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Illinois Compiled Statutes
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ELECTIONS (10 ILCS 5/) Election Code. 10 ILCS 5/10-1
(10 ILCS 5/10-1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-1)
Sec. 10-1. Application of Article to minor political parties.
(a) Political parties as defined in this Article and individual
voters to the number and in the manner specified in this Article may
nominate candidates for public offices whose names shall be placed on
the ballot to be furnished, as provided in this Article. No
nominations may be made under this Article 10, however, by any
established political party which, at the general election next
preceding, polled more than 5% of the entire vote cast in the State,
district, or unit of local government for which the nomination is made.
Those nominations provided for in Section 45-5 of the Township Code
shall be made as prescribed in Sections 45-10 through 45-45 of that
Code for nominations
by established political parties, but minor political parties and
individual voters are governed by this Article. Any convention,
caucus, or meeting of qualified voters of any established political party
as defined in this Article may, however, make one
nomination for each office therein to be
filled at any election for officers of a municipality with a population
of less than 5,000 by causing a certificate of nomination to be filed
with the municipal clerk no earlier than 113 and no later than 106 days before
the election at which the nominated candidates are to be on the ballot.
The municipal caucuses shall be conducted on the first Monday in December of even-numbered years,
except that, when that Monday is a holiday or the eve
of a holiday, the caucuses shall be held on the next business day following the
holiday. Every certificate of nomination shall
state the facts required in Section 10-5 of this Article and
shall be signed by the presiding officer and by the secretary of the
convention, caucus, or meeting, who shall add to their signatures their
places of residence. The certificates shall be sworn to by them to be
true to the best of their knowledge and belief, and a certificate of the
oath shall be annexed to the certificate of nomination.
(b) Publication of the time and place of holding the caucus shall be given
by the municipal clerk. For municipalities of over 500 population, notice
of the caucus shall be published in a newspaper published in the
municipality. If there is no such newspaper, then the notice
shall be published in a newspaper
published in the county and having general circulation in the municipality.
For municipalities of 500 population or less,
notice of the caucus shall be given by the municipal clerk by posting the
notice in 3 of the most public places in the municipality. The
publication or posting shall be given at least 10 days before the caucus.
(c) As provided in Sections 3.1-25-20 through 3.1-25-60 of the Illinois
Municipal Code, a village may adopt a system of nonpartisan primary and general
elections for the election of village officers.
(d) Any city, village, or incorporated town with a population of 5,000 or
less may, by ordinance, determine that established political parties shall
nominate candidates for municipal office in the city, village, or
incorporated town by primary in accordance with Article 7.
(e) Only those voters who reside within the territory for which the
nomination is made shall be permitted to vote or take part in the
proceedings of any convention, caucus, or meeting of individual voters or
of any political party held under this Section.
No voter shall vote or take part in the proceedings of more than one
convention, caucus, or meeting to make a nomination for the same office.
(Source: P.A. 97-81, eff. 7-5-11.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-2
(10 ILCS 5/10-2) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-2)
Sec. 10-2.
The term "political party", as hereinafter used in this
Article 10, shall mean any "established political party", as hereinafter
defined and shall also mean any political group which shall hereafter
undertake to form an established political party in the manner provided
for in this Article 10: Provided, that no political organization or
group shall be qualified as a political party hereunder, or given a
place on a ballot, which organization or group is associated, directly
or indirectly, with Communist, Fascist, Nazi or other un-American
principles and engages in activities or propaganda designed to teach
subservience to the political principles and ideals of foreign nations
or the overthrow by violence of the established constitutional form of
government of the United States and the State of Illinois.
A political party which, at the last general election for State and
county officers, polled for its candidate for Governor more than 5% of
the entire vote cast for Governor, is hereby declared to be an
"established political party" as to the State and as to any district or
political subdivision thereof.
A political party which, at the last election in any congressional
district, legislative district, county, township, municipality or other
political subdivision or district in the State, polled more than 5% of
the entire vote cast within such territorial area or political
subdivision, as the case may be, has voted as a unit for the election of
officers to serve the respective territorial area of such district or
political subdivision, is hereby declared to be an "established
political party" within the meaning of this Article as to such district
or political subdivision.
Any group of persons hereafter desiring to form a new political party
throughout the State, or in any congressional, legislative or judicial
district, or in any other district or in any political subdivision
(other than a municipality) not entirely within a single county, shall
file with the State Board of Elections a petition, as hereinafter
provided; and any such group of persons hereafter desiring to form a new
political party within any county shall file such petition with the
county clerk; and any such group of persons hereafter desiring to form a
new political party within any municipality or township or within any
district of a unit of local government other than a county shall file
such petition with the local election official or Board of Election
Commissioners of such municipality, township or other unit of local
government, as the case may be. Any such petition for the formation of a
new political party throughout the State, or in any such district or
political subdivision, as the case may be, shall declare as concisely as
may be the intention of the signers thereof to form such new political
party in the State, or in such district or political subdivision; shall
state in not more than 5 words the name of such new political party;
shall at the time of filing contain a complete list of candidates of
such party for all offices to be filled in the State, or such district
or political subdivision as the case may be, at the next ensuing
election then to be held; and, if such new political party shall be
formed for the entire State, shall be signed by 1% of the number of voters
who voted at the next preceding Statewide general election or 25,000
qualified voters, whichever is less. If such new political party shall be
formed for any district
or political subdivision less than the entire State, such petition shall
be signed by qualified voters equaling in number not less than 5% of the
number of voters who voted at the next preceding regular election in
such district or political subdivision in which such district or
political subdivision voted as a unit for the election of officers to
serve its respective territorial area. However, whenever the minimum signature
requirement for a district or political subdivision new political
party petition shall exceed the minimum number of signatures for State-wide
new political party petitions at the next preceding State-wide general
election, such State-wide petition signature requirement shall be the
minimum for such district or political subdivision new political party petition.
For the first election following a redistricting of congressional districts,
a petition to form a new political party in a congressional district shall
be signed by at least 5,000 qualified voters of the congressional district.
For the first election following a redistricting of legislative districts,
a petition to form a new political party in a legislative district shall
be signed by at least 3,000 qualified voters of the legislative district.
For the first election following a redistricting of representative
districts, a petition to form a new political party in a representative
district shall be signed by at least 1,500 qualified voters of the
representative district.
For the first election following redistricting of county board districts,
or of municipal wards or districts, or for the first election following
the initial establishment of such districts or wards in a county or
municipality, a petition to form a new political party in a county board
district or in a municipal ward or district shall be signed by qualified
voters of the district or ward equal to not less than 5% of the total
number of votes cast at the preceding general or municipal election, as the
case may be, for the county or municipal office voted on throughout the
county or municipality for which the greatest total number of votes were
cast for all candidates, divided by the number of districts or wards, but
in any event not less than 25 qualified voters of the district or ward.
In the case of a petition to form a new political party within a political
subdivision in which officers are to be elected from
districts and at-large, such petition shall consist
of separate components for each district from which an officer
is to be elected. Each component shall be circulated only within a
district of the political subdivision and signed only by qualified electors
who are residents of such district. Each sheet of such petition must
contain a complete list of the names of the candidates of the party for all
offices to be filled in the political subdivision at large, but the sheets
comprising each component shall also contain the names of those candidates
to be elected from the particular district. Each component of the petition
for each district from which an officer is to be elected must be signed by
qualified voters of the district equalling in number not less than 5% of
the number of voters who voted at the next preceding regular election in
such district at which an officer was elected to serve the district. The
entire petition, including all components, must be signed by a total of
qualified voters of the entire political subdivision equalling in number
not less than 5% of the number of voters who voted at the next preceding
regular election in such political subdivision at which an officer was
elected to serve the political subdivision at large.
The filing of such petition shall constitute the political group a
new political party, for the purpose only of placing upon the ballot at
such next ensuing election such list or an adjusted list in accordance
with Section 10-11, of party candidates for offices to be voted for
throughout the State, or for offices to be voted for in such district or
political subdivision less than the State, as the case may be, under the
name of and as the candidates of such new political party.
If, at such ensuing election, the new political party's candidate for
Governor shall receive more than 5% of the entire votes cast for
Governor, then such new political party shall become an "established
political party" as to the State and as to every district or political
subdivision thereof. If, at such ensuing election, the other candidates
of the new political party, or any other candidate or candidates of the
new political party shall receive more than 5% of all the votes cast for
the office or offices for which they were candidates at such election,
in the State, or in any district or political subdivision, as the case
may be, then and in that event, such new political party shall become an
"established political party" within the State or within such district
or political subdivision less than the State, as the case may be, in
which such candidate or candidates received more than 5% of the votes
cast for the office or offices for which they were candidates. It shall
thereafter nominate its candidates for public offices to be filled in
the State, or such district or political subdivision, as the case may
be, under the provisions of the laws regulating the nomination of
candidates of established political parties at primary elections and
political party conventions, as now or hereafter in force.
A political party which continues to receive for its candidate for
Governor more than 5% of the entire vote cast for Governor, shall remain
an "established political party" as to the State and as to every
district or political subdivision thereof. But if the political party's
candidate for Governor fails to receive more than 5% of the entire vote
cast for Governor, or if the political party does not nominate a
candidate for Governor, the political party shall remain an "established
political party" within the State or within such district or political
subdivision less than the State, as the case may be, only so long as,
and only in those districts or political subdivisions in which, the
candidates of that political party, or any candidate or candidates of
that political party, continue to receive more than 5% of all the votes
cast for the office or offices for which they were candidates at
succeeding general or consolidated elections within the State or within
any district or political subdivision, as the case may be.
Any such petition shall be filed at the same time and shall be
subject to the same requirements and to the same provisions in respect
to objections thereto and to any hearing or hearings upon such
objections that are hereinafter in this Article 10 contained in regard
to the nomination of any other candidate or candidates by petition. If
any such new political party shall become an "established political
party" in the manner herein provided, the candidate or candidates of
such new political party nominated by the petition hereinabove referred
to for such initial election, shall have power to select any such party committeeperson
or committeepersons as shall be necessary for the creation of a
provisional party organization and provisional managing committee or
committees for such party within the State, or in any district or
political subdivision in which the new political party has become
established; and the party committeeperson or committeepersons so selected
shall constitute a provisional party organization for the new political
party and shall have and exercise the powers conferred by law upon any
party committeeperson or committeepersons to manage and control the affairs of
such new political party until the next ensuing primary election at
which the new political party shall be entitled to nominate and elect
any party committeeperson or committeepersons in the State, or in such district
or political subdivision under any parts of this Act relating to the
organization of political parties.
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 the primary election, is ineligible for nomination as a
candidate of a new political party for election in that general election.
(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19 .)
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10 ILCS 5/10-3
(10 ILCS 5/10-3) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-3)
Sec. 10-3. Nomination of independent candidates (not candidates of
any political party), for any office to be filled by the voters of the
State at large may also be made by nomination papers signed in the
aggregate for each candidate by 1% of the number of voters who voted in
the next preceding Statewide general election or 25,000 qualified voters
of the State, whichever is less. Nominations of independent candidates
for public office within any district or political subdivision less than
the State, may be made by nomination papers signed in the aggregate for
each candidate by qualified voters of such district, or political
subdivision, equaling not less than 5%, nor more than 8% (or 50 more
than the minimum, whichever is greater) of the number of persons, who
voted at the next preceding regular election in such district or
political subdivision in which such district or political subdivision
voted as a unit for the election of officers to serve its respective
territorial area. However, whenever the minimum
signature requirement for an independent candidate petition for a
district or political subdivision office shall exceed the minimum number
of signatures for an independent candidate petition for an office to be
filled by the voters of the State at large at the next preceding
State-wide general election, such State-wide petition signature
requirement shall be the minimum for an independent candidate petition
for such district or political subdivision office. For the first
election following a redistricting of congressional districts,
nomination papers for an independent candidate for congressperson shall be
signed by at least 5,000 qualified voters of the congressional district.
For the first election following a redistricting of legislative
districts, nomination papers for an independent candidate for State
Senator in the General Assembly shall be signed by at
least 3,000 qualified voters of the legislative district. For the first
election following a redistricting of representative districts, nomination
papers for an independent candidate for State Representative in the General
Assembly shall be signed by at least 1,500 qualified voters of the
representative district. For the first election following redistricting of
county board districts, or of municipal wards or districts, or for the
first election following the initial establishment of such districts or
wards in a county or municipality, nomination papers
for an independent candidate for county board member, or for alderperson or
trustee of such municipality, shall be signed by qualified voters of the
district or ward equal to not less than 5% nor more than 8% (or 50 more
than the minimum, whichever is greater) of the total number of votes cast
at the preceding general or general municipal election, as the case
may be, for the county or municipal office voted on throughout such county
or municipality for which the greatest total number of votes were cast for
all candidates, divided by the number of districts or wards, but in any
event not less than 25 qualified voters of the district or ward. Each voter
signing a nomination paper shall add to his signature his place of
residence, and each voter may subscribe to one nomination for such
office to be filled, and no more: Provided that the name of any
candidate whose name may appear in any other place upon the ballot shall
not be so added by petition for the same office.
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
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(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.
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(3) the persons striking signatures from the petition
| | shall each sign an additional certificate specifying the number of certification pages listing stricken signatures which are attached to the petition and the page numbers indicated on such certifications. The certificate shall be filed as a part of the petition, shall be numbered, and shall be attached immediately following the last page of voters' signatures and before the certifications of stricken signatures.
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(4) all of the foregoing requirements shall be
| | necessary to effect a valid striking of any signature. The provisions of this Section authorizing the striking of signatures shall not impose any criminal liability on any person so authorized for signatures which may be fraudulent.
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In the case of the offices of Governor and Lieutenant Governor a
joint petition including one candidate for each of those offices must be
filed.
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 the primary election, is ineligible to be placed on the
ballot as an independent candidate for election in that general or
consolidated election.
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 an independent candidate.
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-3.1
(10 ILCS 5/10-3.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-3.1)
Sec. 10-3.1.
Petitions for nomination of nonpartisan candidates for offices
to be filled at an election provided in Article 2A of this Code shall be in
conformity with any requirements as to contents and number of signatures
specified in the statute creating the political subdivision or providing the
applicable form of government thereof. Petitions for nomination of nonpartisan
candidates for municipal offices where the statute creating the municipality or
providing the form of government thereof, or the ordinance so providing,
pursuant to Article VII of the Constitution, requires election to such office
on a nonpartisan basis and does not permit political party nominations
(including without limitation Articles 4 and 5 of the Municipal Code) shall be
in conformity with any requirements as to contents and number of signatures
specified in such statute or ordinance.
The provisions of this Article 10 relating to independent candidate petition
requirements shall apply to nonpartisan petitions to the extent they are
not inconsistent with the requirements of such other statutes or ordinances.
If signature requirements for petitions for nomination of nonpartisan
candidates are not specified in the statute creating the political
subdivision or the signature requirements cannot be determined under
Article 10, the signature requirements for the nonpartisan candidates shall
be at least 0.5% of the total number of registered voters of the political
subdivision for which the nomination is made or a minimum of 25, whichever is
greater.
(Source: P.A. 87-1052.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-4
(10 ILCS 5/10-4) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-4)
Sec. 10-4. Form of petition for nomination. All petitions for nomination
under this Article 10 for
candidates for public office in this State, shall in addition to other
requirements provided by law, be as follows: Such petitions shall
consist of sheets of uniform size and each sheet shall contain, above
the space for signature, an appropriate heading, giving the information
as to name of candidate or candidates in whose behalf such petition is
signed; the office; the party; place of residence; and such other
information or wording as required to make same valid, and the heading
of each sheet shall be the same. Such petition shall be signed by the
qualified voters 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 such 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. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, no signature shall be valid or be counted in
considering the validity or sufficiency of such petition unless the
requirements of this Section are complied with. At the bottom of each
sheet of such petition shall be added a circulator's 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; certifying that the signatures on that sheet of
the petition
were signed in his or her presence; 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 knowledge and belief the persons so signing were at the
time of signing the petition duly registered voters under Article 4, 5, or 6 of this
Code of the political subdivision or district for which the candidate or
candidates shall be nominated, and certifying that their respective residences
are correctly stated therein. Such statement shall be sworn to before some
officer authorized to administer oaths in this State. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, no petition sheet shall
be circulated more than 90 days preceding the last day provided in Section 10-6
for the filing of such petition. Such sheets, before being presented to the
electoral board or filed with the proper officer of the electoral district or
division of the state or municipality, as the case may be, 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, and not
photocopies or duplicates of such sheets. A petition, when presented or
filed, shall not be withdrawn, altered, or added to, and no signature shall be
revoked except by revocation in writing presented or filed with the officers or
officer with whom the petition is required to be presented or filed, and before
the presentment or filing of such petition. Whoever forges any name of a
signer upon any petition shall be deemed guilty of a forgery, and on conviction
thereof, shall be punished accordingly. The word "petition" or "petition for
nomination", as used herein, shall mean what is sometimes known as nomination
papers, in distinction to what is known as a certificate of nomination. The
words "political division for which the candidate is nominated", or its
equivalent, shall mean the largest political division in which all qualified
voters may vote upon such candidate or candidates, as the state in the case of
state officers; the township in the case of township officers et cetera.
Provided, further, that no person shall circulate or certify petitions for
candidates of more than one political party, or for an independent candidate or
candidates in addition to one political party, to be voted upon at the next
primary or general election, or for such candidates and parties with respect to
the same political subdivision at the next consolidated election.
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21; 102-687, eff. 12-17-21.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-5
(10 ILCS 5/10-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-5)
Sec. 10-5.
All petitions for nomination shall,
besides containing the names of candidates, specify as to each:
1. The office or offices to which such candidate or candidates shall
be nominated.
2. The new political party, if any, represented, expressed in not more than 5
words. However, such party shall not bear the same name as, nor include
the name of any established political party as defined in this Article.
This prohibition does not preclude any established political party from
making nominations in those cases in which it is authorized to do so.
3. The place of residence of any such candidate or candidates with
the street and number thereof, if any. In the case of electors for
President and Vice-President of the United States, the names of
candidates for President and Vice-President may be added to the party
name or appellation.
Such certificate of nomination or nomination papers in addition shall
include as a part thereof, the oath required by Section 7-10.1 of this
Act and must include a statement of candidacy for each of the candidates named
therein, except candidates for electors for President and Vice-President
of the United States. Each such statement shall set out the address of
such candidate, the office for which he is a candidate, shall state that
the candidate is qualified for the office specified and 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 acknowledgments of deeds in this
State, and may be in substantially the following form:
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;
and that I am a qualified voter therein; that I am a candidate for
election to the office of.... to be voted upon at the election to be
held on the.... day of....,.....; and that I am legally qualified
to hold such office and that I have 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, and I
hereby request that my name be printed upon the official ballot for
election to such office.
Signed.................
Subscribed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me by.... who is to me
personally known, this.... day of....,......
Signed.................
(Official Character)
(Seal, if officer has one.)
In addition, a new political party petition shall have attached thereto
a certificate stating the names and addresses of the party officers authorized
to fill vacancies in nomination pursuant to Section 10-11.
Nomination papers filed under this Section are not valid if the
candidate named therein fails to file a statement of economic interests
as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act in relation to his
candidacy with the appropriate officer by the end of the period for the
filing of nomination papers unless he has filed a statement of economic
interests in relation to the same governmental unit with that officer
during the same calendar year as the year in which such nomination
papers were filed. If the nomination papers of any candidate and the
statement of economic interest of that candidate are not required to be
filed with the same officer, the candidate must file with the officer
with whom the nomination papers are filed a receipt from the officer
with whom the statement of economic interests is filed showing the date
on which such statement was filed. Such receipt shall be so filed not
later than the last day on which nomination papers may be filed.
(Source: P.A. 84-551.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-5.1
(10 ILCS 5/10-5.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-5.1)
Sec. 10-5.1. In the designation of the name of a candidate on a certificate of
nomination or nomination papers the candidate's given name or names,
initial or initials, a nickname by which the candidate is commonly
known, or a combination thereof, may be used in addition to the
candidate's surname. If a candidate has changed his or her name, whether by a statutory or common law procedure in Illinois or any other jurisdiction, within 3 years before the last day for filing the certificate of nomination or nomination papers for that office, whichever is applicable, then (i) the candidate's name on the certificate or papers must be followed by "formerly known as (list all prior names during the 3-year period) until name changed on (list date of each such name change)" and (ii) the certificate or paper must be accompanied by the candidate's affidavit stating the candidate's previous names during the period specified in (i) and the date or dates each of those names was changed; failure to meet these requirements shall be grounds for denying certification of the candidate's name for the ballot or removing the candidate's name from the ballot, as appropriate, but these requirements do not apply to name changes resulting from adoption to assume an adoptive parent's or parents' surname, marriage or civil union to assume a spouse's surname, or dissolution of marriage or civil union or declaration of invalidity of marriage or civil union to assume a former surname or a name change that conforms the candidate's name to his or her gender identity. No other designation such as a political slogan,
title, or
degree, or
nickname suggesting or implying possession of a title, degree or professional
status, or
similar information may be used in connection with the candidate's
surname.
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-6
(10 ILCS 5/10-6) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-6)
Sec. 10-6. Time and manner of filing. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, certificates
of
nomination and nomination papers for the nomination of candidates for
offices to be filled by electors of the entire State, or any district
not entirely within a county, or for congressional, state legislative or
judicial offices, shall be presented to the principal office of the
State Board of Elections not more than 141 nor less than 134
days previous
to the day of election for which the candidates are nominated. The
State Board of Elections shall endorse the certificates of nomination or
nomination papers, as the case may be, and the date and hour of
presentment to it. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, all
other certificates for the nomination of candidates shall be filed with
the county clerk of the respective counties not more than 141 but at
least 134 days previous to the day of such election. Certificates of nomination and nomination papers for the nomination of candidates for school district offices to be filled at consolidated elections shall be filed with the county clerk or county board of election commissioners of the county in which the principal office of the school district is located not more than 113 nor less than 106 days before the consolidated election. Except as otherwise provided in this Code, certificates
of
nomination and nomination papers for the nomination of candidates for
the other offices of political subdivisions to be filled at regular elections
other than the general election shall be filed with the local election
official of such subdivision:
(1) (Blank);
(2) not more than 113 nor less than 106 days prior to | | the consolidated election; or
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(3) not more than 113 nor less than 106 days prior to
| | the general primary in the case of municipal offices to be filled at the general primary election; or
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(4) not more than 99 nor less than 92 days before the
| | consolidated primary in the case of municipal offices to be elected on a nonpartisan basis pursuant to law (including without limitation, those municipal offices subject to Articles 4 and 5 of the Municipal Code); or
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(5) not more than 113 nor less than 106 days before
| | the municipal primary in even numbered years for such nonpartisan municipal offices where annual elections are provided; or
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(6) in the case of petitions for the office of
| | multi-township assessor, such petitions shall be filed with the election authority not more than 113 nor less than 106 days before the consolidated election.
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However, where a political subdivision's boundaries are co-extensive
with or are entirely within the jurisdiction of a municipal board of
election commissioners, the certificates of nomination and nomination
papers for candidates for such political subdivision offices shall be filed
in the office of such Board.
(Source: P.A. 102-15, eff. 6-17-21.)
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10 ILCS 5/10-6.1
(10 ILCS 5/10-6.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-6.1)
Sec. 10-6.1.
The board or clerk with whom a certificate of nomination or
nomination papers are filed shall notify the person for whom such papers
are filed of the obligation to file statements of organization, reports
of campaign contributions, and annual reports of campaign contributions
and expenditures under Article 9 of this Act. Such notice shall be given
in the manner prescribed by paragraph (7) of Section 9-16 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 81-1189.)
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