Word: ballots
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Election Commission officers failed to include the name of one first-year council candidate on the ballot, bugs plagued the online voting program in Eliot House and the election was delayed by incomplete data on first-year voters...
...Only hours after the election began early Wednesday morning, Jonah G. Westerman '03, a first-year candidate in the East Yard, had notified the council that his name was not on the ballot...
...Epstein, however, said he feels the e-mailed ballot option was insufficient...
...consider a run, pleading for a nonpolitician to carry the Reform Party flag. They discussed taxes, regulation and campaign-finance reform. Last week Ventura called Trump but did not commit to supporting him. After that call Trump asked Stone to assess how the New Yorker might fare under the ballot rules. "He is going to look at [the race] seriously," Stone told TIME...
What Trump will find is that the rules are complex. "This thing is like a giant calculus problem," Buchanan says. To become the Reform nominee, a candidate must essentially pass a two-part test. First, try to get on the ballot in some 30 states where the Reform Party is not slated already. If a candidate can get on enough ballots, then he's eligible for a national primary--an open-door affair in which any eligible voter who requests a Reform ballot can participate. On paper, at least, the rules are fair. But there's still room for mischief...