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For Chicago election officials who ordered 2 million ballots without Emanuel's name on them after Monday's appellate court ruling, it's been chaotic. They literally had to stop the presses midday Tuesday when the Illinois Supreme Court agreed to take Emanuel's case and told them not to print ballots without his name. By then, nearly 300,000 invalid ballots had been printed; they resumed printing ballots with his name. Now the confusion could extend to voters, with early voting starting Monday. Chicago Board of Election Commissioners Chairman Langdon Neal said voters with any doubts should wait until the Supreme Court decision. If Emanuel doesn't end up on the ballot, any votes cast for him would not be counted
-- and there would be no do-overs. Fifty-seven-year-old part-time waitress Mary Tomaszewski called the situation "just baloney" and said it never should have gotten this far. "I think it's totally ridiculous because no person is ever going to want to take another job for fear if they come back to their home they aren't going to be able" to run for political office, Tomaszewski said. "To me it's like common sense, you know? This just looks childish." Flora Gregg, a 57-year-old laid off bank worker who lives in President Barack Obama's South Side neighborhood, said if Emanuel isn't allowed on the ballot, she's ready to protest. "What are they gonna do when the president comes back, not consider him a Chicago resident?" Gregg said. Some have another take. After two decades of relatively tame mayoral races in which Daley was a virtual shoo-in, the election spectacle may be maddening, but at least it's not boring. "It's more interesting than having no point of contention in the race," said Murphy, the coffee shop owner. "Mayors are traditionally kind of like goofballs."
[Associated
Press;
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