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S. B. No. 202 As IntroducedAs Introduced
127th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2007-2008 |
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Cosponsors:
Senators Roberts, Smith, Cafaro
A BILL
To amend sections 3501.01, 3513.01, and 3513.12 of
the Revised Code to require presidential primary
elections to be conducted on the last Tuesday in
January.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That sections 3501.01, 3513.01, and 3513.12 of the
Revised Code be amended to read as follows:
Sec. 3501.01. As used in the sections of the Revised Code
relating to elections and political communications:
(A) "General election" means the election held on the
first
Tuesday after the first Monday in each November.
(B) "Regular municipal election" means the election held
on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in each
odd-numbered year.
(C) "Regular state election" means the election held on
the
first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in each
even-numbered year.
(D) "Special election" means any election other than those
elections defined in other divisions of this section. A special
election may be held only on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in February, May, August, or November, or on the day
authorized by a particular municipal or county charter for the
holding of a primary election, except that in any year in which a
presidential primary election is held, no special election shall
be held in February or May, except as authorized by a municipal
or
county charter, but may be held on the first Tuesday
after the
first Monday in
March.
(E)(1) "Primary" or "primary election" means an election
held
for the purpose of nominating persons as candidates of
political
parties for election to offices, and for the purpose of
electing
persons as members of the controlling committees of
political
parties and as delegates and alternates to the
conventions of
political parties. Primary elections shall be
held
on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday in May of each
year
except in years
in which a presidential primary election is
held.
(2) "Presidential primary election" means a primary
election
as defined by division (E)(1) of this
section at which an election
is held for the purpose of choosing
delegates and alternates to
the national conventions of the major
political parties pursuant
to section 3513.12 of the Revised
Code. Unless otherwise
specified, presidential primary elections
are included in
references to primary elections. In Except as otherwise authorized
by a municipal or county charter, in years in
which a presidential
primary election is held, all primary
elections shall be held on
the first last Tuesday after the
first Monday in March
except as
otherwise authorized by a municipal or county charter January.
(F) "Political party" means any group of voters meeting
the
requirements set forth in section 3517.01 of the Revised Code
for
the formation and existence of a political party.
(1) "Major political party" means any political party
organized under the laws of this state whose candidate for
governor or nominees for presidential electors received no less
than twenty per cent of the total vote cast for such office at
the
most recent regular state election.
(2) "Intermediate political party" means any political
party
organized under the laws of this state whose candidate for
governor or nominees for presidential electors received less than
twenty per cent but not less than ten per cent of the total vote
cast for such office at the most recent regular
state
election.
(3) "Minor political party" means any political party
organized under the laws of this state whose candidate for
governor or nominees for presidential electors received less than
ten per cent but not less than five per cent of the total vote
cast for such office at the most recent regular
state election
or
which has filed with the secretary of state, subsequent to any
election in which it received less than five per cent of such
vote, a petition signed by qualified electors equal in number to
at least one per cent of the total vote cast for such office in
the last preceding regular state election, except that a newly
formed political party shall be known as a minor political party
until the time of the first election for governor or president
which occurs not less than twelve months subsequent to the
formation of such party, after which election the status of such
party shall be determined by the vote for the office of governor
or president.
(G) "Dominant party in a precinct" or "dominant political
party in a precinct" means that political party whose candidate
for election to the office of governor at the most
recent
regular
state election at which a governor was elected received
more votes
than any other person received for election to
that
office in such
precinct at such election.
(H) "Candidate" means any qualified person certified in
accordance with the provisions of the Revised Code for placement
on the official ballot of a primary, general, or special election
to be held in this state, or any qualified person who claims to be
a
write-in candidate, or who
knowingly assents to being
represented as a
write-in candidate by another at either a
primary,
general, or special election to be held in this state.
(I) "Independent candidate" means any candidate who claims
not to be
affiliated with a
political party, and whose name has
been certified on the office-type ballot at a general or special
election
through the filing of a statement of candidacy and
nominating petition, as
prescribed in section 3513.257 of the
Revised Code.
(J) "Nonpartisan candidate" means any candidate whose name
is
required, pursuant to section 3505.04 of the Revised Code, to
be
listed on the nonpartisan ballot, including all candidates for
judicial office, for member of any board of education, for
municipal or township offices in which primary elections are not
held for nominating candidates by political parties, and for
offices of municipal corporations having charters that provide
for
separate ballots for elections for these offices.
(K) "Party candidate" means any candidate who claims to be a
member of a
political party,
whose name has been certified
on the
office-type ballot at a general or special election
through the
filing of a declaration of candidacy and petition of
candidate,
and who has won the primary election of the
candidate's party for
the public office the candidate seeks or is selected
by party
committee in accordance with section 3513.31 of the Revised Code.
(L) "Officer of a political party" includes, but is not
limited to, any member, elected or appointed, of a controlling
committee, whether representing the territory of the state, a
district therein, a county, township, a city, a ward, a precinct,
or other territory, of a major, intermediate, or minor political
party.
(M) "Question or issue" means any question or issue
certified
in accordance with the Revised Code for placement on an
official
ballot at a general or special election to be held in
this state.
(N) "Elector" or "qualified elector" means a person having
the qualifications provided by law to be entitled to
vote.
(O) "Voter" means an elector who votes at an election.
(P) "Voting residence" means that place of residence of an
elector which shall determine the precinct in which the
elector
may vote.
(Q) "Precinct" means a district within a county
established
by the board of elections of such county within which
all
qualified electors having a voting residence therein may vote
at
the same polling place.
(R) "Polling place" means that place provided for each
precinct at which the electors having a voting residence in such
precinct may vote.
(S) "Board" or "board of elections" means the board of
elections appointed in a county pursuant to section 3501.06 of
the
Revised Code.
(T) "Political subdivision" means
a county,
township,
city,
village, or
school district.
(U) "Election officer" or
"election official" means any of
the
following:
(2) Employees of the secretary of state serving
the
division
of elections in the capacity of attorney, administrative
officer,
administrative assistant, elections administrator, office
manager,
or clerical
supervisor;
(3) Director of a board of elections;
(4) Deputy director of a board of elections;
(5)
Member of a board of elections;
(6) Employees of a board of elections;
(7) Precinct polling place judges and clerks;
(8) Employees appointed by the boards of elections on a
temporary or
part-time basis.
(V) "Acknowledgment notice" means a notice sent by a board
of
elections, on a
form prescribed by the secretary of state,
informing a voter registration
applicant or an applicant who
wishes to change the
applicant's residence or name of the status
of
the application; the information necessary to complete or
update
the application, if any; and if the application is
complete,
the precinct in which the applicant is to vote.
(W) "Confirmation notice" means a notice sent by a board of
elections, on a
form prescribed by the secretary of state, to a
registered elector to confirm
the registered elector's current
address.
(X) "Designated agency" means an office or agency in the
state that provides
public assistance or that provides
state-funded programs primarily engaged in
providing services to
persons with disabilities and that is required by the
National
Voter Registration Act of 1993 to implement a program designed and
administered by the secretary of state for registering voters, or
any other
public or government office or agency that implements a
program designed and
administered by the secretary of state for
registering voters, including the
department of job and family
services, the program
administered under section 3701.132
of the
Revised Code by the department of health, the department of mental
health, the department of mental retardation and developmental
disabilities,
the rehabilitation services commission, and any
other
agency the secretary of state designates. "Designated
agency" does
not include public high schools and vocational
schools, public libraries, or
the office of a county treasurer.
(Y) "National Voter Registration Act of 1993" means the
"National Voter
Registration Act of 1993," 107 Stat. 77, 42
U.S.C.A. 1973gg.
(Z) "Voting Rights Act of 1965" means the "Voting Rights Act
of 1965," 79
Stat. 437, 42 U.S.C.A. 1973, as amended.
(AA) "Photo identification" means a document that meets each
of the following requirements:
(1) It shows the name of the individual to whom it was
issued, which shall conform to the name in the poll list or
signature pollbook.
(2) It shows the current address of the individual to whom it
was issued, which shall conform to the address in the poll list or
signature pollbook, except for a driver's license or a state
identification card issued under section 4507.50 of the Revised
Code, which may show either the current or former address of the
individual to whom it was issued, regardless of whether that
address conforms to the address in the poll list or signature
pollbook.
(3) It shows a photograph of the individual to whom it was
issued.
(4) It includes an expiration date that has not passed.
(5) It was issued by the government of the United States or
this state.
Sec. 3513.01. (A) Except as otherwise provided in this
section, on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in March of
2000 and every fourth
year thereafter, and on the first Tuesday
after the first Monday
in May of every other year, primary
elections shall be held in each year on the dates specified in
section 3501.01 of the Revised Code for
the purpose of nominating
persons as candidates of political
parties for election to offices
to be voted for at the
succeeding general election.
(B) The manner of nominating persons as candidates for
election as officers of a municipal corporation having a
population of two thousand or more, as ascertained by the most
recent federal
census, shall be the same as
the manner in
which
candidates were nominated for election as officers in the
municipal corporation in 1989 unless the manner of nominating
such
candidates is changed under division (C), (D), or (E) of
this
section.
(C) Primary elections shall not be held for the nomination
of
candidates for election as officers of any township, or any
municipal corporation having a population of less than two
thousand, unless a majority of the electors of any such
township
or municipal corporation, as determined by the total
number of
votes cast in such township or municipal corporation
for the
office of governor at the most
recent regular state
election,
files with the board of elections of the county within
which such
township or municipal corporation is located, or
within which the
major portion of the population thereof is
located, if the
municipal corporation is situated in more than
one county, not
later than one hundred five days before the day
of a primary
election, a petition signed by such electors asking
that
candidates for election as officers of such township or
municipal
corporation be nominated as candidates of political
parties, in
which event primary elections shall be held in such
township or
municipal corporation for the purpose of nominating
persons as
candidates of political parties for election as
officers of such
township or municipal corporation to be voted
for at the
succeeding regular municipal election. In
a
township or municipal
corporation where a majority of the
electors have filed a petition
asking that candidates for
election as officers of the township or
municipal corporation be
nominated as candidates of political
parties, the nomination of
candidates for a nonpartisan election
may be reestablished in the
manner prescribed in division (E) of
this section.
(D)(1) The electors in a municipal corporation having a
population of two thousand or more, in which municipal officers
were nominated in the most recent election by nominating petition
and elected by nonpartisan election, may place on the ballot in
the manner prescribed in division (D)(2) of this section the
question of changing to the primary-election method of nominating
persons as candidates for election as officers of the municipal
corporation.
(2) The board of elections of the county within which the
municipal corporation is located, or, if the municipal
corporation
is located in more than one county, of the county
within which the
major portion of the population of the municipal
corporation is
located, shall, upon receipt of a petition signed
by electors of
the municipal corporation equal in number to at
least ten per cent
of the vote cast at the most recent
regular municipal
election,
submit to the electors of the municipal corporation the
question
of changing to the primary-election method of nominating
persons
as candidates for election as officers of the municipal
corporation. The ballot language shall be substantially as
follows:
"Shall candidates for election as officers of ............
(name of municipal corporation) in the county of ............
(name of county) be nominated as candidates of political parties?
The question shall be placed on the ballot at the next
general election in an even-numbered year occurring at least
seventy-five days after the petition is filed with the board. If
a
majority of the electors voting on the question vote in the
affirmative, candidates for election as officers of the municipal
corporation shall thereafter be nominated as candidates of
political parties in primary elections, under division (A) of
this
section, unless a change in the manner of nominating persons
as
candidates for election as officers of the municipal
corporation
is made under division (E) of this section.
(E)(1) The electors in a township or municipal corporation
in
which the township or municipal officers are nominated as
candidates of political parties in a primary election may place
on
the ballot, in the manner prescribed in division (E)(2) of
this
section, the question of changing to the nonpartisan method
of
nominating persons as candidates for election as officers of
the
township or municipal corporation.
(2) The board of elections of the county within which the
township or municipal corporation is located, or, if the
municipal
corporation is located in more than one county, of the
county
within which the major portion of the population of the
municipal
corporation is located, shall, upon receipt of a
petition signed
by electors of the township or municipal
corporation equal in
number to at least ten per cent of the vote
cast at the most
recent regular township or municipal
election, as
appropriate,
submit to the electors of the township or municipal
corporation,
as appropriate, the question of changing to the
nonpartisan method
of nominating persons as candidates for
election as officers of
the township or municipal corporation.
The ballot language shall
be substantially as follows:
"Shall candidates for election as officers of ............
(name of the township or municipal corporation) in the county of
............ (name of county) be nominated as candidates by
nominating petition and be elected only in a nonpartisan
election?
The question shall appear on the ballot at the next general
election in an even-numbered year occurring at least seventy-five
days after the petition is filed with the board. If a majority
of
electors voting on the question vote in the affirmative,
candidates for officer of the township or municipal corporation
shall thereafter be nominated by nominating petition and be
elected only in a nonpartisan election, unless a change in the
manner of nominating persons as candidates for election as
officers of the township or municipal corporation is made under
division (C) or (D) of this section.
Sec. 3513.12. At a presidential primary election, which
shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in March
in the year
2000, and
similarly in every fourth year thereafter,
delegates and
alternates to the national conventions of the
different major
political parties shall be chosen by direct vote
of the electors
as provided in this chapter. Candidates for
delegate and
alternate shall be qualified and the election shall
be conducted
in the manner prescribed in this chapter for the
nomination of
candidates for state and district offices, except as
provided in
section 3513.151 of the Revised Code and except that
whenever any
group of candidates for delegate at large or
alternate at large,
or any group of candidates for delegates or
alternates from
districts, file with the secretary of state
statements as
provided by this section, designating the same
persons as their
first and second choices for president of the
United States, such
a group of candidates may submit a group
petition containing a
declaration of candidacy for each of such
candidates. The group
petition need be signed only by the number
of electors required
for the petition of a single candidate. No
group petition shall
be submitted except by a group of candidates
equal in number to
the whole number of delegates at large or
alternates at large to
be elected or equal in number to the whole
number of delegates or
alternates from a district to be elected.
Each person seeking to be elected as delegate or alternate
to
the national convention of the person's political party
shall file
with
the person's declaration of candidacy and certificate a
statement in
writing signed by the person in which the
person
shall state the person's first and
second choices for nomination
as the candidate of the
person's party for
the presidency of the
United States. The secretary of state
shall not permit any
declaration of candidacy and certificate of
a candidate for
election as such delegate or alternate to be
filed unless
accompanied by such statement in writing. The name
of a candidate
for the presidency shall not be so used without
the candidate's
written consent.
A person who is a first choice for president of candidates
seeking election as delegates and alternates shall file with the
secretary of state, prior to the day of the election, a list
indicating the order in which certificates of election are to be
issued to delegate or alternate candidates to whose candidacy the
person
has consented, if fewer than all of such candidates are
entitled
under party rules to be certified as elected. Each
candidate for
election as such delegate or alternate may also file
along with
the candidate's declaration of candidacy and
certificate a
statement in
writing signed by the candidate in the
following form:
"Statement of Candidate
For Election as ............ (Delegate) (Alternate) to the
............ (name of political party) National Convention
I hereby declare to the voters of my political party in the
State of Ohio that, if elected as ............ (delegate)
(alternate) to their national party convention, I shall, to the
best of my judgment and ability, support that candidate for
President of the United States who shall have been selected at
this primary by the voters of my party in the manner provided in
Chapter 3513. of the Ohio Revised Code, as their candidate for
such office.
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........................... (name,), |
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Candidate for ............. |
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(Delegate) (Alternate)" |
The procedures for the selection of candidates for delegate
and alternate to the national convention of a political party set
forth in this section and in section 3513.121 of the Revised Code
are alternative procedures, and if the procedures of this section
are followed, the procedures of section 3513.121 of the Revised
Code need not be followed.
Section 2. That existing sections 3501.01, 3513.01, and
3513.12 of the Revised Code are hereby repealed.
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