June
8, 2010 Primary Election
Results: Grand Totals, All Races
Precinct Results, Contested Races: Democratic
US Senate | Republican US Rep/Governor
Republican Sec. of State/Treasurer |
Legislature: Dem. HD30/Rep. SD45 & HD89
Party Change Statistics
Polls open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Vote at regular
polling places. Polling
Places and sample ballots
In a primary election, no candidates are elected. Instead, voters who
are affiliated with the recognized political parties nominate their
candidates to run in the November 2 general election.
More information about political parties and primary
elections
Voters must be affiliated with one of the two recognized political parties in
Iowa (Democratic and Republican) and can only vote in one party's primary. Any
voter may declare or change party affiliation at any time, including Election
Day.
Dates and Deadlines
- March 1-19: Filing period for federal and state offices with
Secretary of State.
- March 8-31: Filing period for county offices with
County Auditor.
- April 22: 5 p.m. deadline to file petition for satellite voting site, 100
signatures.
- April 24: Military and overseas ballots mailed by this date.
- April 29: First day for early voting at auditor's office.
- May 29: Last day to register
to vote without additional requirements of
Election Day registration,
10 days before the election, 5:00 p.m. Auditor's Office open
Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- May 31: Memorial Day; Auditor's Office closed.
- June 4: Deadline to request absentee ballot by mail.
Requests must be received in our office by 5 p.m.
- June 5: Auditor's Office open Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
- June 7: Last day to vote early at
Auditor's Office (6 p.m.). Postmark deadline for mailed absentee
ballots.
- June 8: Election Day. Polls open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Inconclusive Primaries and Special
Nominating Conventions
The Code of Iowa (43.52) states that a candidate must win 35% of the
vote to win a party nomination. If no candidate wins 35% in a primary,
the primary is inconclusive and the political party must hold a nominating
convention.
Parties may also nominate candidates by convention to
fill ballot vacancies. The deadline is 81 days before the general election for
legislative, statewide and federal offices (August 13, 2010) and 69 days
before the election (August 25, 2010) for county offices.
Candidates for lieutenant governor have been nominated by state party
conventions since 1990, when the constitutional amendment requiring candidates
for governor and lieutenant governor to run as a team took effect. Candidates
for governor do not have to name a running mate before the primary, and even
if they do the name of the running mate is not on the ballot.
Candidates not
representing official parties
In order to earn and maintain official political party status, a party must
win 2 percent of the vote for president or governor in each general election (Code
of Iowa, 43.2). At present, only the Democratic and Republican parties
qualify, though other groups have held full party status in recent years.
In 2008, a new state law allowed groups to complete a petition and become
"political organizations." The Green and Libertarian parties have organization
status. Voters may register as Greens or Libertarians, but these parties do not
participate in the June primary.
Candidates representing political organizations or parties with no official status, or
candidates who
wish to run with no party designation, do not participate in the primary
election. Instead, they may file through petition or convention procedures in order to appear on the November
2 general election ballot. Filing
dates:
In Johnson County, candidates for county office running with no
party or representing parties without full party status may file a declaration
of intent to file candidacy and be included on candidate lists distributed
by our office prior to the
August filing period.
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