http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-08-30/candidate-dea
th-could-delay-or-eliminate-presidential-election
A Candidate's Death Could Delay or Eliminate the Presidential ElectionChaos
would ensue if a vacancy emerges near Election Day.

[image: Description: American democracy would break new ground if Hillary
Clinton or Donald Trump left a presidential ticket vacancy before the Nov.
8 general election.]

American democracy would break new ground if Hillary Clinton or Donald
Trump left a presidential ticket vacancy before the Nov. 8 general
election. Getty Images

The presidential election could be delayed or scrapped altogether if
conspiracy theories become predictive and a candidate dies or drops out
before Nov. 8. The perhaps equally startling alternative, if there's enough
time: Small groups of people hand-picking a replacement pursuant to obscure
party rules.

The scenarios have been seriously considered by few outside of the legal
community and likely are too morbid for polite discussion in politically
mixed company. But prominent law professors have pondered the effects and
possible ways to address a late-date vacancy.

"There's nothing in the Constitution which requires a popular election for
the electors serving in the Electoral College," says John Nagle, a law
professor at the University of Notre Dame, meaning the body that officially
elects presidents could convene without the general public voting.

"It's up to each state legislature to decide how they want to choose the
state's electors," Nagle says. "It may be a situation in which the fact
that we have an Electoral College, rather than direct voting for
presidential candidates, may prove to be helpful."

Both major parties do have rules for presidential ticket replacements,
however, and Congress has the power to change the election date under Article
II <https://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/articleii> of the
Constitution, which allows federal lawmakers to set dates for the selection
of presidential electors and when those electors will vote.

But Congress would be up against a de facto December deadline, as the
Constitution's 20th Amendment requires that congressional terms expire Jan.
3 and presidential terms on Jan. 20. Though it's conceivable to split
legislative and presidential elections, they generally happen at the same
time. And if the entire general election were to be moved after Jan. 3,
Congress effectively would have voted themselves out of office.

Yale Law School professor Akhil Reed Amar considers in a 1994 article
<http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1972&context=fss_papers>
in the Arkansas Law Review the possibility of a special presidential
election being pushed to after Jan. 20, with the speaker of the House
serving as acting president until an election could pick "a real president
for the remainder of the term." But he tells U.S. News that scenario
probably is far-fetched.

Is it possible for the election to be delayed until after Jan. 20, leaving
both the offices of president and vice president temporarily vacant?
Perhaps, Amar says, but "it wouldn't make sense if it were permissible,
given there actually are answers. Why would you ever do that?"

Amar recommends an up to four-week postponement of Election Day if a
candidate dies just before voting, or even if there's a major terrorist
attack.

The possible last-minute replacement of a candidate attracts some cyclical
coverage, but this year the scenario would play out after consistent
conjecture about the health of Democrat Hillary Clinton and hidden agenda
of Republican Donald Trump.

Trump, 70, would be the oldest person elected president, but his health has
received less coverage over the election cycle than apparently unfounded
speculation he will drop out. Clinton, 69 in October, would be the second
oldest president-elect, months younger than Ronald Reagan in 1980.

Although Clinton's coughs and stumbling have earned speculative headlines
on the news-driving Drudge Report, her doctor, Lisa Bardack, said she "is
in excellent physical condition and fit to serve." Trump physician Harold
Bornstein, meanwhile, wrote he would be "the healthiest individual ever
elected to the presidency."

Old age doesn’t rule out a full presidency. Reagan served two terms before
dying at 93 in 2004. Other recent officeholders have lived beyond the life
expectancy for the general population. Gerald Ford died in 2006 at 93.
George H.W. Bush, 92, and Jimmy Carter, 91, are still living.

If something were to happen to Clinton or Trump before the election, rules
established by the Republican and Democratic parties do offer guidelines
for what to do.

If Clinton were to fall off the ticket, Democratic National Committee
members would gather to vote on a replacement. DNC members acted as
superdelegates during this year's primary and overwhelmingly backed Clinton
over boat-rocking socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

DNC spokesman Mark Paustenbach says there currently are 445 committee
members – a number that changes over time and is guided by the group's
bylaws, which give membership to specific officeholders and party leaders
and hold 200 spots for selection by states, along with an optional 75 slots
DNC members can choose to fill.



But the party rules
<http://s3.amazonaws.com/uploads.democrats.org/Downloads/DNC_Charter__Bylaws_9.17.15.pdf>
for replacing a presidential nominee merely specify that a majority of
members must be present at a special meeting called by the committee
chairman. The meeting would follow procedures set by the DNC Rules and
Bylaws Committee and proxy voting would not be allowed.

DNC member Connie Johnson, a former Oklahoma state senator who supported
Sanders, says it would be most appropriate for the DNC to give the
nomination to the runner-up if Clinton were to die or drop out before the
election.

"I believe that's why Sen. Sanders stayed in the contest," she writes in an
email. "As to whether the party would adopt what would appear to be a
common sense solution in the event of [Clinton] no longer being able to
serve – that would remain to be seen. There was so much vitriol aimed at
Sen. Sanders and his supporters by [Clinton supporters] that they would
likely want 'anybody but Bernie' in order to save face and maintain
control."

The Republican National Committee's rules
<https://s3.amazonaws.com/prod-static-ngop-pbl/docs/Rules_of_the_Republican+Party_FINAL_S14090314.pdf>
potentially allow for greater democratic input, but don't require it. If a
vacancy emerges on the ticket, the 168-member RNC would decide whether to
select a replacement on its own or "reconvene the national convention,"
which featured 2,472 voting delegates, that met over the summer.

If RNC members make the choice themselves, the three members representing
each state, territory and the nation's capital – a committeeman,
committeewoman and the local party chairman – would jointly have "the same
number of votes as said state was entitled to cast at the national
convention."

RNC rules allow for state delegations to split their vote and for members
to vote by proxy.

Richard Winger, editor of Ballot Access News <http://ballot-access.org/>
and an expert on presidential election history, says state election
officials likely would be compelled to accept a major party's request to
swap candidates, citing precedent set in 1972 when states allowed Democrats
to replace vice presidential nominee Thomas Eagleton, who was revealed to
be a shock therapy patient, with Sargent Shriver.



Winger says every state but South Dakota also allowed the prominent 1980
independent candidate John Anderson to swap his vice presidential candidate
Milton Eisenhower for former Wisconsin Gov. Patrick Lucey.

Still, if the central party organizations were to upset electors with an
unpalatable pick, it's possible many could bolt.

Edward Foley, a law professor at Ohio State University, says "the Supreme
Court has never ruled that electors can be forced to obey their pledge" to
vote for a particular presidential candidate, leaving open the door for
mass defections or, in the event of a post-election candidate death, an en
masse vote flip.

John Fortier, director of the Democracy Project at the Bipartisan Policy
Center, says he's not certain that Congress would reach consensus on moving
an election date if a candidate died, meaning parties would need to
formally – or informally – decide on a replacement. If the election date
was moved by Congress, Fortier says ongoing absentee or early voting would
make for a mess.

Though not legally required, Fortier says parties may decide on an easy fix
and loudly encourage electors to support their existing vice presidential
nominee. A party legally could pick someone else, but he says a desire for
legitimacy in the eyes of the public may force its hand.

With more than two centuries of history, the U.S. does have some examples
of candidate deaths, though none with a catastrophic impact.

In 1872, presidential candidate Horace Greeley died about three weeks after
winning about 44 percent of the popular vote as a Liberal Republican
supported by Democrats against incumbent Republican Ulysses S. Grant.
Presidential electors chose between various alternatives, but because
Greeley had lost, his death did not sway the election's outcome.

In another case, Republican running mate James Sherman died six days before
the 1912 general election. He wasn't replaced on ballots and the matter was
rendered moot by the GOP's crushing defeat.



Amar, author of a forthcoming book
<https://www.amazon.com/Constitution-Today-Timeless-Lessons-Issues/dp/0465096336>
touching on candidate death, outlines four distinct scenarios that would
warrant special consideration because of the wording of the 20th Amendment:
a death before an election, a death after an election but before electors
meet in December, a death between electors voting and Congress counting
votes in January, and the time between Congress confirming the election and
the Jan. 20 inauguration.

The three post-election time frames identified by Amar are distinguished by
whether the candidate technically is considered "president-elect." That
designation is covered by the 20th Amendment, which allows in case of a
president-elect's death that he or she be replaced by the vice
president-elect. But in their narrowest sense, those amendment terms only
cover part of January.

Though all considerations accounting for a candidate's death are
hypothetical, they could at some future point become less so.

"We should never forget 9/11 was a local election day in New York," Amar
says.



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