The Green Papers: District of Columbia 2011 Off-Year Election |
District of Columbia
Elections for Statewide offices and Congress |
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On 27 April 2011, District of Columbia Mayor Vincent Gray signed B19-90 which was introduced by Councilmember Mary M. Cheh on 1 February 2011. The bill moves the Presidential Primary from "the 2nd Tuesday in January" to the 1st Tuesday in April and moves the regular primary from the "1st Tuesday after the 2nd Monday in September" to the 1st Tuesday in April. The next regular partisan and Presidential primaries will be held concurrently on 3 April 2012. |
Mayor 4 year term, Election Cycle: 2010, 2014. Home Rule | |||||
Democratic | Mayor Vincent C. "Vince" Gray First elected: 2010 Seat up for election: Tuesday 4 November 2014 |
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Delegate to the House of Representatives 2 year term, Election Cycle: 2010, 2012. Home Rule | |||||
{map} | Democratic | Territorial Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton First elected: 1990; re-elected: 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 Seat up for election: Tuesday 6 November 2012 |
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Democratic | Territorial Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton FEC H0DC00058; 30 Sep 11; Tot $81,569; Dsb $120,412 |
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Republican | Missy Reilly Smith | ||||
Green | Rick Tingling-Clemmons | ||||
Non-voting Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives. A candidate must receive a majority of the popular vote in order to be elected as Delegate to the House. A runoff election is scheduled in the event that no candidate receives the requisite majority. |
Political Parties Parties appear in parenthesis and italics when a candidate receives the endorsement of a given Party and/or official sources indicate a candidate's association with a particular Party but only where the Party in question does not appear on the actual ballot as such. |
Major Parties | |
Democratic (affiliates): 2 incumbents, 1 candidate | |
Republican: 1 candidate | |
Major Third Parties | |
Green (affiliates): 1 candidate | |
Candidates running under the banner of more than one party are counted towards each party's total. A candidate who has lost a primary or is apparently no longer a candidate is not counted. |
Notes |
Candidates for office appear on this page in italics where 'The Green Papers' does not yet have independent confirmation from a legal election authority that the person has been officially certified to appear on the ballot. |
"FEC" indicates the Federal Election Commission (FEC) Campaign Finance Summary. When available, we post each candidate's FEC identification number, the date of their most recently filed Report of Receipts and Disbursements, their "Tot" [Total Receipts (contributions received or what came in: FEC Form 3, Line 16, Column B)] and their "Dsb" [Total Disbursements (expenditures or what was spent: FEC Form 3, Line 23, Column B)]. A link is provided to the Federal Election Commission's Summary Report for those who might wish to explore the details. If a candidate raises or spends $5,000 or less, he or she is not subject to FEC reporting requirements. |
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