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Blog comments do not reflect the views or opinions of the Author or Ancel Glink. Some of the content may be considered attorney advertising material under the applicable rules of certain states. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Please read our full disclaimer

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Appellate Court Rules New Party Candidates for Village Office Should Be on the Ballot


An Illinois Appellate Court recently overturned an Electoral Board’s decision disqualifying a new party’s slate of candidates for including political images in the candidate’s nomination petitions, and ordered that the candidates' names be placed on the ballot in Maloney v. Janecyk

A political party (Party) filed new party nomination petitions last fall nominating a slate of candidates for village offices at the 2025 Consolidated Election. In addition to information required by the Illinois Election Code, the Party’s nomination petitions featured American flags at the top of the petition sheets. An objection was filed against the Party’s slate of candidates arguing the petition sheets violated the Election Code by containing political slogans and messages.

The Municipal Officers Electoral Board held a hearing on the objection. At the hearing, the objectors argued that including American flags on the petition sheets constituted prohibited political messaging under the Election Code. The Party candidates responded that no express provision of the Election Code prohibited displaying American flags on candidate petition sheets.

The Electoral Board ruled in favor of the objectors and issued a written order denying the Party’s candidates access to the ballot. Party candidates appealed to the circuit court, which reversed the Electoral Board’s ruling. The circuit court ruled that the Election Code’s restrictions on political slogans in candidate petition sheets only applied to names of candidates, and that the Board’s ruling improperly created a new exclusionary rule denying the Party’s candidates access to the Consolidated Election ballot.

On appeal, the Appellate Court agreed with the circuit court and ruled that as the Election Code provisions on candidate petition sheets were unambiguous, the Electoral Board improperly created a new exclusionary rule by denying the Party’s candidates access to the ballot. As no express provision of the Election Code prohibited displaying American flags in the heading of a candidate’s nomination petition sheets, the Appellate Court overturned the Electoral Board’s decision and ordered the names of Party candidates be printed on the 2025 consolidated election ballot for the village.  

Post Authored by Tyler Smith, Ancel Glink

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