Circuit | Counties | District Attorney |
---|---|---|
3 | Barbour, Bullock | Ben C. Reeves, Jr. (D) |
4 | Bibb, Dallas, Hale, Perry, Wilcox | Michael W. Jackson (D) |
Tennessee's 9th congressional district | |
---|---|
Tennessee's 9th congressional district since January 3, 2013 | |
Representative | Steve Cohen D–Memphis |
Distribution | 98.54% urban 1.46% rural |
Population (2019) | 700,497 |
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The primary duty of the Attorney General is to serve as legal counsel to Alabama's state agencies, departments, and officers. Our office is prohibited by law from providing private citizens with legal advice, representation, or opinions (Code of Alabama, 1975, Title 36, Chapter 15).
District attorneys in Alabama are assigned by circuit. There are 41 circuits in the state.
District attorneys in Alaska are based on the locations of district courts. Some districts share district attorneys, however. Alaskan district attorneys are appointed by the Attorney General .
Each county in Arizona has its own prosecutor, called a county attorney.
District attorneys are assigned to Arkansas's 23 judicial circuits. Arkansas's prosecutors are known as Prosecuting Attorneys. Their elections are non-partisan.
Each county in California has its own prosecutor, known as a district attorney. Their elections are non-partisan.
District attorneys are assigned to each of Colorado's 22 judicial districts .
Prosecutors in Connecticut are known as state's attorneys. Each judicial district is assigned its own state's attorney. They are appointed by a state commission.
Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Alabama uses an open primary system, in which registered voters do not have to be members of a party to vote in that party's primary.
Ballotpedia provides comprehensive ballot coverage of municipal elections in the nation's 100 largest cities by population, including races for trial court judgeships and county offices that overlap them. Ballotpedia also covers the nation's 200 largest public school districts by student enrollment and all school districts overlapping the top 100 cities by population.
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States that do not permit early voting still permit some or all citizens to vote early by mail—often known as absentee voting. Some states allow no-excuse absentee voting, while others require an excuse. States that allow in-person absentee voting without an excuse are counted among early voting states.