The Street‐Level Bureaucrats of Elections: Selection Methods for Local Election Officials

DC Kimball, M Kropf - Review of Policy Research, 2006 - Wiley Online Library
Review of Policy Research, 2006Wiley Online Library
The 2000 presidential election and the recount battle in Florida focused attention on local
election administration in the United States. The Help America Vote Act, passed by the
federal government in 2002, requires wholesale changes in voting equipment and other
election procedures. However, the law did not address the selection of individuals who
manage elections: both state and local election officials play a great role implementing
federal and state election laws. Recently, several election reform advocates have argued for …
Abstract
The 2000 presidential election and the recount battle in Florida focused attention on local election administration in the United States. The Help America Vote Act, passed by the federal government in 2002, requires wholesale changes in voting equipment and other election procedures. However, the law did not address the selection of individuals who manage elections: both state and local election officials play a great role implementing federal and state election laws. Recently, several election reform advocates have argued for shifting to nonpartisan election administrators in the United States. Others, particularly associations representing election officials, have not endorsed that position. To inform this debate, we provide data on the selection methods and party affiliations for all local election officials in the United States (more than 4,500 individuals or commissions). We find considerable variation in the methods used to select state and local election officials in the United States.
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