Bill Text: VA SB720 | 2018 | Regular Session | Prefiled
Bill Title: Form of ballot; party identification of candidates.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-01-23 - Incorporated by Privileges and Elections [SB720 Detail]
Download: Virginia-2018-SB720-Prefiled.html
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §24.2-613 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§24.2-613. Form of ballot.
A. The ballots shall comply with the requirements of this title and the standards prescribed by the State Board.
B. For elections for
federal, statewide, and General Assembly offices only, each Each
candidate who has been nominated by a political party or in a primary election shall may
choose to be identified by the name of his political party.
Independent candidates shall be identified by the term "Independent."
For the purpose of this section, any Independent candidate may, by producing
sufficient and appropriate evidence of nomination by a "recognized
political party" to the State Board, have the term "Independent"
on the ballot converted to that of a "recognized political party" on
the ballot and be treated on the ballot in a manner consistent with the
candidates nominated by political parties. For the purpose of this section, a
"recognized political party" is defined as an organization that, for at
least six months preceding the filing of its nominee for the office, has had in
continual existence a state central committee composed of registered voters
residing in each congressional district of the Commonwealth, a party plan and
bylaws, and a duly elected state chairman and secretary. A letter from the
state chairman of a recognized political party certifying that a candidate is
the nominee of that party and also signed by such candidate accepting that
nomination shall constitute sufficient and appropriate evidence of nomination
by a recognized political party. The name of the political party, the name of
the "recognized political party," or term "Independent" may
be shown by an initial or abbreviation to meet ballot requirements.
C. Except as provided for primary elections, the State Board
shall determine by lot the order of the political parties, and the names of all
candidates for a particular office shall appear together in the order
determined for their parties. In an election district in which more than one
person is nominated by one political party for the same office, the candidates'
names shall appear alphabetically in their party groups under the name of the
office, with sufficient space between party groups to indicate them as such.
For the purpose of this section, except as provided for presidential elections
in §24.2-614, "recognized political parties" shall be treated as a
class; the order of the recognized political parties within the class shall be
determined by lot by the State Board; and the class shall follow the political
parties as defined by §24.2-101 and precede the independent class. Independent
candidates shall be treated as a class under "Independent,",
and their names shall be placed on the ballot after the political parties and
recognized political parties. Where there is more than one independent
candidate for an office, their names shall appear on the ballot in an order
determined by the priority of time of filing all required paperwork for the
office. In the event two or more candidates file simultaneously, the order of
filing shall then be determined by lot by the electoral board as in the case of
a tie vote for the office.
No individual's name shall appear on the ballot more than once for the same office.
D. In preparing the printed ballots for general, special, and
primary elections, the State Board and electoral boards general registrars shall cause
to be printed in not less than 10-point type, immediately below the title of
any office, a statement of the number of candidates for whom votes may be cast
for that office. For any office to which only one candidate can be elected, the
following language shall be used: "Vote for only one." For any office
to which more than one candidate can be elected, the following language shall
be used: "Vote for not more than."
E. Any locality that uses machine-readable ballots at one or more precincts, including any central absentee precinct, may, with the approval of the State Board, use a printed reproduction of the machine-readable ballot in lieu of the official machine-readable ballot. Such reproductions shall be printed and otherwise handled in accordance with all laws and procedures that apply to official paper ballots.
In every county and city using voting systems requiring printed ballots, the electoral board shall furnish a sufficient number of ballots printed on plain white paper, of such form and size as will fit in the ballot frames.