ARIZONA STATE SENATE
Phoenix, Arizona
elections;
petition amendments
Modifies the procedures and requirements for filing referendum, initiative and recall petitions.
When a person chooses to vote by mail, a voter may receive a replacement ballot if they sign a sworn statement that the ballot was lost, spoiled, destroyed or not received. As a result, in some cases voters may cast more than one vote. This legislation designates the first ballot received as the official vote to be counted.
Candidates running for office or individuals initiating a recall petition sometimes only list a post office address, making it impossible to certify that these individuals live in the district. In 2001, the Legislature passed legislation to require a person to provide an actual address or description of place of residence and post office address on nomination petitions for candidates in a primary election initiative petitions and recalls, however this requirement was not included for partisan elections (Laws 2001, Chapter 169). S.B. 1285 conforms the party nomination statutes regarding the candidate’s actual residence address with those amended last year.
There is no fiscal impact to the state general fund associated with this legislation.
1. Stipulates that signatures obtained on a referendum or initiative petition before the political committee supporting the petition has filed a statement of organization or a $500 threshold exemption statement are void. Applies only to petitions filed after the effective date of this act.
2. Exempts recall petitions from the designating if the circulator is paid or a volunteer and stipulates that signatures are valid without the designation.
3. Authorizes the placement of nominated candidates on the official recall ballot after filing a nomination petition that is signed by at least two percent of the total votes cast for all candidates for that office at the last election for that office.
4. Requires the nomination petition signers to be qualified electors of the district of the officer against whom the recall petition is filed.
5. Requires a political committee that makes expenditures to influence the results of a ballot proposition election to include the committee’s name, the official serial number for the petition and the committee’s support or opposition of the passage of the ballot measure in the statement of organization.
6. Requires the first, rather than the last, ballot received to be counted if an elector who receives a replacement ballot votes more than once.
7. Requires, effective January 1, 2003, an address to provide the person’s actual residence address or description of the place of residence.
8. Stipulates that failure to include the actual residence address or description of place of residence does not constitute automatic disqualification of election documents if the documents are challenged.
9. Requires the actual residence address be verified with the voter registration form.
10. Requires the voter register to include a voter's date of birth rather than just the year of birth.
11. Contains technical and conforming changes.
12. Provides for a general effective date unless otherwise provided.
Amendments
Adopted by Committee
1. Removes the sections regarding a consolidated election for referendums or initiatives.
2. Requires the voter register to include a voter's date of birth rather than just the year of birth.
Amendments
Adopted by Committee of the Whole
· Prohibits the automatic disqualification of election documents challenged if the documents do not contain the actual residence address or description of place of residence.
Senate Action
GOV 3/15/02 DPA 4-1-1
3rd Read 3/27/02 25-5-0
Prepared by Senate Staff
March 27, 2002