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Published byTiffany Edwards Modified over 9 years ago
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OVERVIEW OF ELECTION PROCESS Presented by Cathy Connolly
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INTRODUCTION ROLE OF CITY/TOWN CLERK RESOURCES WORKING WITH COUNTY
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JANUARY 31 Campaign finance reports due on January 31
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MAY 2 Clerk must have ready for distribution: Nomination paper, affidavit of qualification and campaign finance laws statement Nomination petitions Financial disclosure forms Political committee statement of organization and $500 threshold exemption statement
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MAY 13 [OPTIONAL] Primary/General Election: First publication of call of election for weekly paper 2 times for a weekly paper MAY 17 [OPTIONAL] Primary/General Election: First publication of call of election for daily paper 4 times for a daily paper
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MAY 20 [OPTIONAL] Primary Election: Second publication of call of election for a weekly paper Fourth time for a daily paper
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JUNE 1 Deadline for candidates to file: Nomination paper, affidavit of qualification and campaign finance laws statement Nomination petitions Financial disclosure forms Political committee statement of organization or $500 threshold exemption statement JUNE 30 Primary/General Election: June 30 campaign finance report due
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JULY 15 Primary Election: Prepare and mail proof of sample ballot to candidates JULY 21 Primary/General Election: Nomination papers from write-in candidates due JULY 29 Primary Election: Post notice sample ballots available
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AUGUST 1 Primary Election: County voter registration closes AUGUST 19 Primary Election: Publish city or town financial statement (Time frame for figures)
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AUGUST 26 Primary Election: Pre-primary campaign finance report due AUGUST 30 Primary Election Day Calculation of who wins at primary Separate calculation for mayor if directly elected Existing ordinances Charter cities Districts
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AUGUST 30 (Cont’d ) By way of example 7 candidates are running for 3 council seats and their vote totals are as follows: John Smith 100 Mary Smith 90 John Doe 90 Mary Doe 70 John Jones 50 Mary Jones 40 Qualified write-in 5 TOTAL445 445 is then divided by three, the number of seats to be filled, which comes to 148.3 and that result is then divided by two and rounded up to a whole number which means that a candidate receiving 75 or more votes would win at the primary. So John Smith, Mary Smith and John Doe would fill the 3 seats. If more candidates than there are offices to be filled had received 75 votes or more, then the top three would be declared winners.
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SEPTEMBER 23 General Election: Mail proof of sample ballot to candidates SEPTEMBER 29 General Election: Nomination papers from write-in candidates due Primary Election: Post-primary campaign finance report due SEPTEMBER 19 Primary Election: Council meets to canvass vote
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OCTOBER 10 General Election: County voter registration closes OCTOBER 7 General Election: Post notice sample ballots available NOVEMBER 4 General Election: Pre-general campaign finance report due
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NOVEMBER 28 General Election: Council meets to canvass vote DECEMBER 8 General Election: Post-general campaign finance report due NOVEMBER 8 General Election Day!
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FEBRUARY 27, 2017 Primary/General: $500 threshold termination statement due
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CALCULATING NOMINATION PETITION SIGNATURE REQUIREMENT FOR CITIES WITH DIRECTLY ELECTED MAYOR For Mayor and Council elected at large At least 5% and not more than 10% of total vote cast in the City for MAYOR in the last preceding election For Council district elections At least 5% and not more than 10% of total vote cast in the District for MAYOR in the last preceding election Add the votes cast for the candidates for the office of mayor including qualified write-ins at the last election and calculate percentage. If mayor was not elected at last preceding election, use next calculation.
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CALCULATING NOMINATION PETITION SIGNATURE REQUIREMENT (CONT.) FOR CITIES W/OUT A DIRECTLY ELECTED MAYOR At least 5% and not more than 10% of vote cast in the City for the COUNCILMEMBER receiving the highest vote at the last preceding election. FOR TOWNS At least 5% and not more than 10% of vote cast in the Town for the COUNCILMEMBER receiving the highest vote at the last preceding election. LOCAL ORDINANCE OPTION
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CALCULATION OF SIGNATURES FOR INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL PETITIONS INITIATIVES AND REFERENDUMS Total number of VALID BALLOTS CAST at the last city or town election where a mayor or at large councilmember was elected For initiatives, 15%; for referendum, 10% Can pass local ordinance to use something other than valid ballots as the basis for the calculation for initiatives only
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CALCULATION OF SIGNATURES FOR INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL PETITIONS (CONT.) RECALL PETITIONS FOR MAYOR OR DISTRICT COUNCILMEMBER Add actual votes cast for all candidates including qualified write-ins for the office at the last general election and multiply by 25% FOR AT LARGE COUNCILMEMBER Add actual votes cast for all council candidates including qualified write-ins at the last general election. Divide by the number of offices filled at that election and then multiply the result by 25%.
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QUESTIONS
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