Chicago area could see nearly 2-week delay of early voting

SHARE Chicago area could see nearly 2-week delay of early voting
earlyvoting_e1539659609942.jpg

A new audit of the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners has found numerous financial irregularities. | Sun-Times file photo

Election officials say early voting could be delayed by nearly two weeks for millions of Chicago-area voters because of candidate ballot challenges.

Early voting starts statewide Thursday, Feb. 8. However, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners spokesman Jim Allen said Monday that because of ongoing candidate objections, ballots won’t be ready on time. He estimates balloting systems will be tested and available by Feb. 21, possibly earlier.

Early voting will begin at 53 suburban Cook County sites on March 5, the Cook County clerk’s office said in a statement Monday, with some in-person early voting options opening on Feb. 21 when most ballot challenges should be settled.

“The in-person voting period in Illinois can begin at election officials’ offices as early as Feb. 8, but ballots will not be available here or in many areas due to the ongoing disputes in the courts and before electoral boards,” the statement said.Roughly 3 million registered voters in Chicago and suburban Cook County will be affected.

It’s unclear which other locations may delay. State Board of Elections spokesman Matt Dietrich says the decision is up to each jurisdiction.

One objection involves the statewide attorney general race. A judge determined last week that Scott Drury’s name can’t appear on ballots for the March 20 primary over paperwork issues. Drury has appealed.

The Latest
Led by Fridays For Future, hundreds of environmental activists took to the streets to urge President Joe Biden to declare a climate emergency and call for investment in clean energy, sustainable transportation, resilient infrastructure, quality healthcare, clean air, safe water and nutritious food, according to youth speakers.
The two were driving in an alley just before 5 p.m. when several people started shooting from two cars, police said.
The Heat jumped on the Bulls midway through the first quarter and never let go the rest of the night. With this Bulls roster falling short yet again, there is some serious soul-searching to do, starting with free agent DeMar DeRozan.
The statewide voter turnout of 19.07% is the lowest for a presidential primary election since at least 1960, according to Illinois State Board of Elections figures.
“There’s all kinds of dangers that can happen,” said Itai Segre, a teacher who lives in Roscoe Village with family in Jerusalem.