| In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors. |
A look at what happens after the Oct. 7 recall election:
Registrars in California's 58 counties have 28 days to complete official vote count. County supervisors have an additional seven days to approve results and send to secretary of state's office.
Within five days of county certification, any registered voter can request a recount if willing to pay for the costly process.
Secretary of state has four days to certify county election results. Under certain conditions, secretary of state can certify results before counties finish their official count. Entire certification process cannot take longer than 39 days from election day Nov. 15.
Upon certification of recall and replacement, new governor can immediately be sworn into office. Barring legal challenge, the latest an inauguration could happen is Nov. 16.
Governor has control over 1,100 appointments to top state jobs including the 13 Cabinet members, dozens of department heads, and hundreds of deputies and top state executives.
State law requires that governor submit a balanced budget proposal to the Legislature by Jan. 10.
Source: California secretary of state and governor's offices.