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Posted on 06.18.09 by Steve Trinward
“The election came down to the high card. With the final Town Council seat in the small Phoenix-area town of Cave Creek on the line, two candidates who tied with 660 votes apiece in a May runoff cut cards to decide the race. The winner was Adam Trenk, 25, whose king of hearts beat out former councilman Thomas McGuire’s six of hearts. An obscure Arizona law dating to 1925 says that election ties should be broken ‘by lot.’ It applies to all elected offices but the governor, secretary of state, attorney general, treasurer, and superintendent for public instruction. Ties in those seats are determined by the Legislature. While a first for Cave Creek and relatively rare, such events do happen from time to time in Arizona. Last year, two local school-board candidates rolled dice to decide a winner. In 1992, a game of poker resolved a stalemate in the primary for a state Legislative seat.” (06/18/09) Link: http://tinyurl.com/kmldl9 Filed under: CANDi News and PND News and RRND News | Report Bad Link Bookmark this post in Furl or Del.icio.us | |









