California Statutes § 6460 Formation of delegation
Statute Text
Every candidate whether selected pursuant to Section 6340 , or unselected as referred to in Section 6343 , who wishes to have a delegation of electors pledged to his or her candidacy in accordance with the result of the presidential preference primary or who wishes to have an official California delegation at the Republican National Convention shall form a delegation in compliance with Section 6461.
History
Enacted by Stats. 1994, Ch. 920, Sec. 2.
Explore Related Documents
This section contains links to related documents with the same tags to allow you quickly access other relevant legal materials. These links include document types and counts, enabling you to explore similar content efficiently.
-
Candidates and Parties / Nominations / Primary Elections (280)
- Statutes (278)
- Regulations (2)
- Election Law Manual
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 2: Ballot Access Qualification Requirements
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 3: Public Support Requirements
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 4: Miscellaneous Candidacy Regulations
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 5: Ballot Access Challenges
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 2: State Regulation of Political Parties
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 3: Selection of the Party Nominee
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 4: Party Ballot Access for the General Election
- Chapter 7: The Role of Courts on Election Day, Subchapter 2: Election Day Remedies Sought
- Chapter 9: Election Contests, Subchapter 3: Statutory Requirements
- Chapter 9: Election Contests, Subchapter 4: Contest Types
-
Candidates and Parties / Political Parties (543)
- Statutes (516)
- Regulations (27)
- Election Law Manual
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 2: Ballot Access Qualification Requirements
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 3: Public Support Requirements
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 4: Miscellaneous Candidacy Regulations
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 5: Ballot Access Challenges
- Chapter 2: State Regulation of Candidacies And Candidate Ballot Access, Subchapter 6: Candidate Removal or Substitution
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 2: State Regulation of Political Parties
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 3: Selection of the Party Nominee
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 4: Party Ballot Access for the General Election
- Chapter 6: Election Administration, Subchapter 4: Election Observation
- Chapter 9: Election Contests, Subchapter 4: Contest Types
- Federal Elections / U.S. Presidential (282)
-
Federal Elections / U.S. Presidential / Electoral College (76)
- Statutes (76)
- Election Law Manual
- Chapter 1: Federal Regulation of State and Local Electoral Practices, Subchapter 2: Federal Constitutional Considerations
- Chapter 3: State Regulations That Affect Political Parties, Subchapter 3: Selection of the Party Nominee
- Chapter 7: The Role of Courts on Election Day, Subchapter 2: Election Day Remedies Sought
- Chapter 9: Election Contests, Subchapter 4: Contest Types
- Chapter 12: Special Considerations, Subchapter 5: Independent State Legislature Theory