On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 3:27 PM, Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, 21 Dec 2017, Ørjan Johansen wrote:
>> On Wed, 20 Dec 2017, ATMunn wrote:
>>
>> > actually, crap. If there's no Assessor, then unless only one person runs 
>> > for
>> > the office, there will be no way to resolve it.
>>
>> How doesn't deputization work?
>
> Hmm.  It's generally accepted that a Deputy gains an office an "instant"
> *after* e deputises for the job, I think?  So if someone other than the
> election winner deputises to resolve the election, who gets it?

CFJ 2400 states that deputization works "as if" the deputizer gained
the office immediately before deputization. CFJ 3462 (my first case)
mentions in dicta that the deputizer "actually" takes office after
normal deputization, and this appears to be the closest we have to an
accepted precedent on the matter.

-Aris

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