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Bill

Bill

HB 321

Election judge selection.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Marlene Brady and 9 co-sponsors

If a candidate is removed after ballots are printed, ballots must remove the empty space and provide a supplementary ballot to affected voters to prevent confusion.

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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 321

Summary — HB 321: Blank space on ballots; remove and provide supplementary ballot if a candidate is removed from race after ballots are printed

Status: Died in Committee
Introduced: November 12, 2024
Subject: Apportionment and Elections

Note: The full bill text was not provided. This summary is based on the bill title and typical election practice language that such a measure would include. If you can provide the bill’s full text or section-by-section language, I can produce a fully specific summary tied to the exact provisions.

Main purpose and intent

HB 321 would address the situation when a candidate is removed from a ballot after ballots have already been printed. The bill’s apparent intent is to (1) eliminate any blank space where the removed candidate’s name would appear, and (2) require election officials to provide a supplementary ballot (or other corrective mechanism) so voters are able to cast valid votes without confusion or spoiled ballots.

Key provisions likely included

  • Removal of printed blank space: require counties/boards of elections to ensure ballots do not display empty/placeholder lines for candidates removed post-printing.
  • Supplementary ballot requirement: mandate issuance of a supplementary or replacement ballot (paper or electronic) to affected voters, or provide instructions and procedures for how to cast a valid vote when the original printed ballot contains a now-vacant slot.
  • Timing and thresholds: set deadlines or triggers (e.g., candidate withdrawal, death, disqualification) that initiate the corrective process and specify how close to election day the rule applies.
  • Distribution rules: describe how supplementary ballots will be distributed (at polling places, mailed to absentee/mail voters, made available at early voting sites) and how they must be secured and tracked.
  • Vote counting and tabulation: specify how votes from supplementary ballots are to be counted, reconciled with original ballot counts, and audited.
  • Notification and signage: require conspicuous notices to voters at polling places and on absentee ballot materials explaining the change and the use of supplementary ballots.
  • Cost allocation: identify who bears additional administrative and printing costs (typically local election jurisdictions).
  • Compliance and enforcement: set recordkeeping and reporting requirements; provide for remedies if procedures are not followed.

Who would be affected

  • Local election officials and counties: operational burden to produce, distribute, and track supplementary ballots; possible increased costs and staff time.
  • Voters: clearer ballots and procedures intended to reduce confusion and spoiled ballots; affected voters may need to follow new instructions.
  • Candidates and political parties: potential impacts on ballot access and perceptions; parties may need to adapt to changed notifications.
  • State election oversight agencies: may need to issue implementing guidance and oversight.

Procedural/timeline aspects

  • Effective date: not available in provided materials — typically such changes include an effective date tied to the next election cycle.
  • Applicability: likely limited to ballots printed before a candidate’s removal and to elections occurring after enactment.
  • Implementation lead time: would require guidance and planning by election administrators, especially close to election dates.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Benefits: reduces voter confusion, prevents accidental votes for disqualified candidates, and increases clarity at the polls.
  • Costs and logistics: reprinting or producing supplementary ballots can be costly and administratively burdensome, especially close to election day; may require changes to ballot printing contracts and vote-counting workflows.
  • Legal and uniformity issues: must be carefully coordinated with existing election statutes and federal laws (e.g., deadlines for absentee/mail ballots); risk of litigation if procedures are unclear or inconsistently applied.
  • Voter confidence: clear, timely communication is essential to maintain public trust when ballot changes occur.

If you want a summary tied exactly to legislative language, please provide the bill text or the committee report for this specific HB 321 (blank‑space/supplementary‑ballot version). I’ll then produce a concise section‑by‑section summary and identify precise fiscal or legal effects.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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