17 USC § 107 Limitations on Exclusive Rights – FAIR USE
Lacy Clay's Bio and/or Biography – Do you know this HOUSE NEGRO?
In our pursuit of the OVERTHROW of the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime, we intend to seek the PROSECUTION of these House Negroes (i.e. some of which are LAWYERS). Please NOTE “HOW Many” were EDUCATED under WHITE INSTITUTIONS!
While the AGE REQUIREMENT is 25 Years Old to serve as a United States SENATOR and/or REPRESENTATIVE, as of 2017, the AGE RANGE for the House Negroes Serving is BETWEEN 40 – 88 Years Old!
This is SIGNIFICANT because the House Negroes Placed in the United States Congress are those who GREW UP in the Heart of the CIVIL RIGHTS Movement and EXPERIENCED the BRUTAL Murders/Killings of Civil Rights Leaders as Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Therefore, MAKING them EASY PREY to be CONTROLLED by THREATS and FEAR on their Lives and their Family Members MADE by WHITE Jews/Zionists and WHITE Supremacists!
Help BRING these HOUSE NEGROES to JUSTICE for the ROLES they have PLAYED in the TERRORIST/RACIST/DISCRIMINATORY Practices of the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime!
This House Negro had a DUTY and OBLIGATION to NOTIFY the Public/World of the Illegal/Unlawful Occupation of the DESPOT presently CONTROLLING and RUNNING the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime!
Moreover, the THREATS made (if any) by WHITE Jews/Zionists and WHITE Supremacists AGAINST them and/or their Family Members, Friends, etc.
A U-Visa lets victims of crimes who meet certain requirements stay in the United States. A U-Visa provides the following benefits:
You can legally live in the United States for four years. After three years of having a U-Visa you can apply for a green card to stay in the U.S. permanently. (And if you get a green card, you can eventually apply to become a U.S. citizen).
With a U-Visa you can get permission to work in the United States.
Some of your family members might also be able to get a U-Visa
With a U-Visa you might be eligible for certain public benefits in some States like California and New York.
17 USC § 107 Limitations on Exclusive Rights – FAIR USE
Lacy Clay's Bio and/or Biography – Do you know this HOUSE NEGRO?
In our pursuit of the OVERTHROW of the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime, we intend to seek the PROSECUTION of these House Negroes (i.e. some of which are LAWYERS). Please NOTE “HOW Many” were EDUCATED under WHITE INSTITUTIONS!
While the AGE REQUIREMENT is 25 Years Old to serve as a United States SENATOR and/or REPRESENTATIVE, as of 2017, the AGE RANGE for the House Negroes Serving is BETWEEN 40 – 88 Years Old!
This is SIGNIFICANT because the House Negroes Placed in the United States Congress are those who GREW UP in the Heart of the CIVIL RIGHTS Movement and EXPERIENCED the BRUTAL Murders/Killings of Civil Rights Leaders as Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Therefore, MAKING them EASY PREY to be CONTROLLED by THREATS and FEAR on their Lives and their Family Members MADE by WHITE Jews/Zionists and WHITE Supremacists!
Help BRING these HOUSE NEGROES to JUSTICE for the ROLES they have PLAYED in the TERRORIST/RACIST/DISCRIMINATORY Practices of the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime!
This House Negro had a DUTY and OBLIGATION to NOTIFY the Public/World of the Illegal/Unlawful Occupation of the DESPOT presently CONTROLLING and RUNNING the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime!
Moreover, the THREATS made (if any) by WHITE Jews/Zionists and WHITE Supremacists AGAINST them and/or their Family Members, Friends, etc.
A U-Visa lets victims of crimes who meet certain requirements stay in the United States. A U-Visa provides the following benefits:
You can legally live in the United States for four years. After three years of having a U-Visa you can apply for a green card to stay in the U.S. permanently. (And if you get a green card, you can eventually apply to become a U.S. citizen).
With a U-Visa you can get permission to work in the United States.
Some of your family members might also be able to get a U-Visa
With a U-Visa you might be eligible for certain public benefits in some States like California and New York.
Writing and designing election materials so voters can find, understand and use them.
This was a workshop presented to the Utah Association of Counties 2015 Management Conference, April 29, 2015
Presentation developed for a series of lectures on political parties for PS 101 American Government at the University of Kentucky, Spring 2007. Dr. Christopher S. Rice, Instructor.
Plain language is at the heart of the Center for Civic Design's work. Learn what it is, why you should use it, and how to bring it into your writing practice.
Center for Civic Design's 2022 Civic Design Fellow Robert Pérez led a research project to better understand civic engagement attitudes among bilingual youth in San Mateo County, California. In a series of moderated interviews, we set out to hear stories from bilingual citizens about their experiences to discover pain points and barriers to accessing voter registration information, civic engagement, and the next steps in the voting process.
Good forms are designed with many audiences in mind — they must be easy for a voter to complete accurately and quick for an election administrator to process.
In this webinar, CCD design researchers Emma Werowinski and Sean Isamu Johnson share best practices they’ve learned from working on forms with election offices across the country, and preview our newest tool for election offices – an InDesign template that makes it fast and easy to create print masters and accessible, fillable forms at the same time.
Download the Forms Template, and explore our workbook on Creating accessible forms for print + PDF: https://civicdesign.org/fieldguides/accessible-forms-print-pdf/
Hundreds of thousands of mail-in ballots can be rejected because of mistakes, such as mismatched or missing signatures. Voters are often notified by their local elections office, but are they actually taking action?
This is a report on research with we conducted to test cure forms with voters to learn what motivated them to take action.
A short presentation about how to think about accessibility as usability for more people. By thinking about how to create a "curb cut effect" (where features designed for disability end up helping many people) and asking different questions, we can make it easier for more people to vote.
What can we do to make it easier for voters to vote by mail, within affordable and robust election administration? We tackled this question as a design problem, working on flexible templates for outgoing and return envelopes and voter information inserts with the goal to:
• Make it easier for voters to recognize and return their ballot accurately
• Support bilingual ballots to meet Voting Rights Act requirements
• Improve election administration by reducing errors and make it easier to process vote-by-mail ballots.
• Create recognizable consistency to support statewide voter ed campaigns.
• Offer flexible templates so envelopes can be customized for local information and procedures.
• Support accurate handling and delivery of ballots sent through the US Postal Service (USPS).
Presentation to the Committee on Future of Voting: Accessible, Reliable, Verifiable Technology at the National Academies of Science, Engineering, Medicine (NASEM) in contribution to the report Securing the Vote: Protecting American Democracy (2018)
Updated with annotation on the ballot images.
From the 2018 EAC Language Access for Voters Summit:
Session 4: Trends in Election Administration and their Impact on Language Access & Closing Remarks
A Language Access for Voters Summit discussion beyond the importance of Section 203 compliance towards expanded approaches to language assistance. Moderator: Tom Hicks, Chair, U.S. Election Assistance Commission, Matt Beaton, Travis Lane, Maria Bianchi, Lucy Barefoot and Whitney Quesenbery
Webcast link: https://www.eac.gov/media/video-player-2018-language-summit/
Making Elections Accessible to All is Still a Wicked Problem (or Curbcuts for...Center for Civic Design
The goal of completely accessible elections is still a work in progress. But there is progress. Let’s talk about current work to make elections secure, accurate and accessible. Whitney brings a perspective few others have. She has been a leader in creating voting system standards for 18 years. Now as the director of the Center for Civic Design, she works with elections offices and advocacy groups around the country on everything elections, from voter registration to materials to help voters get information about elections and vote by mail.
Presentation at Accessibility DC, June 7, 2018
We have been working with the California Secretary of State's office, the Future of California Elections, and election officials across the state to design usable, consistent vote-by-mail envelopes to support the Voter's Choice Act.
We presented this work at the National Postal Forum 2018 as part of a day-long session on election mail.
For more information about the project: https://civicdesign.org/projects/vote-by-mail/
We’ve learned a lot about how to invite everyone into the design process and what happens when we introduce design workshops, usability testing, field observations and other UX/IA/UCD approaches in projects to change how voter registration works? Turns out that it’s possible to bring government lawyers, rights advocates, and government agency staff together to solve the tough problems of implementing a new law.
This session will look at how to not only manage a complex and diverse group of stakeholders, but get them engaged as active partners in the design work of getting the user experience right, through a case study of work in several states in the U.S. that are changing how voter registration works.
The new approach, called “automatic voter registration” turns one of the basic elements in the service design of elections on its head, changing it from a registration process that puts the burden on the voter to incorporating voter registration into other routine transactions. The concept is simple, but the details matter because mistakes can disenfranchise voters or even expose them to legal jeopardy.
Presentation at the IA Summit 2018
Keynote at Service Design in Government, 2018
Creating government services is hard enough with just one agency involved. But when new policies to ensure wider participation in elections involve two (or more) agencies with competing priorities, democracy is a design problem.
Improving voter registration is exciting, and a chance to make a key democratic process more user-centred and transparent, but making this work is a real service design challenge. We’ve had to be come 'agency whisperers', bridging the gaps between the State Elections Office, the Department of Motor Vehicles, social service agencies, and advocacy groups working for better elections and voter rights.
In the United States, voters must register to vote individually, and must maintain their registration when they move. That sounds easy enough, but for young people, those with irregular lives, or marginalised groups, keeping up with voter registration in the course of mobile - even chaotic - lives can be difficult. New legislation to support automatic voter registration modernises opportunities for people to keep their registration up to date through driver’s license and social service offices.
When the Motor Voter Act was passed in 1993, supporting voter registration meant handing someone a paper form. Now, it takes coordination between several agencies, dealing with competing databases, ancient platforms, and adding new questions to existing transactions. And it takes working with one of the least loved government offices - the Department of Motor Vehicles.
We’ve been working across the US to design the implementation of these new policies so they are a good experience for everyone, register people who have been excluded from electoral participation, and make sure everyone who wants to has a voice and a vote. The goal is to design the automatic voter registration service to be simple, understandable, and transparent - even though there’s a lot of complexity under the covers.
Whitney Quesenbery, Taapsi Ramchandani, Maggie Ollove
UXPA and IDXA NYC World Usability Day November 9, 2017
Of course we want to be inclusive...but where to start? There’s accessibility, language, digital inclusion, global, cultural, and socio-economic differences. Come learn how to broaden your research to include more voices in the people you meet and the stories you collect. And how to use those stories in a conscious act of innovation.
We’ll share some of our best research tips, introduce you to some of the people we’ve met, and tell you the stories that changed our product. Then, you’ll explore ideas for how to make your own work more inclusive. Hopefully, you will leave inspired to be an inclusion superhero and delight everyone who uses your products.
What you will learn:
- Ways to think about inclusion
- Ideas for increasing the diversity of your research participants
- Examples of how insights from inclusive research can expand and improve your product vision
Presentation to the Committee on Future of Voting: Accessible, Reliable, Verifiable Technology at the National Academies of Science, Engineering, Medicine (NASEM)
Between Filth and Fortune- Urban Cattle Foraging Realities by Devi S Nair, An...Mansi Shah
This study examines cattle rearing in urban and rural settings, focusing on milk production and consumption. By exploring a case in Ahmedabad, it highlights the challenges and processes in dairy farming across different environments, emphasising the need for sustainable practices and the essential role of milk in daily consumption.
Storytelling For The Web: Integrate Storytelling in your Design ProcessChiara Aliotta
In this slides I explain how I have used storytelling techniques to elevate websites and brands and create memorable user experiences. You can discover practical tips as I showcase the elements of good storytelling and its applied to some examples of diverse brands/projects..
EASY TUTORIAL OF HOW TO USE CAPCUT BY: FEBLESS HERNANEFebless Hernane
CapCut is an easy-to-use video editing app perfect for beginners. To start, download and open CapCut on your phone. Tap "New Project" and select the videos or photos you want to edit. You can trim clips by dragging the edges, add text by tapping "Text," and include music by selecting "Audio." Enhance your video with filters and effects from the "Effects" menu. When you're happy with your video, tap the export button to save and share it. CapCut makes video editing simple and fun for everyone!
Decormart Studio is widely recognized as one of the best interior designers in Bangalore, known for their exceptional design expertise and ability to create stunning, functional spaces. With a strong focus on client preferences and timely project delivery, Decormart Studio has built a solid reputation for their innovative and personalized approach to interior design.
White wonder, Work developed by Eva TschoppMansi Shah
White Wonder by Eva Tschopp
A tale about our culture around the use of fertilizers and pesticides visiting small farms around Ahmedabad in Matar and Shilaj.
9. Classic problems
splitting contests into different columns
placing different contests on the same
screen
placing response options on both sides of
names
using arrows rather than bubbles on paper
ballots
leaving in disqualified candidates
14. Classic problems
inconsistency in format and style
not using shading, bold text
not writing short, simple instructions
placing instructions too far away
not telling voters how to correct paper
ballots
16. Top 10 design
principles
Use lowercase letters
Avoid centered text
Pick one sans-serif font
Use big enough type
Support process and navigation
Use clear, simple language
Use accurate instructional illustrations
Use informational icons (only)
Use contrast and color functionally
Decide what’s most important
27. Comptroller
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote Once
Vote una vez
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Attorney General
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote Once
Vote una vez
[Chinese]
[Korean]
United States
Senator
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote Once
Vote una vez
[Chinese]
[Korean]
United States
Senator
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote Once
Vote una vez
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Supreme Court
Justice
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote for any FIVE
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Representative in
Congress
[Spanish]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Vote Once
Vote una vez
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 2G
3G3F3E3D3C3B3A
4I4K 4J
4G4F4E4D4C4B4A
5A 5B 5C 5D 5E 5F 5G
6E6D6C6B6A
7A 7B 7C 7D 7E
8E8D8C8B8A
9E9D9C9B9A
10D10C10B10A
11C11B11A
4H
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
WRITE-IN
A B C D E F G
A B C D E F G
A B C D E F G H
K J I
A B C D E F G
EDCBA
A B C
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Democratic
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Republican
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Independence
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Green
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Libertarian
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Republican
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Independence
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Libertarian
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Freedom
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Republican
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Independence
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Green
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Rent is 2 Damn
High
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Libertarian
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Tax Revolt
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Taxpayers
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Anti-Prohibition
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Republican
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Independence
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Green
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Libertarian
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Republican
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Independence
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Conservative
[Chinese]
[Korean]
Working Families
[Chinese]
[Korean]
H
Anti-Prohibition
[Chinese]
[Korean]
5H
Harry
Wilson
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Thomas P.
DiNapoli
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Harry
Wilson
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Harry
Wilson
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Thomas P.
DiNapoli
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Julia A.
Willebrand
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
John
Gaetani
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eric T.
Schneiderman
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Bruce
Blakeman
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eric T.
Schneiderman
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Dan
Donovan
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eric T.
Schneiderman
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Carl E.
Person
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Ramon J.
Jimenez
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kristen E.
Gillibrand
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Joseph J.
DioGuardi
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kristen E.
Gillibrand
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Joseph J.
DioGuardi
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kristen E.
Gillibrand
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cecile A.
Lawrence
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Joseph
Huff
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
John
Clifton
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Dan
Donovan
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Joseph J.
DioGuardi
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Viva
Morgan
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Charles E.
Schumer
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eugene M.
Fahey
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Charles E.
Schumer
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Jay
Townsend
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Charles E.
Schumer
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Colia
Clark
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Randy A.
Credico
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Randy A.
Credico
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kevin M.
Dillon
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cheryl A.
Green
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kevin M.
Dillon
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kevin M.
Dillon
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Kevin M.
Dillon
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eugene M.
Fahey
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Mark C.
Rodgers
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eugene M.
Fahey
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Jay
Townsend
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Eugene M.
Fahey
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Mark A.
Montour
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Deborah A.
Chimes
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Mark A.
Montour
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Deborah A.
Chimes
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cathrine Nugent
Panepinto
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Nydia M.
Velazquez
Nydia M.
Velazquez
Henry J.
Nowak
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Alice
Gaffney
Paul B.
Wojtaszek
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Henry J.
Nowak
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Paul B.
Wojtaszek
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cathrine Nugent
Panepinto
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Jeffrey F.
Voelkl
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cathrine Nugent
Panepinto
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Cathrine Nugent
Panepinto
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
Henry J.
Nowak
[Chinese]
[Chinese]
[Korean]
[Korean]
RDH
✺
New York
sued for
usability
problems
28. 4097
Trim Trim
PERF
PERF
Trim
PERF
PERF
Trim
Score 1
Score 2
Score 3
Score
Score
Score
SantaCruzRunDate:03/29/201610:37:42aLastPrinted:3/29/1610:39
cCopyright2012DOMINIONVOTING
Version:80
Optech3PE4c
CA44-1-001D
VOTE BOTH SIDES
(2A)CA44-1-001D
DEM 1
DEM 1
DEM 1OFFICIAL BALLOT
PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ELECTION
COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2016
This ballot stub shall be removed and retained by the voter
OFFICIAL BALLOT
PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY ELECTION
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2016
Instructions to Voters:
Use only a blue or black ballpoint pen to mark your choices.
You must connect the head and tail of the arrow for your vote to count. You only need to draw one line.
To vote for a qualified write-in candidate, write the person’s name on the blank line provided and connect the head and tail of the arrow.
If you make a mistake, ask a poll worker for another ballot. If you are voting by mail, follow the instructions you received with your ballot.
Party-Nominated Offices
Only voters who disclosed a preference upon registering to
vote for the same party as the candidate seeking the
nomination of any party for the Presidency or election to a party
committee may vote for that candidate at the primary election,
unless the party has adopted a rule to permit non-party voters
to vote in its primary elections.
Voter-Nominated and Nonpartisan Offices
All voters, regardless of the party preference they disclosed upon registration, or refusal to disclose a party
preference, may vote for any candidate for a voter-nominated or nonpartisan office.
The party preference, if any, designated by a candidate for a voter-nominated office is selected by the
candidate and is shown for the information of the voters only.
It does not imply that the candidate is nominated or endorsed by the party or that the party approves of the
candidate. The party preference, if any, of a candidate for a nonpartisan office does not appear on the ballot.
United States Senator
continued on next column
United States Senator
contest has 35 candidates.
Only vote for One
Vote for OnePresidential Preference
President of the United
States
Party-Nominated Offices
KEITH JUDD
MICHAEL STEINBERG
BERNIE SANDERS
WILLIE WILSON
ROQUE DE LA FUENTE
HILLARY CLINTON
HENRY HEWES
Vote for One
United States Senator
Voter-Nominated Offices
GEORGE C. YANG
Accountant
Party Preference: Republican
JERRY J. LAWS
Party Preference: Republican
GAIL K. LIGHTFOOT
Party Preference: Libertarian
MIKE BEITIKS
Party Preference: None
PAMELA ELIZONDO
Party Preference: Green
SCOTT A. VINEBERG
Party Preference: None
STEVE STOKES
Party Preference: Democratic
DUF SUNDHEIM
Party Preference: Republican
LING LING SHI
Party Preference: None
LORETTA L. SANCHEZ
Party Preference: Democratic
PHIL WYMAN
Party Preference: Republican
JARRELL WILLIAMSON
Party Preference: Republican
THOMAS G. DEL BECCARO
Party Preference: Republican
RON UNZ
Party Preference: Republican
GREG CONION
Party Preference: Republican
JASON KRAUS
Party Preference: None
TIM GILDERSLEEVE
Party Preference: None
CLIVE GREY
Party Preference: None
DON J. GRUNDMANN
Party Preference: None
PRESIDENT CRISTINA GRAPPO
Party Preference: Democratic
HERBERT G. PETERS
Party Preference: Democratic
TOM PALZER
Party Preference: Republican
KAREN ROSEBERRY
Party Preference: Republican
EMORY PERETZ RODGERS
Party Preference: Democratic
DON KRAMPE
Party Preference: Republican
MARK MATTHEW HERD
Party Preference: Libertarian
VON HOUGO
Party Preference: Republican
JASON HANANIA
Party Preference: None
KAMALA D HARRIS
Party Preference: Democratic
GAR MYERS
Party Preference: None
PAUL MERRITT
Party Preference: None
MASSIE MUNROE
Party Preference: Democratic
AKINYEMI OLABODE AGBEDE
Party Preference: Democratic
ELEANOR GARCIA
Party Preference: None
Vote for One20th District
United States
Representative
CASEY LUCIUS
National Security Professor
Party Preference: Republican
JOE WILLIAMS
Hospital Laboratory Technician
Party Preference: Peace and Freedom
JACK DIGBY
Ironworker/Homemaker/Artist
Party Preference: None
BARBARA HONEGGER
Investigative Journalist/Author
Party Preference: None
JIMMY PANETTA
Prosecutor
Party Preference: Democratic
California
primary,
June
2016
29. Score 1
Score 2
Score
Score
SantaCruzRunDate:03/29/201610:37:42aLastPrinted:3/29/1610:39
United States Senator
continued on next column
United States Senator
contest has 35 candidates.
Only vote for One
Vote for OnePresidential Preference
President of the United
States
Party-Nominated Offices
KEITH JUDD
MICHAEL STEINBERG
BERNIE SANDERS
WILLIE WILSON
ROQUE DE LA FUENTE
HILLARY CLINTON
HENRY HEWES
Vote for One
United States Senator
Voter-Nominated Offices
GEORGE C. YANG
Accountant
Party Preference: Republican
JERRY J. LAWS
Party Preference: Republican
GAIL K. LIGHTFOOT
Party Preference: Libertarian
MIKE BEITIKS
Party Preference: None
PAMELA ELIZONDO
Party Preference: Green
SCOTT A. VINEBERG
Party Preference: None
STEVE STOKES
Party Preference: Democratic
DUF SUNDHEIM
Party Preference: Republican
LING LING SHI
Party Preference: None
LORETTA L. SANCHEZ
Party Preference: Democratic
PHIL WYMAN
Party Preference: Republican
JARRELL WILLIAMSON
Party Preference: Republican
THOMAS G. DEL BECCARO
Party Preference: Republican
RON UNZ
Party Preference: Republican
GREG CONION
Party Preference: Republican
JASON KRAUS
Party Preference: None
TIM GILDERSLEEVE
Party Preference: None
CLIVE GREY
Party Preference: None
DON J. GRUNDMANN
Party Preference: None
PRESIDENT CRISTINA GRAPPO
Party Preference: Democratic
HERBERT G. PETERS
Party Preference: Democratic
TOM PALZER
Party Preference: Republican
KAREN ROSEBERRY
Party Preference: Republican
EMORY PERETZ RODGERS
Party Preference: Democratic
DON KRAMPE
Party Preference: Republican
MARK MATTHEW HERD
Party Preference: Libertarian
VON HOUGO
Party Preference: Republican
JASON HANANIA
Party Preference: None
KAMALA D HARRIS
Party Preference: Democratic
GAR MYERS
Party Preference: None
PAUL MERRITT
Party Preference: None
MASSIE MUNROE
Party Preference: Democratic
AKINYEMI OLABODE AGBEDE
Party Preference: Democratic
ELEANOR GARCIA
Party Preference: None
Vote for One20th District
United States
Representative
CASEY LUCIUS
National Security Professor
Party Preference: Republican
JOE WILLIAMS
Hospital Laboratory Technician
Party Preference: Peace and Freedom
JACK DIGBY
Ironworker/Homemaker/Artist
Party Preference: None
BARBARA HONEGGER
Investigative Journalist/Author
Party Preference: None
JIMMY PANETTA
Prosecutor
Party Preference: Democratic
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