Anonymous ID: e093d3 April 8, 2020, 10:34 a.m. No.8723584   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8723485

REMINDER

 

PB Notable resource for research on vote by mail- starting point.

 

All-Mail Elections (aka Vote-By-Mail)

 

National Conference Of State Legislatures

 

https://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/all-mail-elections.aspx

 

22

 

States currently use vote by mail.

 

5

 

States 100% vote by mail

 

Oddly the site lists 21 by anons count.

 

Five states currently conduct all elections entirely by mail: Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah. At least 21 other states have laws that allow certain smaller elections, such as school board contests, to be conducted by mail. For these elections, all registered voters receive a ballot in the mail. The voter marks the ballot, puts it in a secrecy envelope or sleeve and then into a separate mailing envelope, signs an affidavit on the exterior of the mailing envelope, and returns the package via mail or by dropping it off.

 

Ballots are mailed out well ahead of Election Day, and thus voters have an “election period,” not just a single day, to vote. All-mail elections can be thought of as absentee voting for everyone. This system is also referred to as “vote by mail.”

 

While “all-mail elections” means that every registered voter receives a ballot by mail, this does not preclude in-person voting opportunities on and/or before Election Day. For example, despite the fact that all registered voters in Colorado are mailed a ballot, voters can choose to cast a ballot at an in-person vote center during the early voting period or on Election Day (or drop off, or mail, their ballot back).

 

Generally, states begin with providing all-mail elections only in certain circumstances, and then add additional opportunities as citizens become familiar with procedures. Oregon’s vote-by-mail timeline includes four times that the legislature acted prior to the 1998 citizens’ vote that made Oregon the first all-mail election state. See below for state-by-state statutes.

 

For detailed information on state laws related to voting by mail please see our resource on Voting Outside the Polling Place.