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AR15.COM
12/20/2009 9:40:04 PM EDT
well our "representatives"



sold us out.



we can 'try' and do something...



Recall






Article XXI




Recall from Office






<tt>Section 1.  State officers may be recalled.
Every elective public officer of the state of Colorado may be recalled from office at any
time by the registered electors entitled to vote for a successor of such incumbent through
the procedure and in the manner herein provided for, which procedure shall be known as the
recall, and shall be in addition to and without excluding any other method of removal
provided by law.
</tt>




<tt>The procedure hereunder to effect the recall of an
elective public officer shall be as follows:
</tt>





<tt>A petition signed by registered electors entitled to
vote for a successor of the incumbent sought to be recalled, equal in number to
twenty­five percent of the entire vote cast at the last preceding election for all
candidates for the position which the incumbent sought to be recalled occupies, demanding
an election of the successor to the officer named in said petition, shall be filed in the
office in which petitions for nominations to office held by the incumbent sought to be
recalled are required to be filed; provided, if more than one person is required by law to
be elected to fill the office of which the person sought to be recalled is an incumbent,
then the said petition shall be signed by registered electors entitled to vote for a
successor to the incumbent sought to be recalled equal in number to twenty­five percent
of the entire vote cast at the last preceding general election for all candidates for the
office, to which the incumbent sought to be recalled was elected as one of the officers
thereof, said entire vote being divided by the number of all officers elected to such
office, at the last preceding general election; and such petition shall contain a general
statement, in not more than two hundred words, of the ground or grounds on which such
recall is sought, which statement is intended for the information of the registered
electors, and the registered electors shall be the sole and exclusive judges of the
legality, reasonableness and sufficiency of such ground or grounds assigned for such
recall, and said ground or grounds shall not be open to review.


</tt>




<tt>Added November 5, 1912. (See Laws 1913, p. 672.); as
amended November 6, 1984 ­­ Effective upon proclamation of the Governor, January 14,
1985. (For the text of this amendment and the votes cast thereon, see L. 84, p. 1147, and
L. 85, p. 1791.)


</tt>




<tt>Section 2.  Form of recall petition.
Any recall petition may be circulated and signed in sections, provided each section shall
contain a full and accurate copy of the title and text of the petition; and such recall
petition shall be filed in the office in which petitions for nominations to office held by
the incumbent sought to be recalled are required to be filed.
</tt>





<tt>The signatures to such recall petition need not all be
on one sheet of paper, but each signer must add to his signature the date of his signing
said petition, and his place of residence, giving his street number, if any, should he
reside in a town or city. The person circulating such sheet must make and subscribe an
oath on said sheet that the signatures thereon are genuine, and a false oath, willfully so
made and subscribed by such person, shall be perjury and be punished as such. All
petitions shall be deemed and held to be sufficient if they appear to be signed by the
requisite number of signers, and such signers shall be deemed and held to be registered
electors, unless a protest in writing under oath shall be filed in the office in which
such petition has been filed, by some registered elector, within fifteen days after such
petition is filed, setting forth specifically the grounds of such protest, whereupon the
officer with whom such petition is filed shall forthwith mail a copy of such protest to
the person or persons named in such petition as representing the signers thereof, together
with a notice fixing a time for hearing such protest not less than five nor more than ten
days after such notice is mailed. All hearings shall be before the officer with whom such
protest is filed, and all testimony shall be under oath. Such hearings shall be summary
and not subject to delay, and must be concluded within thirty days after such petition is
filed, and the result thereof shall be forthwith certified to the person or persons
representing the signers of such petition. In case the petition is not sufficient it may
be withdrawn by the person or a majority of the persons representing the signers of such
petition, and may, within fifteen days thereafter, be amended and refiled as an original
petition. The finding as to the sufficiency of any petition may be reviewed by any state
court of general jurisdiction in the county in which such petition is filed, upon
application of the person or a majority of the persons representing the signers of such
petition, but such review shall be had and determined forthwith. The sufficiency, or the
determination of the sufficiency, of the petition referred to in this section shall not be
held, or construed, to refer to the ground or grounds assigned in such petition for the
recall of the incumbent sought to be recalled from office thereby.
</tt>





<tt>When such petition is sufficient, the officer with whom
such recall petition was filed, shall forthwith submit said petition, together with a
certificate of its sufficiency to the governor, who shall thereupon order and fix the date
for holding the election not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days from the date
of submission of said petition; provided, if a general election is to be held within
ninety days after the date of submission of said petition, the recall election shall be
held as part of said general election.


</tt>




<tt>Added November 5, 1912. (See Laws 1913, p. 673.); as
amended November 6, 1984 ­­ Effective upon proclamation of the Governor, January 14,
1985. (For the text of this amendment and the votes cast thereon, see L. 84, p. 1148, and
L. 85, p. 1791.)


</tt>




<tt>Section 3.  Resignation ­ filling vacancy.
If such officer shall offer his resignation, it shall be accepted, and the vacancy caused
by such resignation, or from any other cause, shall be filled as provided by law; but the
person appointed to fill such vacancy shall hold his office only until the person elected
at the recall election shall qualify. If such officer shall not resign within five days
after the sufficiency of the recall petition shall have been sustained, the governor shall
make or cause to be made publication of notice for the holding of such election, and
officers charged by law with duties concerning elections shall make all arrangements for
such election, and the same shall be conducted, returned and the result thereof declared
in all respects as in the case of general elections.
</tt>





<tt>On the official ballot at such elections shall be
printed in not more than 200 words, the reasons set forth in the petition for demanding
his recall, and in not more than three hundred words there shall also be printed, if
desired by him, the officer's justification of his course in office. If such officer shall
resign at any time subsequent to the filing thereof, the recall election shall be called
notwithstanding such resignation.
</tt>





<tt>There shall be printed on the official ballot, as to
every officer whose recall is to be voted on, the words, "Shall (name of person
against whom the recall petition is filed) be recalled from the office of (title of the
office)?" Following such question shall be the words, "Yes" and
"No", on separate lines, with a blank space at the right of each, in which the
voter shall indicate, by marking a cross (X), his vote for or against such recall.
</tt>






<tt>On such ballots, under each question, there shall also
be printed the names of those persons who have been nominated as candidates to succeed the
person sought to be recalled; but no vote cast shall be counted for any candidate for such
office, unless the voter also voted for or against the recall of such person sought to be
recalled from said office. The name of the person against whom the petition is filed shall
not appear on the ballot as a candidate for the office.
</tt>





<tt>If a majority of those voting on said question of the
recall of any incumbent from office shall vote "no", said incumbent shall
continue in said office; if a majority shall vote "yes", such incumbent shall
thereupon be deemed removed from such office upon the qualification of his successor.
</tt>






<tt>If the vote had in such recall elections shall recall
the officer then the candidate who has received the highest number of votes for the office
thereby vacated shall be declared elected for the remainder of the term, and a certificate
of election shall be forthwith issued to him by the canvassing board. In case the person
who received the highest number of votes shall fail to qualify within fifteen days after
the issuance of a certificate of election, the office shall be deemed vacant, and shall be
filled according to law.
</tt>




<tt>Candidates for the office may be nominated by petition,
as now provided by law, which petition shall be filed in the office in which petitions for
nomination to office are required by law to be filed not less than fifteen days before
such recall election.


</tt>




<tt>Added November 5, 1912. (See Laws 1913, p. 674.)


</tt>




<tt>Section 4.  Limitation ­ municipal
corporations may adopt, when.
No recall petition shall be circulated or filed against
any officer until he has actually held his office for at least six months, save and except
it may be filed against any member of the state legislature at any time after five days
from the convening and organizing of the legislature after his election.
</tt>





<tt>After one recall petition and election, no further
petition shall be filed against the same officer during the term for which he was elected,
unless the petitioners signing said petition shall equal fifty percent of the votes cast
at the last preceding general election for all of the candidates for the office held by
such officer as herein above defined.
</tt>





<tt>In any recall election of a state elective officer, if
the incumbent whose recall is sought is not recalled, he shall be repaid from the state
treasury for the expenses of such election in the manner provided by law. The general
assembly may establish procedures for the reimbursement by a local governmental entity of
expenses incurred by an incumbent elective officer of such governmental entity whose
recall is sought but who is not recalled.
</tt>





<tt>If the governor is sought to be recalled under the
provisions of this article, the duties herein imposed upon him shall be performed by the
lieutenant­governor; and if the secretary of state is sought to be recalled, the duties
herein imposed upon him, shall be performed by the state auditor.
</tt>





<tt>The recall may also be exercised by the registered
electors of each county, city and county, city and town of the state, with reference to
the elective officers thereof, under such procedure as shall be provided by law.
</tt>






<tt>Until otherwise provided by law, the legislative body of
any such county, city and county, city and town may provide for the manner of exercising
such recall powers in such counties, cities and counties, cities and towns, but shall not
require any such recall to be signed by registered electors more in number than
twenty­five percent of the entire vote cast at the last preceding election, as in section
1 hereof more particularly set forth, for all the candidates for office which the
incumbent sought to be recalled occupies, as herein above defined.
</tt>





<tt>Every person having authority to exercise or exercising
any public or governmental duty, power or function, shall be an elective officer, or one
appointed, drawn or designated in accordance with law by an elective officer or officers,
or by some board, commission, person or persons legally appointed by an elective officer
or officers, each of which said elective officers shall be subject to the recall provision
of this constitution; provided, that, subject to regulation by law, any person may,
without compensation therefor, file petitions, or complaints in courts concerning crimes,
or do police duty only in cases of immediate danger to person or property.
</tt>





<tt>Nothing herein contained shall be construed as affecting
or limiting the present or future powers of cities and counties or cities having charters
adopted under the authority given by the constitution, except as in the last three
preceding paragraphs expressed.
</tt>




<tt>In the submission to the electors of any petition
proposed under this article, all officers shall be guided by the general laws of the
state, except as otherwise herein provided.
</tt>





<tt>This article is self­executing, but legislation may be
enacted to facilitate its operations, but in no way limiting or restricting the provisions
of this article, or the powers herein reserved.


</tt>




<tt>Added November 5, 1912. (See Laws 1913, p. 676.); as
amended November 6, 1984 ­­ Effective upon proclamation of the Governor, January 14,
1985. (For the text of this amendment and the votes cast thereon, see L. 84, p. 1149, and
L. 85, p. 1791.); as amended November 8, 1988 ­­ Effective upon proclamation of the
Governor, January 3, 1989. (For the text of this amendment and the votes cast thereon, see
L. 88, p. 1455, and L. 89, p. 1658.)
</tt>













Please send comments to Independence Institute, 14142 Denver West Pkwy., suite 185,
Golden, CO 80401 Phone 303-279-6536 (fax) 303-279-4176 (email)[email protected]









12/21/2009 9:00:47 AM EDT
[#1]
I am in full support of taking the scum bags out of office-

But what is the legal presidence of such a thing- is there a format that should be followed to carry through with?  

I read in more laymans terms, but is this still applicable to any and every elected offical in State Office?
12/21/2009 9:06:06 AM EDT
[#2]
California recalled their governor back in 2003 or 2004...
12/21/2009 4:43:04 PM EDT
[#3]
Sounds like a good idea to me. This shit has got to stop before it's too late.
12/21/2009 4:47:17 PM EDT
[#4]
Quoted:
California recalled their governor back in 2003 or 2004...


Yeah, I remember. I was in CA at that time.
Early stage of recall was a total circus.

Early recall stage, I remember one of the local TV News reporter asked Gray Davis (D- former governor of CA who got recalled) on an interview:
Reporter: What would you do to change, if you become a governor?
Davis: Excuse me! I am the Governor!

 

12/21/2009 6:47:36 PM EDT
[#5]
recall would be great for Mark Udall, but Benett would be a waste of time and effort, just vote bennet out at the next election.

Would be a waste of time and effort for the congress critters as well. They are all up for election this next cycle.
12/21/2009 7:42:33 PM EDT
[#6]
Quoted:
recall would be great for Mark Udall, but Benett would be a waste of time and effort, just vote bennet out at the next election.

Would be a waste of time and effort for the congress critters as well. They are all up for election this next cycle.


Agreed this late in their term it wont accomplish much.
But it would send one hell of a message to the next round of elected officials.

They need to realize that we are sick of their shit.

12/22/2009 9:04:28 AM EDT
[#7]
Quoted:
recall would be great for Mark Udall, but Benett would be a waste of time and effort, just vote bennet out at the next election.

Would be a waste of time and effort for the congress critters as well. They are all up for election this next cycle.


If Bennet were recalled, then Ritter would appoint the next interim senator. Remember, Bennet only got one vote last year? What's to stop jackhole from nominating him again?

Fear of the voters? If either of them think they have a chance next year they're the only ones who do.
12/22/2009 10:25:43 AM EDT
[#8]
Yea is this another case of Ritter getting to pick someone else to replace? We should recall, but only after Ritter has been defeated.
12/22/2009 12:05:35 PM EDT
[#9]
I doubt the Senators nor the Congressman could be recalled, only Ritter and the statehouse since they are actually state officials. Just like the way the Governor is term limited but when Colorado tried to Term Limit the national Senators and Congress critters, the Supremes ruled against.

Vote with the ballot box and the checkbook. Hopefully Perlmutter goes down in 2010.
12/23/2009 3:26:44 AM EDT
[#10]
I believe if they are recalled it has to be a special election for the replacement, I do not believe Ritter can appoint the replacement.