More than just a ballot on Nov. 4

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

PRINCETON — To conduct next month’s election, Bureau County Clerk Kami Hieronymus is going to need 25,000 sheets of blue paper. That’s the result of a ruling handed down last week by Judge Nathaniel Howse of the Cook County Circuit Court regarding the wording on the referendum about whether Illinois should hold a Constitutional Convention.

Every 20 years, voters are asked if the state should hold a Constitutional Convention, but this year, the Chicago Bar Association, Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn and a group of voters filed a lawsuit against the Secretary of State Election Board over alleged biased and illegal wording of the referendum.

The dispute came about because of an allegedly biased “explanation of proposed call” paragraph that voters are prompted to read before getting to the actual question.

According to the lawsuit, the original wording advanced an anti-Constitutional Convention viewpoint by pointing out that the 1988 con-con referendum was defeated by a 75 percent-25 percent margin without noting that the question had been approved by a similarly overwhelming margin in 1968; informing voters that failing to vote on the question is the equivalent of a negative vote; and prompting voters to vote one way or another only for certain listed, acceptable reasons.

Howse agreed.

“I believe the language is not accurate [and] interferes with the rights of voters,” he said in his ruling.

Rather than reprint hundreds of thousands of ballots, Howse ordered election officials to print notices directing voters to disregard the false information. According to the notice, voters are told the “Notice” and “Explanation of Proposed Call” on the referendum have been ruled inaccurate and incorrect and should be ignored.

That’s where Hieronymus and the 25,000 sheets of blue paper come in. Based on the judge’s ruling, she will have to make 25,000 copies of the notice, one for every registered voter in the county. The notices will be sent out to each absentee voter, handed to all the early voters, and sent out to all the precincts on Election Day, one for each registered voter.

In addition to making all the copies, there will also be the issue of disposing of 25,000 sheets of blue paper after the voters are done voting.

Previous Page|1||

Comments


National Video