|
cannot be removed from the container without breaking the seal
|
or filament tape and disturbing any signatures affixed by the
|
election judges to the container. The election authority shall
|
keep the office of the election authority, or any receiving
|
stations designated by the authority, open for at least 12
|
consecutive hours after the polls close or until the ballots |
and
election material and equipment from all precincts within |
the
jurisdiction of the election authority have been returned |
to the
election authority. Ballots and election materials and
|
equipment returned to the office of the election authority |
which
are not signed and sealed as required by law shall not be
|
accepted by the election authority until the judges returning
|
the ballots make and sign the necessary corrections. Upon
|
acceptance of the ballots and election materials and equipment
|
by the election authority, the judges returning the ballots
|
shall take a receipt signed by the election authority and
|
stamped with the time and date of the return. The election
|
judges whose duty it is to return any ballots and election
|
materials and equipment as provided shall, in the event the
|
ballots, materials or equipment cannot be found when needed, on
|
proper request, produce the receipt which they are to take as
|
above provided.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24C-13)
|
|
Sec. 24C-13. Absentee ballots; Early voting ballots; |
Proceedings at Location for
Central Counting; Employees; |
Approval of List.
|
(a) All jurisdictions using Direct Recording Electronic
|
Voting Systems shall use paper ballots or paper ballot sheets
|
approved for use under Articles 16, 24A or 24B of this Code |
when
conducting absentee voting except that Direct Recording
|
Electronic Voting Systems may be used for in-person absentee
|
voting conducted pursuant to Section 19-2.1 of this Code. All
|
absentee ballots shall be counted at the office of the election
|
authority. The provisions of Section 24A-9, 24B-9 and 24C-9 of
|
this Code shall apply to the testing and notice requirements |
for
central count tabulation equipment, including comparing |
the
signature on the ballot envelope with the signature of the |
voter
on the permanent voter registration record card taken |
from the
master file. Absentee ballots other than absentee |
ballots voted
in person pursuant to Section 19-2.1 of this Code |
shall be
examined and processed pursuant to Sections 19-9 and |
20-9 of
this Code. Vote results shall be recorded by precinct |
and shall
be added to the vote results for the precinct in |
which the
absent voter was eligible to vote prior to completion |
of the
official canvass.
|
(a-5) Early voting ballots cast in accordance with Article |
19A shall be counted in precincts as provided in that Article. |
Early votes cast through the use of Direct Recording Electronic |
Voting System devices shall be counted using the procedures of |
this Article. Early votes cast by a method other than the use |
of Direct Recording Electronic Voting System devices shall be |
counted using the procedures of this Code for that method.
|
(b) All proceedings at the location for central counting
|
shall be under the direction of the county clerk or board of
|
election commissioners. Except for any specially trained
|
technicians required for the operation of the Direct Recording
|
Electronic Voting System, the employees at the counting station
|
shall be equally divided between members of the 2 leading
|
political parties and all duties performed by the employees
|
|
shall be by teams consisting of an equal number of members of
|
each political party. Thirty days before an election the county
|
clerk or board of election commissioners shall submit to the
|
chairman of each political party, for his or her approval or
|
disapproval, a list of persons of his or her party proposed to
|
be employed. If a chairman fails to notify the election
|
authority of his or her disapproval of any proposed employee
|
within a period of 10 days thereafter the list shall be deemed
|
approved.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
(10 ILCS 5/24C-15)
|
Sec. 24C-15. Official Return of Precinct; Check of Totals;
|
Audit. The precinct return printed by the Direct Recording
|
Electronic Voting System tabulating equipment shall include |
the
number of ballots cast and votes cast for each candidate |
and
public question and shall constitute the official return of |
each
precinct. In addition to the precinct return, the election
|
authority shall provide the number of applications for ballots
|
in each precinct, the total number of ballots and absentee
|
ballots counted in each precinct for each political subdivision
|
and district and the number of registered voters in each
|
precinct. However, the election authority shall check the
|
totals shown by the precinct return and, if there is an obvious
|
discrepancy regarding the total number of votes cast in any
|
precinct, shall have the ballots for that precinct audited to
|
correct the return. The procedures for this audit shall apply
|
prior to and after the proclamation is completed; however, |
after
the proclamation of results, the election authority must |
obtain
a court order to unseal voted ballots or voting devices |
except
for election contests and discovery recounts. The |
certificate
of results, which has been prepared and signed by |
the judges of
election in the polling place after the ballots |
have been
tabulated, shall be the document used for the canvass |
of votes
for such precinct. Whenever a discrepancy exists |
during the
canvass of votes between the unofficial results and |
|
the
certificate of results, or whenever a discrepancy exists |
during
the canvass of votes between the certificate of results |
and the
set of totals reflected on the certificate of results, |
the
ballots for that precinct shall be audited to correct the
|
return.
|
Prior to the proclamation, the election authority shall
|
test the voting devices and equipment in 5%
1% of the precincts
|
within the election jurisdiction. The precincts to be tested
|
shall be selected after election day on a random basis by the
|
election authority, so that every precinct in the election
|
jurisdiction has an equal mathematical chance of being |
selected.
The State Board of Elections shall design a standard |
and
scientific random method of selecting the precincts that |
are to
be tested, and the election authority shall be required |
to use
that method. The State Board of Elections, the State's |
Attorney
and other appropriate law enforcement agencies, the |
county
chairman of each established political party and |
qualified civic
organizations shall be given prior written |
notice of the time
and place of the random selection procedure |
and may be
represented at the procedure.
|
The test shall be conducted by counting the votes marked on
|
the permanent paper record of each ballot cast in the tested
|
precinct printed by the voting system at the time that each
|
ballot was cast and comparing the results of this count with |
the
results shown by the certificate of results prepared by the
|
Direct Recording Electronic Voting System in the test precinct.
|
The election authority shall test count these votes either by
|
hand or by using an automatic tabulating device other than a
|
Direct Recording Electronic voting device that has been |
approved
by the State Board of Elections for that purpose and |
tested
before use to ensure accuracy. The election authority |
shall
print the results of each test count. If any error is |
detected,
the cause shall be determined and corrected, and an |
errorless
count shall be made prior to the official canvass and
|
proclamation of election results. If an errorless count cannot
|
be conducted and there continues to be difference in vote
|
|
results between the certificate of results produced by the
|
Direct Recording Electronic Voting System and the count of the
|
permanent paper records or if an error was detected and
|
corrected, the election authority shall immediately prepare |
and
forward to the appropriate canvassing board a written |
report
explaining the results of the test and any errors |
encountered
and the report shall be made available for public |
inspection.
|
The State Board of Elections, the State's Attorney and
|
other appropriate law enforcement agencies, the county |
chairman
of each established political party and qualified |
civic
organizations shall be given prior written notice of the |
time
and place of the test and may be represented at the test.
|
The results of this post-election test shall be treated in
|
the same manner and have the same effect as the results of the
|
discovery procedures set forth in Section 22-9.1 of this Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-574, eff. 8-21-03.)
|
Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Section 5.700 and by changing Section 8h as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/5.700 new)
|
Sec. 5.700. The Voters' Guide Fund. |
(30 ILCS 105/8h)
|
Sec. 8h. Transfers to General Revenue Fund. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), notwithstanding |
any other
State law to the contrary, the Governor
may, through |
June 30, 2007, from time to time direct the State Treasurer and |
Comptroller to transfer
a specified sum from any fund held by |
the State Treasurer to the General
Revenue Fund in order to |
help defray the State's operating costs for the
fiscal year. |
The total transfer under this Section from any fund in any
|
fiscal year shall not exceed the lesser of (i) 8% of the |
revenues to be deposited
into the fund during that fiscal year |
or (ii) an amount that leaves a remaining fund balance of 25% |
|
of the July 1 fund balance of that fiscal year. In fiscal year |
2005 only, prior to calculating the July 1, 2004 final |
balances, the Governor may calculate and direct the State |
Treasurer with the Comptroller to transfer additional amounts |
determined by applying the formula authorized in Public Act |
93-839 to the funds balances on July 1, 2003.
No transfer may |
be made from a fund under this Section that would have the
|
effect of reducing the available balance in the fund to an |
amount less than
the amount remaining unexpended and unreserved |
from the total appropriation
from that fund estimated to be |
expended for that fiscal year. This Section does not apply to |
any
funds that are restricted by federal law to a specific use, |
to any funds in
the Motor Fuel Tax Fund, the Hospital Provider |
Fund, the Medicaid Provider Relief Fund, or the Reviewing Court |
Alternative Dispute Resolution Fund , or the Voters' Guide Fund , |
or to any
funds to which subsection (f) of Section 20-40 of the |
Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act applies. |
Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Section, for fiscal |
year 2004,
the total transfer under this Section from the Road |
Fund or the State
Construction Account Fund shall not exceed |
the lesser of (i) 5% of the revenues to be deposited
into the |
fund during that fiscal year or (ii) 25% of the beginning |
balance in the fund.
For fiscal year 2005 through fiscal year |
2007, no amounts may be transferred under this Section from the |
Road Fund, the State Construction Account Fund, the Criminal |
Justice Information Systems Trust Fund, the Wireless Service |
Emergency Fund, or the Mandatory Arbitration Fund.
|
In determining the available balance in a fund, the |
Governor
may include receipts, transfers into the fund, and |
other
resources anticipated to be available in the fund in that |
fiscal year.
|
The State Treasurer and Comptroller shall transfer the |
amounts designated
under this Section as soon as may be |
practicable after receiving the direction
to transfer from the |
Governor.
|
(b) This Section does not apply to any fund established |
|
under the Community Senior Services and Resources Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-674, |
eff. 6-10-04; 93-714, eff. 7-12-04; 93-801, eff. 7-22-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 93-1054, eff. 11-18-04; 93-1067, eff. |
1-15-05.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by |
changing Sections 3.1-10-50 and 5-5-1 as follows:
|
(65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-50)
|
Sec. 3.1-10-50. Vacancies.
|
(a) A municipal officer may resign from office. A vacancy |
occurs in an
office by reason of resignation, failure to elect |
or qualify (in which case
the incumbent shall remain in office |
until the vacancy is filled),
death, permanent physical or |
mental disability rendering the person
incapable of performing |
the duties of his or her office, conviction of a
disqualifying |
crime, abandonment of office, removal from office,
or removal |
of residence from the municipality or, in the case of aldermen
|
of a ward or trustees of a district, removal of residence from |
the ward or
district, as the case may be.
An admission of guilt |
of a criminal offense that would, upon conviction,
disqualify |
the municipal officer from holding that office, in the form of |
a
written agreement with State or federal prosecutors to plead |
guilty to
a felony, bribery, perjury, or other infamous crime |
under State or federal
law, shall constitute a resignation from |
that office, effective at the time the
plea agreement is made. |
For purposes of this Section, a conviction for an
offense that |
disqualifies the municipal officer from holding that office |
shall
occur on the date of the return of a guilty verdict or, |
in the case of a trial
by the court, the entry of a finding of |
guilt.
|
(b) If a vacancy occurs in an elective municipal office |
with
a 4-year term and there remains an unexpired portion of |
the term of at
least 28 months, and the vacancy occurs at least |
130 days before the general
municipal election next scheduled |
|
under the general election law, the vacancy
shall be filled for |
the remainder of the term at that general municipal
election. |
Whenever an election is held for this purpose, the municipal
|
clerk shall certify the office to be filled and the candidates |
for the
office to the proper election authorities as provided |
in the general
election law. If the vacancy is in the office of |
mayor, the city council
shall elect one of their members acting |
mayor; if the vacancy is in the
office of president, the |
vacancy shall be filled by the appointment by the trustees of |
an acting president from the members of
the board of trustees.
|
In villages with a population of less than 5,000, if each of |
the members of
the board of trustees either declines the |
appointment as acting
president or is not approved for the |
appointment by a majority vote of the
trustees presently |
holding office, then the
board of trustees may appoint as |
acting president any other
village resident who is qualified to |
hold municipal office.
The acting mayor or acting president
|
shall perform the duties and possess all the rights and powers |
of the mayor
or president until a successor to fill the vacancy |
has been elected and has
qualified. If the vacancy is in any |
other elective municipal office, then until
the office is |
filled by election, the mayor or president shall appoint a
|
qualified person to the office subject to the advice and |
consent of the
city council or trustees.
|
(c) In a 2 year term, or if the vacancy occurs later than |
the time provided
in subsection (b) in a 4 year term, a vacancy |
in the office of mayor shall be
filled by the corporate |
authorities electing one of their members acting mayor;
if the |
vacancy is in the office of president, the vacancy shall be |
filled by
the appointment by the trustees of an acting
|
president from the members of the board of trustees.
In |
villages with a population of less than 5,000, if each of the |
members of
the board of trustees either declines the |
appointment as acting
president or is not approved for the |
appointment by a majority vote of the
trustees presently |
holding office, then the
board of trustees may appoint as |
|
acting president any other
village resident who is qualified to |
hold municipal office.
The acting mayor or
acting president |
shall perform the duties and possess all the rights and powers
|
of the mayor or president until a mayor or president is elected |
at the next
general municipal election and has qualified. A |
vacancy in any elective office
other than mayor or president |
shall be filled by appointment by the mayor or
president, with |
the advice and consent of the corporate authorities.
|
(d) This subsection applies on and after January 1, 2006. |
The election of an acting mayor or acting president in a |
municipality with a population under 500,000 does not create a |
vacancy in the original office of the person on the city |
council or as a trustee, as the case may be, unless the person |
resigns from the original office following election as acting |
mayor
or acting president. If the person resigns from the |
original office following
election as acting mayor or acting |
president, then the original office must be filled pursuant to |
the terms of this Section and the acting mayor or acting |
president shall
exercise the powers of the mayor or president |
and shall vote and have veto power in the manner provided by |
law for a mayor or president. If the person does not resign |
from
the original office following election as acting mayor or |
acting president, then the
acting mayor or acting president |
shall exercise the powers of the mayor or president but shall |
be entitled to vote only in the manner provided for as the |
holder of the original office and shall not have the power to |
veto. If the person does not resign from the
original office |
following election as acting mayor or acting president, and if |
that person's original term of office has not expired when a |
mayor or president is elected and has
qualified for office, the |
acting mayor or acting president shall return to the original |
office for the remainder of the term thereof.
|
(e)
(d) Municipal officers appointed or elected under this |
Section shall
hold office until their successors are elected |
and have qualified.
|
(f)
(e) An appointment to fill a vacancy in the office of |
|
alderman shall be
made within 60 days after the vacancy occurs. |
The requirement that an
appointment be made within 60 days is |
an exclusive power and function of the
State and is a denial |
and limitation under Article VII, Section 6, subsection
(h) of |
the Illinois Constitution of the power of a home rule |
municipality to
require that an appointment be made within a |
different period after the vacancy
occurs.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-429, eff. 8-15-97; 90-707, eff. 8-7-98; |
91-357, eff.
7-29-99.)
|
(65 ILCS 5/5-5-1) (from Ch. 24, par. 5-5-1)
|
Sec. 5-5-1. Petition for abandonment of managerial form; |
referendum;
succeeding elections of officers and aldermen or |
trustees.
|
(a) A city or village that has operated for 4
years or more |
under the
managerial form of municipal government may abandon |
that
organization as provided in this Section. For the purposes |
of this
Article, the
operation of the managerial form of |
municipal government shall be deemed
to begin on the date of |
the appointment of the first manager in
the city or village. |
When a petition for abandonment
signed by electors of the
|
municipality equal in number to at least 10% of the number of |
votes cast
for candidates for mayor at the preceding general |
quadrennial municipal
election is filed with the circuit court |
for the county in which that
city or village is located, the |
court shall set a date not less than 10
nor more than 30 days |
thereafter for a hearing on the sufficiency of the
petition. |
Notice of the filing of the petition and of the date of the
|
hearing shall be given in writing to the city or village clerk |
and to
the mayor or village president at least 7 days before |
the date of the
hearing. If the petition is found sufficient, |
the court shall enter an
order directing that the
proposition |
be submitted at an election other than a primary election for
|
the municipality. The clerk of the court shall certify the |
proposition to
the proper election authorities for submission.
|
The proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
|
|
Shall (name of city or village) retain the managerial |
form of municipal government?
|
(b) If the majority of the votes at the
election are "yes", |
then the
proposition to abandon is rejected and the |
municipality shall continue
operating under this Article 5. If |
the majority of the votes are "no",
then the proposition to |
abandon operation under this Article 5 is
approved.
|
(c) If the proposition for abandonment is approved, the |
city or village
shall become subject to Article 3.1 or Article |
4,
whichever Article was in force in the city or village
|
immediately before the adoption of the plan authorized by this |
Article 5, upon the
election and qualification of officers to |
be elected at the next
succeeding general municipal election. |
Those officers shall be those
prescribed by Article 3.1 or |
Article 4, as the case may be, but the
change shall not in any |
manner or degree affect the property rights or
liabilities of |
the city or village. The mayor, clerk, and treasurer and
all |
other elected officers of a city or village in office at the |
time
the proposition for abandonment is approved shall continue |
in office
until the expiration of the term for which they were |
elected.
|
(d) If a city or village operating under this Article 5 has |
aldermen or
trustees elected from wards or districts and a |
proposition to abandon operation under this Article 5 is |
approved, then the officers
to be elected at the next
|
succeeding general municipal election shall be elected from the |
same
wards or districts as exist immediately before the |
abandonment.
|
(e) If a city or village operating under this Article 5 has |
a council or
village board elected from the municipality at |
large and a proposition
to abandon operation under this Article |
5 is approved, then
the first group of aldermen,
board of |
trustees, or commissioners so elected shall be of the same
|
number as was provided for in the municipality at the time of |
the
adoption of a plan under this Article 5, with the same ward |
or district
boundaries in cities or villages that immediately |
|
before the adoption
of this Article 5 had wards or districts, |
unless the municipal
boundaries have been changed. If there has |
been such a change,
the council or village board shall so alter |
the former ward or district
boundaries so as to conform as |
nearly as possible to the former
division. If the plan |
authorized by this Article 5 is
abandoned, the next general |
municipal election for officers shall be
held at the time |
specified in Section 3.1-10-75 or
3.1-25-15 for that
election. |
The aldermen or trustees elected at that election shall, if
the |
city or village was operating under Article 3 at the time of
|
adoption of this Article 5 and had at that time staggered 4 |
year terms
of office for the aldermen or trustees, choose by |
lot which shall serve
initial 2 year terms as provided by |
Section 3.1-20-35 or
3.1-15-5, whichever
may be applicable, in |
the case of election of those officers at
the first
election |
after a municipality is incorporated.
|
(f) The proposition to abandon the managerial form of |
municipal
government shall not be submitted in any city or |
village oftener than
once in 46
12 months.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 20. The Revised Cities and Villages Act of 1941 is |
amended by changing Section 21-28 as follows:
|
(65 ILCS 20/21-28) (from Ch. 24, par. 21-28)
|
Sec. 21-28. Nomination by petition. |
(a) All nominations for alderman of any ward in the city |
shall be by
petition. All petitions for nominations of |
candidates shall be signed by
such a number of legal voters of |
the ward as will aggregate not less
than two per cent
of all |
the votes cast for alderman in such ward at the last preceding
|
general election. For the election following the redistricting |
of wards
petitions for nominations of candidates shall be |
signed by the number of
legal voters of the ward as will |
aggregate not less than 2% of the total
number of votes cast |
for mayor at the last preceding municipal election
divided by |
|
the number of wards. |
(b) All nominations for mayor, city clerk, and city |
treasurer in the city shall be by petition. Each petition for |
nomination of a candidate must be signed by at least 12,500 |
legal voters of the city.
|
(c) All such petitions, and procedure with
respect thereto,
|
shall conform in other respects to the provisions of the |
election and
ballot laws then in force in the city of Chicago |
concerning the nomination
of independent candidates for public |
office by petition. The method of
nomination herein provided is |
exclusive of and replaces all other methods
heretofore provided |
by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-1535.)
|
Section 25. The Illinois Highway Code is amended by |
changing Section 6-116 as follows:
|
(605 ILCS 5/6-116) (from Ch. 121, par. 6-116)
|
Sec. 6-116. Except as otherwise provided in this Section |
with respect
to highway commissioners of township and |
consolidated township road districts,
at the election provided |
by the general election law in 1985 and every 4
years |
thereafter in all counties, other than counties in which a |
county
unit road district has been established and other than |
in Cook County, the
highway commissioner of each road district |
and the district clerk of each
road district having an elected |
clerk, shall be elected to hold office for
a term of 4 years, |
and until his successor is elected and qualified. The
highway |
commissioner of each road district and the district clerk of |
each
road district elected in 1979 shall hold office for an |
additional 2 years
and until his successor is elected and has |
qualified.
|
In each township and consolidated township road district |
outside Cook County,
highway commissioners shall be elected at |
the election provided for such commissioners
by the general |
election law in 1981 and
every 4 years thereafter to hold |
|
office for a term of 4 years and until
his successor is elected |
and qualified. The highway commissioner of each
road district |
in Cook County shall be elected at the election provided for
|
said commissioner by the general election law in 1981 and every |
4 years
thereafter for a term of 4 years, and until his |
successor is elected and qualified.
|
Each highway commissioner
shall enter upon the duties of |
his office on the third
first Monday in May
after his election.
|
In road districts comprised of a single township, the |
highway commissioner
shall be elected at the election provided |
for said commissioner by the general
election law. All |
elections as are provided in this Section shall be conducted
in |
accordance with the general election law.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-108.)
|
Section 30. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Section 2-105 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/2-105) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 2-105)
|
Sec. 2-105. Offices of Secretary of State. The Secretary of |
State shall maintain offices in the State capital and
in such |
other places in the State as he may deem necessary to properly
|
carry out the powers and duties vested in him.
|
The Secretary of State may construct and equip one or more |
buildings in
the State of Illinois outside of the County of |
Sangamon as he deems
necessary to properly carry out the powers |
and duties vested in him. The
Secretary of State may, on behalf |
of the State of Illinois, acquire public
or private property |
needed therefor by lease, purchase or eminent domain.
The care, |
custody and control of such sites and buildings constructed
|
thereon shall be vested in the Secretary of State. Expenditures |
for the
construction and equipping of any of such buildings |
upon premises owned by
another public entity shall not be |
subject to the provisions of any State
law requiring that the |
State be vested with absolute fee title to the
premises. The |
exercise of the authority vested in the Secretary of State by
|
|
this Section is subject to the appropriation of the necessary |
funds.
|
Pursuant to Sections 4-6.2, 5-16.2, and 6-50.2 of The |
Election Code,
the Secretary of State shall make driver |
services facilities available for use as temporary places of |
registration. Registration
within the offices shall be in the |
most public, orderly and convenient portions
thereof, and |
Section 4-3, 5-3, and 11-4 of The Election Code relative
to the |
attendance of police officers during the conduct of |
registration
shall apply. Registration under this Section |
shall be made in the manner
provided by Sections 4-8, 4-10, |
5-7, 5-9, 6-34, 6-35, and 6-37 of The
Election Code.
|
Within 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1990,
and no later than November 1 of each even-numbered |
year thereafter, the
Secretary of State, to the extent |
practicable, shall designate to each
election authority in the |
State a reasonable number of employees at each
driver services |
facility
registered
to vote
within the
jurisdiction of such |
election authority and within adjacent election
jurisdictions |
for appointment as deputy registrars by the election
authority |
located within the election jurisdiction where the employees
|
maintain their residences. Such designation shall be in writing |
and
certified by the Secretary of State.
|
Each person applying at a driver services facility for a |
driver's
license or permit, a corrected driver's license or |
permit, an Illinois
identification card or a corrected Illinois |
identification card
shall be notified that the person may |
register at such station to vote in
the State
election |
jurisdiction in which the station is located or in an election
|
jurisdiction adjacent to the location of the station and may |
also
transfer his voter registration at such station to a |
different
an address in the
State
election jurisdiction within |
which the station is located or to an address
in an adjacent |
election jurisdiction . Such notification may be made in
writing |
or verbally issued by an employee or the Secretary of State.
|
The Secretary of State shall promulgate such rules as may |
|
be necessary
for the efficient execution of his duties and the |
duties of his employees
under this amendatory Act of 1990.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-89, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
Section 90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding |
Section 8.29 as
follows:
|
(30 ILCS 805/8.29 new)
|
Sec. 8.29. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8 |
of this
Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the |
implementation of
any mandate created by this amendatory Act of |
the 94th General Assembly. |
Section 95. Severability. The provisions of this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly are severable under |
Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 97. 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 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law. |