2016 North Dakota Century Code Title 16.1 Elections Chapter 16.1-11 Nominations for Office - Primary Election
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CHAPTER 16.1-11
NOMINATIONS FOR OFFICE - PRIMARY ELECTION
16.1-11-01. Primary election - When held - Nomination of candidates - Nomination for
special elections.
On the second Tuesday in June of every general election year, a primary election must be
held for the nomination of candidates for the following offices in the years of their regular
election: United States senators, member of the United States house of representatives,
members of the legislative assembly, elected state officials, judges of the supreme court and
district court, county officers, and county commissioners. In special elections the nominations
for the officers enumerated in this section must be made as provided in this title.
16.1-11-02. Presidential preference contest - Time for holding.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 174, § 6.
16.1-11-02.1. Presidential preference contest conduct - Mail ballot election.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 174, § 6.
16.1-11-02.2. Presidential preference contest - Requirements.
Expired under S.L. 1995, ch. 209, § 13.
16.1-11-02.3. Presidential preference contest - Rules.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 174, § 6.
16.1-11-03. Political parties authorized to conduct presidential preference contest.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 174, § 6.
16.1-11-03.1. 2000 presidential caucus.
Expired pursuant to S.L. 1999, ch. 207, § 6.
16.1-11-04. Presidential preference contest.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 174, § 6.
16.1-11-05. Secretary of state to give notice to county auditor of officers to be
nominated.
Repealed by S.L. 2015, ch. 158, § 5.
16.1-11-05.1. Participation in endorsements for nomination.
No person may participate directly or indirectly in the endorsement for nomination of more
than one person for each office to be filled, except a person may sign a petition for placement of
a candidate's name on the primary ballot:
1. For more than one person for each office for an office not under party designation.
2. For more than one person for each office for an office under party designation only if
all the candidates for whom the person signs a petition for an office are running under
the same party designation.
Except for persons allowed to seek nomination to more than one office pursuant to section
16.1-12-03, no person may accept endorsement for nomination by certificate or petition to more
than one office. No political party is entitled to endorse for nomination by certificate more than
one set of nominees.
16.1-11-06. State candidate's petition or political party certificate of endorsement
required to get name on ballot - Contents - Filing.
1. Every candidate for United States senator, United States representative, a state office,
including the office of state senator or state representative, and judges of the supreme
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2.
and district courts shall present to the secretary of state, between the first date
candidates may begin circulating nominating petitions according to this chapter and
before four p.m. of the sixty-fourth day before any primary election, either:
a. The certificate of endorsement signed by the state chairman of any legally
recognized political party containing the candidate's name, post-office address,
and telephone number, the title of the office to which the candidate aspires, and
the party which the candidate represents; or
b. The nominating petition containing the following:
(1) The candidate's name, post-office address, and telephone number, and the
title of the office to which the candidate aspires, the appropriate district
judgeship number if applicable, and whether the petition is intended for
nomination for an unexpired term of office if applicable.
(2) The name of the party the candidate represents if the petition is for an office
under party designation.
(3) The signatures of qualified electors, the number of which must be
determined as follows:
(a) If the office is under party designation, the signatures of three percent
of the total vote cast for the candidates of the party with which the
candidate affiliates for the same position at the last general election.
However, no more than three hundred signatures may be required.
(b) If there was no candidate of a party for a position at the preceding
general election, at least three hundred signatures.
(c) If the office is under the no-party designation, at least three hundred
signatures.
(d) If the office is a legislative office, the signatures of at least one percent
of the total resident population of the legislative district as determined
by the most recent federal decennial census.
(4) The mailing address and the date of signing for each signer.
If the petition or certificate of endorsement is for the office of governor and lieutenant
governor, the petition or certificate must contain the names and other information
required of candidates for both those offices. If the petition or certificate of
endorsement is mailed, it must be in the possession of the secretary of state before
four p.m. of the sixty-fourth day before the primary election.
16.1-11-07. Presidential candidates on ballot - Filing time.
Repealed by S.L. 2007, ch. 197, § 9.
16.1-11-08. Reference to party affiliation in petition and affidavit prohibited for certain
offices.
No reference may be made to a party ballot or to the party affiliation of a candidate in a
petition and affidavit filed by or on behalf of a candidate for nomination in the primary election to
an elective county office, the office of judge of the supreme court, judge of the district court, or
superintendent of public instruction.
16.1-11-09. Form of certificate of endorsement.
A certificate of endorsement filed with the proper officer as provided in this chapter must be
in substantially the following form:
CERTIFICATE OF ENDORSEMENT
I, ______________, do certify that I am the state (district) chairman of the
______________ political party of the ______________ legislative district (if appropriate) of
the state of North Dakota and that ______________ (insert name of endorsee), residing at
____________, was duly endorsed for nomination to the office of ______________ on the
______________ day of __________, by the ______________ political party of the
______________ legislative district (if appropriate), duly convened and organized in
accordance with the bylaws of the ______________ political party and the laws of this
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state, and do hereby request ______________ name be printed upon the ballot as a
candidate for nomination to the office of ______________ at the forthcoming primary
election to be held on ______________ of this year.
Dated this ____________ day of _________.
_________________________________________
(signature of state or district chairman)
16.1-11-10. Applicant's name placed upon ballot - Affidavit to accompany petition.
Upon receipt by the secretary of state of the petition or certificate of endorsement provided
for in section 16.1-11-06 accompanied by the following affidavit, the secretary of state shall
place the applicant's name upon the primary election ballot in the columns of the applicant's
party as hereinafter provided. The affidavit must be substantially as follows:
State of North Dakota )
) ss.
County of ________ )
I, ______________, being sworn, say that I reside at ________________, in the city of
_______________, in the county of ______________ of North Dakota; and zip code of
________________; that I am a candidate for nomination to the office of _____________ to
be chosen at the primary election to be held on _____________, ______, and I request that
my name be printed upon the primary election ballot as provided by law, as a candidate of
the ______________ party for said office. I am requesting that my name be listed on the
ballot as I have identified my ballot name below. I understand that nicknames are allowed
as part of my ballot name, but titles and campaign slogans are not permissible. I have
reviewed the requirements to hold office and I certify that I am qualified to serve if elected.
_______________________________________
Ballot name requested
_______________________________________
Candidate's signature
Subscribed and sworn to before me on ______________, _____.
________________________________________
Notary Public
NOTARY SEAL
My Commission Expires ____________________
16.1-11-11. County candidates' petitions - Filing - Contents.
Every candidate for a county office shall present, between the first date candidates may
begin circulating nominating petitions according to this chapter and before four p.m. of the
sixty-fourth day before any primary election, to the county auditor of the county in which the
candidate resides, a petition containing the following:
1. The candidate's name, post-office address, and telephone number, the title of the
office to which the candidate aspires, the appropriate district number if applicable, and
whether the petition is intended for nomination for an unexpired term of office if
applicable.
2. The signatures of qualified electors, the number of which must be determined as
follows:
a. If the office is a county office, the signatures of not less than two percent of the
total vote cast for the office at the most recent general election at which the office
was voted upon.
b. If the office is a county office and multiple candidates were elected to the office at
the preceding general election at which the office was voted upon, the signatures
of not less than two percent of the votes cast for all candidates divided by the
number of candidates that were to be elected to that office.
c. If the office is a county office and no candidate was elected or no votes were cast
for the office at any general election, the number of signers equal to the
percentage as provided in paragraph 1 applied to the total average vote cast for
the offices of sheriff and county auditor at the most recent general election at
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which those officers were elected in the petitioner's county. This average must be
determined by dividing by two the total vote cast for those offices.
d. In no case may more than three hundred signatures be required.
3. The residential address, mailing address (if different from residential address), and
date of signing for each signer. A post office box does not qualify as a residential
address. In those areas of the state where street addresses are not available, a
description of where the residential address is located shall be used.
If the petition or certificate of endorsement is mailed, it must be in the possession of the county
auditor before four p.m. on the sixty-fourth day before the primary election.
16.1-11-11.1. Deadline for placing county and city measures on primary, general, or
special election ballots.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a county may not submit a measure for
consideration of the voters at a primary, general, or special statewide, district, or county election
after four p.m. on the sixty-fourth day before the election. A city that has combined its regular or
a special election with a primary, general, or special county election, according to the provisions
set forth in section 40-21-02, may not submit a measure for consideration of the voters at that
election after four p.m. on the sixty-fourth day before the election.
16.1-11-12. County auditor to place applicant's name on ballot.
Upon receipt of the petition or certificate of endorsement provided for in section 16.1-11-11
by the county auditor and when accompanied by an affidavit as provided in section 16.1-11-10,
the county auditor shall place the name of the applicant upon the primary election ballot in the
party or appropriate column, as the case may be.
16.1-11-13. Filing petition or certificate of endorsement when legislative district
composed of more than one county - Certificate of county auditor.
Repealed by S.L. 2013, ch. 175, § 11.
16.1-11-14. Application by other persons to place name on ballot - Petition - Affidavit.
Repealed by S.L. 1995, ch. 207, § 20.
16.1-11-15. Nominating petition not to be circulated prior to January first - Special
election.
No nominating petition provided for in sections 16.1-11-06 and 16.1-11-11 may be circulated
or signed prior to January first preceding the primary election. Any signatures to a petition
secured before that time may not be counted. A nominating petition for a special election may
not be circulated or signed more than thirty days before the time when a petition for the special
election must be filed.
16.1-11-16. Form of nominating petitions.
1. Each nominating petition circulated by candidates for any state, district, county, or
other political subdivision office must include or have attached the following
information, which must be made available to each signer at the time of signing:
a. The candidate's name, address, and telephone number and the title of the office
to which the candidate aspires, including the appropriate district number if
applicable, or whether the petition is intended for an unexpired term of office if
applicable.
b. The name of the party the candidate represents if the petition is for an office
under party designation.
c. The date of the election at which the candidate is seeking nomination or election.
2. Only qualified electors of the state, district, county, or other political subdivision, as the
case may be, may sign nominating petitions. In addition to signing the person's name,
petition signers shall include the following information:
a. The date of signing.
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b.
3.
Complete residential address. A post office box does not qualify as a residential
address. In those areas of the state where street addresses are not available, a
description of where the residential address is located shall be used.
c. Complete mailing address if different from residential address.
Incomplete signatures or accompanying information of petition signers which do not
meet the requirements of this section invalidate such signatures. The use of ditto
marks to indicate that the information contained on the previous signature line carries
over does not invalidate a signature. Signatures that are not accompanied by a
complete date are not invalid if the signatures are preceded and followed by a
signature that is accompanied by a complete date.
16.1-11-17. Filling vacancy in party primary election ballot permissible - Petition Affidavit.
Repealed by S.L. 1995, ch. 207, § 20.
16.1-11-18. Party committees to fill vacancy occurring in nomination for party office.
1. If a vacancy occurs in any party certificate of endorsement at the primary election for
any state or legislative district office, the proper state or district executive committee of
the political party may fill the vacancy by filing another certificate of endorsement with
the proper officer as provided in sections 16.1-11-06 and 16.1-11-11.
2. If no party endorsement has been made by certificate and a vacancy occurs in a slate
of candidates seeking party nomination by petition at the primary election, the proper
state or district executive committee may fill the vacancy by filing a certificate of
endorsement with the proper officer as provided in sections 16.1-11-06 and 16.1-11-11.
3. If party endorsements by certificate have been made for any state or district office and
a vacancy occurs in the slate of persons seeking nomination at the primary election
because of the unavailability of the person who is seeking nomination by petition, that
vacancy may not be filled except by petition.
4. If a vacancy occurs in a slate of statewide candidates after the candidates have been
nominated at the primary election, the proper state executive committee may fill any
vacancy by filing a certificate of nomination with the secretary of state. The chairman
and secretary of the committee shall make and file with the secretary of state a
certificate setting forth the cause of the vacancy, the name of the person for whom the
new nominee is to be substituted, the fact that the committee was authorized to fill
vacancies, and any further information as may be required to be given in an original
certificate of nomination. When such a certificate is filed, the secretary of state shall
certify the new nomination and the name of the person who has been nominated to fill
the vacancy in place of the original nominee to the various auditors. If the secretary of
state already has forwarded the certificate, the secretary of state forthwith shall certify
to the auditors the name and address of the new nominee, the office the new nominee
is nominated for, the party or political principle the new nominee represents, and the
name of the person for whom the new nominee is substituting. Failure to publish the
name of a new nominee does not invalidate the election.
5. If a vacancy occurs in a slate of legislative candidates after the candidates have been
nominated at the primary election, the proper district executive committee may fill the
vacancy by filing a certificate of nomination with the secretary of state. The chairman
and secretary of the committee shall make and file with the secretary of state a
certificate setting forth the cause of the vacancy, the name of the person for whom the
new nominee is to be substituted, the fact that the committee was authorized to fill
vacancies, and any further information as may be required to be given in an original
certificate of nomination. When the certificate is filed, the secretary of state shall certify
the new nomination to the various county auditors affected by the change by
forwarding to them the name of the person who has been nominated to fill the vacancy
in place of the original nominee. The certification must include the name and address
of the new nominee, the office the new nominee is nominated for, the party or political
principle the new nominee represents, and the name of the person for whom the new
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nominee is substituting. Failure to publish the name of a new nominee does not
invalidate the election.
6. A vacancy in a nomination following a primary election may not be filled according to
subsection 4 or 5 unless the nominated candidate:
a. Dies;
b. Would be unable to serve, if elected, as a result of a debilitating illness;
c. Ceases to be a resident of the state or an individual nominated for legislative
office will not be a resident of the legislative district at the time of the election; or
d. Ceases to be qualified to serve, if elected, as otherwise provided by law.
Vacancies to be filled according to the provisions of this section may be filled not later than the
sixty-fourth day prior to the election.
16.1-11-19. Filling vacancy existing on no-party ballot - Petition required - Time of
filing.
If a vacancy exists on a no-party ballot for a state office or for judge of a district court, the
vacancy may be filled by filing with the secretary of state, before four p.m. on the sixty-fourth
day prior to the primary election, a written petition as provided in section 16.1-11-06, stating that
the petitioner desires to become a candidate for nomination to the office for which a vacancy
exists. If the petition is mailed, it must be in the possession of the secretary of state before
four p.m. on the sixty-fourth day prior to the primary election. The petition for the nomination of
any person to fill the vacancy must be signed by qualified electors equal in number to at least
two percent of the total vote cast for governor at the most recent general election in the state or
district at which the office of governor was voted upon, but in no case may more than three
hundred signatures be required.
If a vacancy exists on a no-party ballot in a county or district within a county, the vacancy
may be filled by filing with the county auditor, before four p.m. of the sixty-fourth day prior to the
primary election, a written petition as provided in section 16.1-11-11, stating that the petitioner
desires to become a candidate for nomination to the office for which a vacancy exists. If the
petition is mailed, it must be in the possession of the county auditor before four p.m. on the
sixty-fourth day prior to the primary election. The petition for the nomination of any person to fill
the vacancy must be signed by qualified electors as provided in subdivision c of subsection 2 of
section 16.1-11-11. A vacancy in the no-party ballot must be deemed to exist when a candidate
who was qualified by filing a petition pursuant to section 16.1-11-06 or 16.1-11-11 dies, resigns,
or otherwise becomes disqualified to have the candidate's name printed on the ballot.
16.1-11-20. Certified list of nominees transmitted to county auditor by secretary of
state.
At least fifty-five days before any primary election, the secretary of state shall electronically
transmit to each county auditor a certified list containing the names and post-office addresses of
each person for whom nomination papers have been filed in the secretary of state's office and
who are entitled to be voted for at the primary election. A designation of the office for which each
is a candidate, and if applicable, the party or principle represented by each must be included.
16.1-11-21. County auditor to publish sample primary election ballot and notice of
time and place of election.
The county auditor shall publish in the official county newspaper, and if no newspaper is
published in the county then in a newspaper published in an adjoining county in the state, the
following:
1. A copy of the sample ballot of the primary election, as arranged by order and direction
of the county auditor. The form of the sample ballot must conform in all respects to the
form prescribed for the sample primary ballot by the secretary of state. The county
auditor shall publish the sample ballot in all forms appropriate for the method or
methods of voting in the county. Absent voters' ballots may not be considered in
determining which form of voting is used. Candidates from each legislative district that
falls within the boundaries of the county must be listed in a separate box or category
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within the sample ballot by legislative district number to enable the voters in each
legislative district to ascertain the legislative candidates in their specific district.
2. The date of the primary election.
3. The hours during which the polls will be open.
4. The statement that the primary election balloting will be held in the regular polling
place in each precinct.
The notice must be published in the official county newspaper once each week for two
consecutive weeks before the primary election and include a statement in substantially the
following format:
The arrangement of candidate names appearing on ballots in your precinct may vary
from the published sample ballots, depending upon the precinct and legislative district
in which you reside.
16.1-11-22. Primary election ballot - Form - Voters to vote for candidates of only one
political party.
At the primary election there may be only one ballot for all parties or principles. The ballot
must be in the following form:
1. The ballot must be entitled the "consolidated primary election ballot".
2. Each political party or principle having candidates at the primary election must have a
separate section on the ballot.
3. At the head of each column must be printed the name of the political party or principle
which it represents.
4. Spanning the columns containing the political party ballot and prior to the party names
or principle titles must be printed: "In a Political Party Primary Election, you may only
vote for the candidates of one political party. This ballot contains the number of political
parties or principles and a description of where the political parties or principles are to
be found in the columns below. If you vote in more than one political party's section,
your Political Party Ballot will be rejected; however, all votes on the No Party and
Measure Ballots will still be counted."
5. Immediately below the warning against voting for candidates of more than one political
party must be printed: "To vote for the candidate of your choice, you must darken the
oval next to the name of that candidate. To vote for a person whose name is not
printed on the ballot, you must darken the oval next to the blank line provided and
write that person's name on the blank line."
6. The offices specified in section 16.1-11-26 must be arranged in each section with the
name of each office in the center of each political party section at the head of the
names of all the aspirants for the office.
7. Immediately under the name of each office must be printed: "Vote for no more than
__________ name (or names)."
8. Immediately preceding and on the same line as the name of each aspirant must be
printed an oval in which the voter is to mark the voter's choice by darkening the oval
next to the name of the candidate chosen.
9. The political party or principle which cast the largest vote for governor at the most
recent primary election at which the office of governor was voted upon must have the
first section, and the political party or principle casting the next largest vote must have
the second section, and so on.
The judges and the inspector of elections shall inform each elector at the primary, before voting,
that if the voter votes for candidates of more than one political party the voter's political party
ballot will be rejected.
16.1-11-23. Presidential preference contest ballots.
Repealed by S.L. 2005, ch. 185, § 18.
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16.1-11-24. No-party primary ballot - Contents.
There must be a separate ballot at all primary elections which must be entitled "no-party
primary ballot". The names of aspirants for nomination to each office must be arranged on the
no-party primary ballot in separate groups in their order. The separate ballot may be on the
same paper or electronic ballot, but the list of offices and candidates must be entitled "no-party
primary ballot" in a manner to indicate clearly the separation of the no-party list of offices and
candidates from the party list of offices and candidates. The names of all candidates for any of
the offices mentioned in section 16.1-11-08 must be placed on the ballot without party
designation. Immediately under the name of each office must be placed the language: "Vote for
no more than __________ name (or names)." The number inserted must be the number to be
elected to the office at the next succeeding general election.
16.1-11-25. Preparation, printing, distributing, canvassing, and returning of no-party
ballot.
The no-party ballot must be prepared, printed, distributed, canvassed, and returned in the
same manner provided for other primary election ballots.
16.1-11-26. Order in which names of offices shall appear on ballot.
The primary election ballot for party nominations shall contain the following offices in the
following order under each party column:
1. Congressional:
United States senator
representative in Congress
2. Legislative:
state senator __________ district
state representative __________ district
3. State offices:
governor and lieutenant governor
secretary of state
state auditor
state treasurer
attorney general
insurance commissioner
agriculture commissioner
public service commissioner
tax commissioner
16.1-11-27. Arrangement of names on ballots.
Sample ballots used for publication purposes must be arranged using the rotation of the
ballot in the precinct in the county which cast the highest total vote for governor at the last
general election at which the office of governor was filled. In the event that this determination is
no longer possible due to changes in precinct boundaries, the precincts are to be ordered
according to the precincts with the greatest voting age population to the least. This information
is to be provided by the North Dakota state data center or based on the best available data as
determined by the county auditor. On the official ballot used at the election, including electronic
voting system ballots, the names of candidates beside or under headings designating each
office to be voted for must be alternated in the following manner:
1. The ballot must first be arranged with all the names for each office on the ballot in an
order determined by lot by the county auditor and prepared by the county auditor for all
state, district, and county offices. The position of names that require alternating under
the provisions of this section must be alternated by an algorithm approved by the
secretary of state designed to ensure to the extent possible that each name on the
ballot for an office is listed in each position order on an equal number of precinct
ballots spread across the county. There must be a different alternation sequence for
each of the following, based on the geographical area by which the office is filled:
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a.
2.
Offices to be filled by the electors of the state, the entire county, or any district
which includes the entire county.
b. Offices to be filled by the electors of districts smaller than the county, with a
different rotation for each of those districts.
Although the names are to be alternated within the offices on the ballot, the name
order for an office is to be the same for all ballots within a precinct.
16.1-11-28. Piling, cutting, and blocking ballots.
Repealed by S.L. 1999, ch. 209, § 2.
16.1-11-29. Preparation of ballot.
Unless otherwise provided in this chapter, the primary election ballot must be prepared as
provided in chapter 16.1-06.
16.1-11-30. Separate section on primary election ballot required for each political
party.
Any party that had printed on the ballot at the last preceding presidential election the names
of a set of presidential electors pledged to the election of the party's candidates for president
and vice president or a candidate for governor and those candidates for presidential electors or
governor received at least five percent of the total vote cast for presidential electors or the office
of governor within this state at that election; any party that had printed on the ballot at the last
preceding nonpresidential election a candidate for attorney general or secretary of state, and
the candidate received at least five percent of the total vote cast for the office the candidate was
seeking at the election; or any party that has organized according to all the requirements of
chapter 16.1-03 must be provided with a separate section on primary election ballots.
Any other political organization is entitled to endorse candidates or have candidates petition
to be included on the primary ballot in a separate section of the consolidated primary election
ballot, if a petition signed by at least seven thousand qualified electors of this state is filed with
the secretary of state before four p.m. of the sixty-fourth day before a primary or special
election, naming the political organization, stating the platform principles of the party, and
requesting the names of its candidates to be included on the state's primary ballot in a separate
section. Political organizations that are granted ballot access under this section are allowed
ballot access only for those offices for which the organization has identified candidates.
Regardless of the means by which the petition is delivered, the original must be in the
possession of the secretary of state before four p.m. on the sixty-fourth day prior to a primary or
special election. Candidates of that party are entitled to the same rights and privileges as those
of other parties. Petitions circulated according to this section must be filed with the secretary of
state in accordance with section 1-01-50.
A political organization that had printed on the ballot at the last preceding presidential
election the names of a set of presidential electors pledged to the election of the party's
candidates for president and vice president or a candidate for governor and those candidates
for presidential electors or governor received at least five percent of the total vote cast for
presidential electors or the office of governor within this state at that election, and any political
organization that has printed on the ballot at the last preceding nonpresidential election a
candidate for attorney general or secretary of state, and the candidate received at least five
percent of the total vote cast for the office the candidate was seeking at the election are entitled
to organize according to the requirements of chapter 16.1-03.
16.1-11-31. Precinct election reports.
Optical scan ballot tabulation machines must print reports detailing the election results from
the precinct after the close of the polls.
16.1-11-32. Poll lists kept by clerks of elections.
The clerks of primary elections shall keep either one paper or one electronic list of the
names of all persons voting at each primary election. The clerks must return the list, which must
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be a part of the records and filed with other election returns. Only one complete list of voters
may be kept whether or not a special election is held simultaneously with the primary election.
16.1-11-33. Judges of election to run report of primary election - Contents.
The judges of a primary election in each precinct shall run a separate report for each
political party or principle, containing the names of all persons voted for at the primary election,
the number of votes cast for each candidate, and for what office. The report must be subscribed
by the election judges and must be filed with the returns in the office of the county auditor.
16.1-11-34. Counting and canvassing of votes in presidential preference contest.
Repealed by S.L. 2005, ch. 185, § 18.
16.1-11-35. Nominations by write-in.
The provisions of this title do not prevent any elector from writing on the paper ballot, or in
the case of direct-recording electronic voting system devices, entering by touchscreen or other
data entry device, the name of any person for whom the elector desires to vote, and such vote
must be counted according to the provisions for the counting of write-in votes found in section
16.1-12-02.2.
16.1-11-36. Vote required at primary election for nomination.
A person may not be deemed nominated as a candidate for any office at any primary
election unless that person receives a number of votes equal to the number of signatures
required, or which would have been required had the person not had the person's name placed
on the ballot through a certificate of endorsement, on a petition to have a candidate's name for
that office placed on the primary ballot.
16.1-11-37. Vote required for nomination on no-party ballot - Partisan nominations
prohibited.
The number of persons to be nominated as candidates for any one no-party office must be
that number of persons who receive the highest number of votes and who total twice the
number of available positions for the office if that many persons are candidates for nomination.
Provided, however, that a person may not be deemed nominated as a candidate for any
no-party office at any primary election unless the number of votes received by the person
equals the number of signatures of qualified electors required to be obtained on a petition to
have a candidate's name for the office placed on the primary ballot. No partisan nominations
may be made for any of the offices mentioned in section 16.1-11-08.
16.1-11-38. Tie vote determination.
In case of a tie vote the nominee or nominees must be determined by a drawing of names
in the presence of the candidates upon at least five days' notice to each candidate, by the
canvassing board or boards concerned, at a time and place designated by the board. A
candidate involved in a tie vote may withdraw the candidate's name from consideration if the
candidate is willing to sign a statement to that effect in the presence of and witnessed by the
filing officer of the election. If no candidates remain, the office is to be filled according to the
rules of filling an office when a vacancy exists.
16.1-11-39. Persons nominated in accordance with provisions of chapter eligible as
candidates in general election.
All persons nominated in accordance with the provisions of this chapter are eligible as
candidates to be voted for at the ensuing general election.
16.1-11-40. Primary election and ballot governed by general election provisions.
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the primary election ballot must be arranged,
and the primary election must be provided for, conducted, and the expenses thereof paid as in
the case of a general election.
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