Candidate filing begins Monday, signaling official start of 2024
election cycle
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[November 27, 2023]
By DILPREET RAJU
Capitol News Illinois
draju@capitolnewsillinois.com
Monday morning marks the official beginning of the 2024 election cycle
in Illinois, opening up the week-long period when candidates for local,
state, congressional and judicial races are required to turn in the
signatures they’ve spent the last two months collecting to get on the
ballot.
The first day of petition filing has traditionally taken on a party
atmosphere, as candidates and staff line up outside the Illinois State
Board of Elections office in Springfield, where the line often reaches
past the Chuck E. Cheese storefront, roughly 100 yards down from the
board’s entrance in the capital city strip mall.
Those who get in line before 8 a.m. are entered into a lottery drawing
to be placed atop the ballot for their respective position. The lottery
drawing is scheduled for Dec. 13.
Though many candidates line up before filing opens, elections board
spokesperson Matt Dietrich said he hasn’t seen any studies that prove
being first on a primary ballot actually provides any advantage.
“Primary voters tend to be the most informed voters,” he said. “So these
are the voters are most likely to know which candidates are on their
primary ballot and they're the voters who are most likely to have
already made up their minds before they go into the polling place.”
Still, “political candidates, if they sense that there may be any type
of advantage to something, they'll go out of their way,” Dietrich said.
Some candidates also try for another myth of advantage by waiting until
the last hour of the last day of the filing period, Dec. 4 from 4 to 5
p.m. This pool of candidates is entered into a lottery to be at the
bottom of the list in their respective races.
Candidates can file petitions to be on the ballot from Nov. 27 through
Dec. 4 at the elections office for any of the 17 U.S. House of
Representatives seats, 141 Illinois General Assembly seats or 77
judicial vacancies.
After filing, the board opens a period for challenges to candidate
petitions. Typically, opponents or party operatives will attempt to
knock a newcomer off the ballot for signatures that may not have been
collected properly, or in some cases are proven to be fraudulent.
The board will certify the primary ballot at its January meeting and the
primary election is scheduled for March 19.
This filing day signals a return to normal from the last state election
cycle, which was slowed by delays in 2020 U.S. Census data that caused a
chain reaction — slowing the process of redistricting in 2021 and
changing Illinois’ typical mid-March primary to a June primary last
year. Instead of the usual November candidate filing in 2021, the Board
of Elections pushed it to March 2022.
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The Illinois State Board of Elections office is pictured in
Springfield. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Campbell)
Dietrich said it was necessary as candidates needed the new maps —
which had been challenged in court — finalized before they could
start passing petitions for the new districts they sought to run in.
Election security
Even before petitions are filed, election authorities in Illinois
are trying to get ahead of both conspiracy theories and genuine
questions about election security and integrity that have continue
to circulate and evolve on social media during the past several
election cycles.
In late September a number of downstate county clerks hosted a
series of coordinated news conferences to send the message that if
constituents are concerned about election integrity, they should
visit their local county clerk’s office to learn how the process is
actually handled from start to finish.
In a Capitol Cast interview this fall, Tazewell County Clerk John
Ackerman said that since 2016, county clerks throughout the state of
Illinois have seen “unprecedented attention focused on elections.”
“A lot of misinformation [is] being placed out there,” Ackerman
said. “Two presidential cycles in a row. Before we got to the third
one, if you just keep doing the same thing, you’ll get the same
result.”
Ackerman said he tries to tell people, “you know who we are, we’re
in the community, our kids go to the same schools, we shop at the
same supermarkets.”
On the podcast in September, Dietrich emphasized that the work of
running elections is largely decentralized; the Board of Elections
only provides administrative support to Illinois' 108 local election
authorities.
”They do all of the voter registration, they do all of the voter
list maintenance on a daily basis, they recruit the election judges,
they rent out the polling places,” he said.
One increased security measure requires that no one except Board of
Elections employees and candidates filing their signatures will be
allowed in the petition filing room next week.
The 2024 Illinois general primary election is March 19. Registered
voters can begin requesting mail-in ballots Dec. 20, according to
the Illinois State Board of Elections calendar. |