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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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How random drawing of candidates for ballot works
Monday August 11, 2003
With 195 candidates in the running in the Oct. 7 recall
election, position on the ballot is crucial. State law requires
that the order of the candidate names be selected randomly. To get
the order, officials at the California Secretary of State's Office
will:
Assign each letter of the alphabet a canister to be drawn from
a lottery box, until a new alphabetical order has been determined.
The first letter drawn receives first position on the ballot
and all candidates whose name begins with that letter will be
first.
Candidates with the same first letter of their last name would
be assigned positions based on the order in which the second letter
of their last name is drawn.
The candidate order is then rotated based on Assembly
districts. The initial ballot order would be used in Assembly
District 1. In Assembly District 2, the candidate at the top of the
ballot moves to the bottom. The rotation continues through all 80
Assembly districts.
Source: California Secretary of State's office.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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