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Orr urges three “modest” election reforms

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* Cook County Clerk David Orr…

Petition filing for the February municipal election in Chicago, a process that is painful and costly for candidates and confusing for voters, ended Monday. But it’s only the beginning of a very expensive month of litigation around voters’ signatures.

In May of this year, after once again experiencing an expensive and frustrating ballot access fight during the primary, I released a set of proposals to make determining who will be on the ballot easier for candidates, voters and election administrators. I am reissuing those proposals today.

The Chicago Sun-Times, for one, supported our proposals after we visited with their editorial board. The proposals were turned into legislation in Springfield, as well. If they can’t get through veto session, these reforms should be a priority for the next legislature and governor. Each day for the next six weeks we’ll hear about who is or isn’t going to be on the ballot, who did or did not demonstrate the levels of support by gathering signatures. And while the airwaves will be full of talk about process, they will not be full of candidates talking about safety, health care, policing and the future of our great city and metropolitan area. Chicago, Cook County, and Illinois deserve better. Though I am leaving elected office, I hope those that remain continue to reform the way we do business keeping voters at the center.

My office has pushed to consolidate and professionalize the administration of electoral boards for years. And while we have achieved some important reforms, like moving many small local boards to the jurisdiction of the County Clerk, more changes need to be made. We believe we can make these changes in part by harnessing the power of other election officials’ innovations to further expand access to the ballot.

Below are three modest reforms to the candidate filing and electoral board process that will help ensure that voters, administrators and candidates are best positioned to play their part in democracy. Through these efforts, we can increase the efficiency of the process for candidates and administrators, lower the burden on candidates and give the courts adequate time to sort through all issues.

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:26 pm

Comments

  1. Yes, Yes, and Yes.

    Comment by Montrose Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:35 pm

  2. All these things…seem to make a lot of sense.

    Comment by Liandro Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:46 pm

  3. Maybe I’m missing something here, but are any of these proposals necessarily bad ideas? I’m a little concerned with the eSignature thing, but that’s because the last wonder system implemented in the state is still rough around some pretty big edges.

    Comment by Fixer Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:47 pm

  4. As somebody that has helped on petitions for the last few years, yes, PLEASE!!!

    Comment by PLEASE Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:49 pm

  5. “This is not good for our democracy.” No, but it is good for incumbents, and that is the whole point.

    Comment by perry noya Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:49 pm

  6. -The proposals were turned into legislation in Springfield, as well. If they can’t get through veto session, these reforms should be a priority for the next legislature and governor.-
    Rauner vetoed this? I wonder why.

    Comment by Anonymous Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:53 pm

  7. A cottage industry will dry up if the eSign gets implemented with the same kind of success as Denver.

    Comment by Anonish Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 12:56 pm

  8. We’re going to miss David Orr.

    Comment by Cheryl44 Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:05 pm

  9. Yes to all, but add my point on a different thread about signing multiple petitions. So which courageous politician will lead the charge to make these changes? Mike Madigan?

    Comment by NeverPoliticallyCorrect Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:12 pm

  10. Just set a maximum number of signatures for every office and be done with it. There would be less fraud and it would be faster to review thus making the objection process easier for the Clerk and candidates to handle.

    Comment by TopHatMonocle Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:14 pm

  11. Ok, but… increasing the time, means less time for court challenges, see Kaegi fiasco.
    Also, if I want to check cook county signatures, I have to go to to david orr’s, if I want to check Chicago I have to go to the next floor, but when its time to do the challenge, the judge has both city/county on the same software, why make it hard to review them?
    Why not real reform and have elections and circulations when its not 10 degrees out?

    Comment by Rutro Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:19 pm

  12. Common Sense David Orr - he will be missed.

    Comment by PP Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:41 pm

  13. Consolidation of the County Clerk & Recorder of Deeds keeps Karen Yarbrough employed unfortunately. ORR retiring is a sad occasion for the taxpayers of Cook County and Clerk employee holdovers.

    Comment by qualified someone nobody sent Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:49 pm

  14. Love and 1 and 2.

    If there is insistence that municipal elections happen in an odd-numbered year, I would make all non-partisan municipal elections a top-two system and have the primary in August and the general/runoff in November.

    Comment by Precinct Captain Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:50 pm

  15. Won’t somebody please think of the Kasper?

    Comment by Ok Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:54 pm

  16. To add, petitions haven’t moved from paper form to tablet in DC. It is an option to use a mobile device for collecting signatures, however, I have yet to see anyone actually doing so. All the petitions I signed this primary season were on paper.

    Comment by GV Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 1:57 pm

  17. I’m all for allowing petition signatures to be collected on tablets, it will save time and money and drama. But I know I’m going to feel weird putting my personal info into some random person’s iPad waiting for my train.

    Comment by Scammers Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 2:07 pm

  18. === But I know I’m going to feel weird putting my personal info into some random person’s iPad waiting for my train. ===

    Good point!

    Comment by Just Observing Tuesday, Nov 27, 18 @ 2:16 pm

  19. One point on this. I wonder if people would be more reluctant to e-sign. Currently it takes less than a minute to get a signature. For people in dense urban areas where you get signatures by standing on the street and asking people to sign (rather than going door to door) people might give up that minute, but will they stop for two or three minutes, if that’s the time to enter the information?

    Beyond that, comparing signatures is going to be a challenge. My own signature on those credit card pads is nothing like my signature when I use a pen.

    I agree that reform is needed but I would like to see how these work on a more limited scale before going city-wide.

    Comment by Gooner Wednesday, Nov 28, 18 @ 6:36 am

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