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Voter registration in the United States

Voter registration in the United States is required for voting in federal, state and local elections in the United States. The only exception is North Dakota, although cities in North Dakota may register voters for city elections.[1] Voter registration takes place at the county level in many states and at the municipal level in several states. Most states set cutoff dates for voter registration and to update details, ranging from 2 to 4 weeks before an election; while a third of states have Election Day or "same-day" voter registration which enables eligible citizens to register or update their registration when they vote before or on election day.

Map of the District of Columbia, states, and territories in the United States that require voter registration to vote:
  Voter registration required for federal and state elections
  No voter registration required for federal or state elections, although some local city elections may require voter registration
A group of African American children gather around a sign and booth to register voters. Early 1960s.

It has been argued that some registration requirements deter some people (especially disadvantaged people) from registering and therefore exercising their right to vote, resulting in a lower voter turnout. Several consequences of registering for voting are mentioned sometimes as deterrents for registration, like to serve jury duty, to be drafted into the military, or to update car insurance in case of changing address of residence, for example. But many of these claims are false or, like being listed as potential juror, are only applicable to certain jurisdictions or are not the only way to be called in to serve.[2]

According to a 2012 study, 24% of the voting-eligible population in the United States are not registered to vote, equaling some 51 million U.S. citizens.[3][4] While voters traditionally had to register at government offices by a certain period of time before an election, in the mid-1990s, the federal government made efforts to facilitate registering, in an attempt to increase turnout. The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (the "Motor Voter" law) now requires state governments to either provide uniform opt-in registration services through drivers' license registration centers, disability centers, schools, libraries, and mail-in registration, or to allow Election Day voter registration, where voters can register at polling places immediately prior to voting. In 2016, Oregon became the first state to make voter registration fully automatic (opt-out) when issuing driver licenses and ID cards, since followed by 15 more states and the District of Columbia. Political parties and other organizations sometimes hold "voter registration drives", that is, events to register new voters.

In 31 states and the District of Columbia, persons registering to vote may at the same time declare an affiliation with a political party.[5]

History edit

In 1800, Massachusetts was the first state to require voter registration as a prerequisite for voting statewide,[6] which was followed by Maine (1821), Pennsylvania (1836) and Connecticut (1839). During the 19th century, and especially after the Civil War, more states and cities would establish voter registration as a prerequisite to voting, partially to prevent voting by immigrants in cities. However, it was not until 1913 when Nebraska became the first state to establish a permanent statewide voter register, overseen by an election commissioner.

According to a 2020 study, voter registration laws adopted in the period 1880–1916 reduced turnout as much as 19 percentage points.[7]

North Dakota abolished voter registration in 1951 for state and federal elections, the only state to do so.[1] It has since 2004 required voters to produce ID at time of casting a vote. This has led to North Dakota being accused of voter suppression because many Native American were denied a vote because the address on their tribal IDs had a post office box address, which continues to be a common practice.[8]

In 2002, Arizona made online voter registration available. In 2016, Oregon became the first state to implement a fully automatic (opt-out) voter registration system tied to the process of issuing driver licenses and ID cards.

No registration jurisdiction edit

North Dakota is the only state that does not have voter registration, which was abolished in 1951, although cities in North Dakota may register voters for city elections.[1][9] In North Dakota voters must provide identification and proof of entitlement to vote at the polling place before being permitted to vote.

North Dakota is exempt from the requirements of the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993. Because of this exemption, North Dakota has since 2004 required voters to produce an approved form of ID before being able to vote, one of which was a tribe ID commonly used by Native Americans. It was common and lawful for a post office box to be used on this ID, instead of a residential address, because there are no street addresses on reservations. In 2016, a change required tribal ID to have a residential address to be accepted, and North Dakota has been accused of voter suppression with many Native Americans being denied a vote because they did not have an approved form of ID with a residential address.[10]

North Dakota's ID law especially adversely affected large numbers of Native Americans, with almost a quarter of Native Americans in the state, otherwise eligible to vote, being denied a vote on the basis that they do not have proper ID; compared to 12% of non-Indians. A judge overturned the ID law in July 2016, also saying: "The undisputed evidence before the Court reveals that voter fraud in North Dakota has been virtually non-existent."[11] However, the denial of a vote on this basis was also an issue in the 2018 mid-term election.[10]

Federal jurisdiction edit

While the United States Congress has jurisdiction over laws applying to federal elections, it has deferred most aspects of election law to the states. The United States Constitution prohibits states from restricting voting rights in ways that infringe on a person's right to equal protection under the law (14th Amendment), on the basis of race (15th Amendment), on the basis of sex (19th Amendment), on the basis of having failed to pay a poll tax or any tax (24th Amendment), or on the basis of age for persons age 18 and older (26th Amendment). The administration of elections, however, vary widely across jurisdictions.

In general, US citizens over the age of 18 have the right to vote in federal elections.[12] In a few cases, permanent residents ("green card" holders) have registered to vote and have cast ballots without realizing that doing so was illegal. Non-citizens convicted in criminal court of having made a false claim of citizenship for the purpose of registering to vote in a federal election can be fined and imprisoned for up to a year. Deportation and removal proceedings have resulted from several such cases.[13] Some municipalities allow non-citizen residents to vote in municipal or school district elections.

All states except Maine and Vermont (and the District of Columbia) deny the vote to convicted felons for some duration, a practice known as felony disenfranchisement. In 16 states, voting is only prohibited during incarceration. 21 states additionally prohibit voting during parole or probation but allow voting after. Eleven states either indefinitely suspend voting rights or require special action to have voting rights restored.[14]

Effect on participation edit

 
A Sumter County, Florida Voter Information Card.

A 2012 study by The Pew Charitable Trusts estimates that 24% of the voting-eligible population in the United States are not registered to vote, a percentage that represents "at least 51 million eligible U.S. citizens."[15][16] The study suggests that registration requirements contribute to discouraging people from exercising their right to vote, thereby causing a lower voter turnout. The extent of discouragement and its effect on increasing the socioeconomic bias of the electorate however remain contested.

In a 1980 landmark study, Raymond E. Wolfinger and Steven J. Rosenstone came to the conclusion that less restrictive registration requirements would substantially increase the electoral turnout. According to their probit analysis, if all states adopted the procedures of the most permissive state regulations, which would mean:

  1. eliminating the closing date
  2. opening registration offices during the forty-hour work week
  3. opening registration offices in the evening or on Saturday
  4. permitting absentee registration for the sick, disabled and absent

(p 73) turnout in the 1972 presidential election would have been 9.1% higher, with 12.2 million additional people having voted.[17] In a seminal 1988 book, sociologists Richard Cloward and Francis Fox Piven argued that lowering registration requirements would improve socioeconomic equality in the composition of the electorate.[18]

Findings such as this have inspired lawmakers to facilitate the registration process, eventually leading to the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (or "Motor Voter" act) that required states to allow voter registration at various public offices, including drivers' license registration centers, disability centers, schools, libraries, as well as mail-in registration, unless a state adopts Election Day voter registration. The way towards passing this piece of federal legislation was however lengthy and rocky, as these reforms were highly contested. In an expanded 1990 edition of their 1988 book, titled "Why Americans still don't vote: and why politicians want it that way," Cloward and Piven argued that the reforms were expected to encourage less-privileged groups which happen to lean towards the Democratic Party.[19]

While the turnout at federal elections did substantially increase following the electoral reforms, the effect fell short of Wolfinger and Rosenstone's expectations while Cloward's and Piven's hope of improving the demographic representativeness of the electorate wasn't fulfilled at all. Political scientist Adam Berinsky concluded in a 2005 article that the reforms designed to make voting "easier" in their entirety had an opposite effect, actually increasing the preexisting socioeconomic biases by ensuring "that those citizens who are most engaged with the political world – those with politically relevant resources – continue to participate, whereas those individuals without such resources fall by the wayside."[20] As Berinsky reaffirms in a 2016 piece, the only way to increase turnout while improving representativeness is making more people become interested in politics.[21]

Registration centers edit

Traditionally, voter registration took place at government offices, but the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993, which came into effect on January 1, 1995, simplified registration. The Act requires state governments to provide opt-in registration services through drivers' license registration centers, disability centers, schools, libraries, as well as providing for mail-in registration. However, six states are exempt from the streamlined processes under the Act: North Dakota, Idaho, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

Online Registration edit

 
Online voter registration in the United States:
  Online voter registration available[a]
  Online voter registration allowed for those updating their driver's license or state IDs
  Online voter registration to be implemented
  Online voter registration legislation passed at least one chamber.
  No online voter registration available

As of August 2020, online voter registration was available in 41 states, the District of Columbia, and Guam, with two additional states (Maine and Oklahoma) phasing in implementation.[22] North Dakota does not have voter registration. Since a federal judicial order in September 2020, Texas allows residents to register to vote online if and when they are renewing their driver's licenses or state identification cards.[23]

State or federal district Date online voter
registration implemented
Website
  Alabama 2016-12-01[24] Alabama Votes
  Alaska 2015-11[25] Alaska Online Voter Registration
  Arizona 2002-07[26] Service Arizona Voter Registration
  California 2012-09-19[27] California Online Voter Registration
  Colorado 2010-04-01[28] Go Vote Colorado
  Connecticut 2014-01-01[29] Connecticut Online Voter Registration
  Delaware 2014-04[22] I Vote Delaware
  District of Columbia 2015[25] District of Columbia Online Voter Registration
  Florida 2017-10-01[22] Register to Vote Florida Voter Registration
  Georgia 2014-03[25] Georgia Online Voter Registration
  Guam 2022[30] Guam Online Voter Registration
  Hawaii 2015-08-04[31] Hawaii Online Voter Registration
  Idaho 2017-12-06[32] Idaho Votes
  Illinois 2014-06-17[33] Illinois Online Voter Registration
  Indiana 2010-07-01[34] Indiana Online Voter Registration
  Iowa 2016-01-04[35] Iowa Online Voter Registration
  Kansas 2009-05[25] Kansas Online Voter Registration
  Kentucky 2016-03-01[36] Kentucky Online Voter Registration
  Louisiana 2010-04[25] Geaux Vote
  Maine 2023-11[37] N/A
  Maryland 2012-07-01[38] Maryland Online Voter Registration
  Massachusetts 2015-06-23[39] Massachusetts Online Voter Registration
  Michigan 2019-12-02[40] Michigan Online Voter Registration
  Minnesota 2013-09-26[41] MN Votes
  Missouri[b] 2014[22] Vote Missouri
  Nebraska 2015-09-22[42] Nebraska Online Voter Registration
  Nevada 2012-09[25] Nevada Online Voter Registration
  New Jersey 2020-09-04[43][44] New Jersey Online Voter Registration
  New Mexico 2016-01-01[45] New Mexico Online Voter Registration
  New York 2011[22] New York Electronic Voter Registration 
  North Carolina[c][46] 2020-03-20 North Carolina Online Voter Registration
  Ohio 2017-01-01[47] Ohio Online Voter Registration
  Oklahoma 2020[48] Not fully implemented yet[48][d]
  Oregon 2010-03-01[49] OreStar
  Pennsylvania 2015-08-27[50] PA Online Voter Registration
  Rhode Island 2016-08-01[51] RI Online Voter Registration
  South Carolina 2012-10-02[52] S.C. Online Voter Registration
  Tennessee 2017-08-29[53] GoVote TN Voter Registration
  Texas 2020-09[23] N/A[e]
  Utah 2010-06[25] Utah Online Voter Registration
  Vermont 2015-10-12[54] Vermont Online Voter Registration
  Virginia 2013-07-23[55] Virginia Voter Registration
  Washington 2008-01[25] MyVote
  West Virginia 2015-09[25] West Virginia Online Voter Registration
  Wisconsin 2017-01-09[56] My Vote Wisconsin
  1. ^ In Missouri, a person can register to vote online and electronically provide a signature using a mobile device, tablet computer or touchscreen computer, but not a standard desktop computer. The state reviews the information and prints out the registration form, which it sends to the person's local elections office for verification.
  2. ^ In Missouri, a person can register to vote online and electronically provide a signature using a mobile device, tablet computer or touchscreen computer, but not a standard desktop computer. The state reviews the information and prints out the registration form, which it sends to the person's local elections office for verification.
  3. ^ Prior to March 30, 2020, applicants could only apply online as an extra option in the process of conducting a separate transaction through the North Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles. In response to the closure of most DMV offices due to COVID-19, the NCDMV opened online voter registration for all holders of North Carolina driver's licenses and state ID cards and removed the need for a transaction.
  4. ^ In Oklahoma, registered voters can update their registration information online but new voters and voters who have changed names or moved to a different county must fill out a paper form.
  5. ^ Since a federal judicial order in September 2020, Texas allows residents to register to vote online if and when they are renewing their driver's licenses or state identification cards. Voters with neither card must register by paper.

Automatic voter registration edit

 
Map of the District of Columbia, states, and territories in the United States that allow automatic voter registration:
  Automatic voter registration available
  Automatic voter registration to be implemented
  No automatic voter registration available

As of September 2023, 24 states and the District of Columbia had automatic registration of citizens who interact with state agencies such as the DMV, along with 3 other states that have passed legislation or committed administratively to create automatic registration systems, but not yet implemented it.[57][58][59] Those interacting with the state agencies have the option to opt-out of registering.

On January 1, 2016, the Oregon Motor Voter Act implemented automatic voter registration of eligible citizens tied to the process of issuing driver licenses and ID cards, with the person having the right to opt out.[60] By April 2016 three more states – California, West Virginia, and Vermont – adopted the system, and in May 2016 Connecticut announced plans to implement it administratively rather than by legislation.[61][62] Alaskan voters approved Measure 1 on November 8, 2016, to allow residents to register to vote when applying annually for the state's Permanent Dividend Fund.[63][64] Voter approval of Measure 1 made Alaska the first state to implement automatic (opt-in) voter registration via ballot initiative. New York passed automatic voter registration on December 22, 2020, with implementation to commence in 2023.[65] Several more states have considered legislation for automatic registration.[66] On August 28, 2017, Illinois set July 1, 2018, for implementation of automatic voter registration at motor vehicle agencies, and a year later at other state agencies.[67]

State or federal district Automatic voter
registration implemented
  Alaska 2017-03-01[68]
  California 2017-04[59]
  Colorado 2017-02[59]
  Connecticut 2018[69]
  Delaware 2023[70][71]
  District of Columbia 2018-06-26[72]
  Georgia 2016-09[59]
  Hawaii 2021
  Illinois 2018-07-02[73]
  Maine 2022-01[74][75]
  Maryland 2019-07-01[59]
  Massachusetts 2020-01[59]
  Michigan 2019-09-09[76]
  Minnesota 2023-05-05[77]
  Nevada 2020-01[78]
  New Jersey 2018-11-01[79][59]
  New Mexico 2020[80]
  New York 2020-12-22[81]
  Oregon 2016-01-01[82]
  Pennsylvania 2023-09-19
  Rhode Island 2018-06[59]
  Vermont 2017-01[59]
  Virginia 2020-04[83]
  Washington 2019-07[59]
  West Virginia 2019-07[59]

Voter re-registration edit

In many jurisdictions in the United States, registered voter must re-register to vote upon changing residential addresses (even within the same county),[84][85] or changing names.[85] In the 31 states (and District of Columbia) where voters register by political party,[5] a voter desiring to switch party affiliation must also re-register[85] to vote in closed primaries.[86]

Some jurisdictions have automatic voter re-registration whereby existing registrants are automatically re-registered after changing home addresses. A 2022 study found that automatic voter re-registration would increase voter turnout in the US by 5.8 percentage points.[84]

Partial Automatic edit

This type does transfer some data from DMV electronically to election officials. For instance, name, age and address. However, does not fully meet the definition of an fully automated system, because it is still relying on paper forms in some way.[87]

Election Day / same-day edit

 
Map of the District of Columbia, states, and territories in the United States that allow same-day voter registration:
  Same-day and early voting period voter registration available
  Same-day voter registration available
  Early voting period voter registration available
  Same-day and early voting period voter registration not implemented yet
  No same-day and early voting period voter registration available

The majority of states require voters to register two to four weeks before an election, with cutoff dates varying from 30 to 15 days.

Some states allow Election Day voter registration (also known as EDR) which enables eligible citizens to register to vote or update their registration when they arrive to vote. Some states call the procedure same-day registration (SDR) because voters can register and vote during the early voting period before Election Day.

EDR allows eligible citizens to register or update their registration at the polls or their local election office by showing valid identification to a poll worker or election official, who checks the identification, consults the registration list and, if they are not registered or the registration is out of date, registers them on the spot.

As of March 27, 2018, 17 states and the District of Columbia offer same day voter registration, which allows any qualified resident of the state to go to register to vote and cast a ballot all in that day. Additionally, 1 state (Washington) has enacted same day vote registration, which has yet to be implemented.[88] Also, 9 states have voter registration possible for a portion of their early voting periods.

Five states are exempt from the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 because they have continuously since 1993 had EDR: Idaho, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Maine lost the exemption when it abolished EDR in 2011, though it was restored later that year. North Dakota is also exempt because it does not have voter registration. In June 2011, Maine abolished EDR, which had been in place since 1973, and abolished absentee voting during the two business days before an election.[89] However, the stipulation banning EDR was overturned in a November 2011 citizen referendum ("people's veto") titled Question 1,[90] when Maine voters reinstated EDR with 59% in favor.[91]

Voter turnout is much higher in states using EDR than in states that do not. A 2013 report analyzing turnout in the 2012 United States presidential election, had SDR states averaging at a turnout of 71%, well above the average voter turn-out rate of 59% for non-SDR states.[92] According to official turnout data report in the 2014 edition of America Goes to the Polls,[93] voter turnout in EDR states has averaged 10–14 percent higher than states that lack that option.[94] Other research suggests that EDR increases turnout between three and fourteen percentage points.[95][96][97][98][99] A 2004 study summarizes the impact of EDR on voter turnout as "about five percentage points".[100] A 2021 study found that same day voter registration disproportionately increase turnout among young voters; young voters move more frequently, which disproportionately burdens them under traditional voter registration laws.[101]

Federal district or state Same day voting registration implemented Early voting period registration implemented
  California 2012[88] [data missing][88]
  Colorado 2013[88] [data missing][88]
  Connecticut 2012[88] N/A[88]
  District of Columbia 2010[88] N/A[88]
  Hawaii 2014[88] [data missing][88]
  Idaho 1994[88] N/A[88]
  Illinois 2005 and 2015[88] N/A[88]
  Iowa 2007[88] [data missing][88]
  Maine 1973 [102][88] N/A[88]
  Maryland 2013 and 2018[88] [data missing][88]
  Michigan 2019[103][88] 2019[103][88]
  Minnesota 1974[88] N/A[88]
  Montana 2005[88] N/A[88]
  Nevada 2019[88]
  New Hampshire 1996[88] N/A[88]
  New Mexico 2019[80][104][88] [data missing][80][104][88]
  North Carolina 2007[88] [data missing][88]
  Utah 2018[88] [data missing][88]
  Vermont 2015[88] [data missing][88]
  Virginia 2022[88] N/A
  Washington 2018[88] 2019[88]
  Wisconsin 1975[88] N/A[88]
  Wyoming 1994[88] N/A[88]

Permanent & portable registration edit

 
Map of the District of Columbia, states, and territories in the United States that allow permanent & portable voter registration:
  Permanent & portable voter registration available for registered voter
  Briefly, but no longer, allow for permanent & portable voter registration available for registered voters who move to a precinct that has an electronic poll book or are an active military member
  Provisional ballots available for registered voters who move
  No permanent & portable registration available

As of 2014, Delaware, Hawaii, Oregon, and Texas allow registered voters who have moved within the state to update their registrations when they vote, and are given a regular ballot when they vote. Florida briefly allowed any registered voter who moved to another county and another voting precinct to vote by provisional ballot, except if "the precinct to which you have moved has an electronic poll book or you are an active military member", in which case the voter was given a regular ballot when they voted.[105] As of 2014, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Ohio, and Utah allow registered voters who have moved within the state or the District of Columbia to vote in their new county without re-registering at their new address, but they can only vote a provisional ballot, which could require further action from the voter before it is counted.[106]

Preregistration edit

 
Map of the District of Columbia, states, and territories in the United States that allow preregistration prior to turning 18 years old:
  Preregistration after turning 16 years old
  Preregistration after turning 17 years old
  Preregistration prior to turning 18 years old
  No preregistration; can only vote after turning 18 years old
  Unknown

Preregistration allows individuals younger than 18 years of age to register to vote, but not to actually vote until they reach 18. All states have some form of preregistration, starting at age 16, except for North Dakota which does not have any registration.[107]

Federal district or state Preregistration requirements
  Alabama 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Alaska Within 90 days preceding 18th birthday[107]
  Arizona 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Arkansas 18 years old by the election date[107]
  California 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Colorado 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Connecticut 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Delaware 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  District of Columbia 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Florida 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Georgia 17.5-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Hawaii 16-year-olds may preregister, and 17-year-olds may register but not vote[107]
  Idaho 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Illinois 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Indiana 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Iowa 17.5-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Kansas 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Kentucky 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Louisiana 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Maine 17-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Maryland 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Massachusetts 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Michigan 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Minnesota 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Mississippi 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Missouri 17.5-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Montana 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Nebraska 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Nevada 17-year-olds may preregister[107]
  New Hampshire 18 years old by the election date[107]
  New Jersey 17-year-olds may preregister[107]
  New Mexico 18 years old by the election date[107]
  New York 16 year olds may preregister[107]
  North Carolina 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Ohio 18-year-olds by the election date[107]
  Oklahoma 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Oregon 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Pennsylvania 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Rhode Island 16-year-olds may preregister, and 17-year-olds may register if they will be 18 years old by the election[107]
  South Carolina 18 years old by the election date[107]
  South Dakota 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Tennessee 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Texas Individuals 17 years and 10 months old may register
  Utah 16-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Vermont 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Virginia 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Washington 18 years old by the election date[107]
  West Virginia 17-year-olds may preregister[107]
  Wisconsin 18 years old by the election date[107]
  Wyoming 18 years old by the election date[107]

Registration Drives edit

 
An October 2008 voter registration rally held on behalf of Barack Obama's presidential campaign, on Philadelphia's Benjamin Franklin Parkway

A voter registration drive is an effort undertaken by a government authority, political party or other entity to register to vote persons otherwise entitled to vote. In many jurisdictions, the functions of electoral authorities includes endeavours to get as many people to register to vote as possible. In most jurisdictions, registration is a prerequisite to a person being able to vote at an election.

In the United States, such drives are often undertaken by a political campaign, political party, or other outside groups (partisan and non-partisan), that seeks to register persons who are eligible to vote but are not registered. In all U.S. states except North Dakota, registration is a prerequisite to a person being able to vote at federal, state or local elections, as well as to serve on juries and perform other civil duties. Sometimes these drives are undertaken for partisan purposes, and target specific demographic groups considered to be likely to vote for one candidate or other; on the other hand, such drives may be undertaken by non-partisan groups and targeted more generally.

In 2004, the Nu Mu Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity held a voter registration drive in DeKalb County, Georgia, from which Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox (Dem.) rejected all 63 voter registration applications because the fraternity did not obtain specific pre-clearance from the state to conduct their drive. Nu Mu Lambda filed Charles H. Wesley Education Foundation v. Cathy Cox (Wesley v. Cox)[108] asserting that the Georgia's long-standing policy and practice of rejecting mail-in voter registration applications that were submitted in bundles, by persons other than registrars, deputy registrars, or "authorized persons", violated the requirements of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 by undermining voter registration drives. A senior U.S. District Judge upheld earlier federal court decisions in the case, which found that private entities have a right, under the federal law, to engage in organized voter registration activity in Georgia at times and locations of their choosing, without the presence or permission of state or local election officials.[109]

National organizations that regularly work to register voters and promote citizens' engagement in elections include:

Party affiliation edit

 
  States which feature partisan voter affiliation questions on voter registration forms
  States which have passed legislation to feature partisan voter affiliation questions on voter registration forms
  No partisan affiliation questions on voter registration forms

In 31 states and the District of Columbia, voters are allowed to mark their party affiliation, or their unaffiliated status, on their voter registration form. In those states which host closed primaries for political parties, voters are often mandated to declare their party affiliation prior to receiving a primary ballot, whether on the day of the primary or by a prior deadline.[5] In addition, voters who are party-affiliated in their voter files are most often allowed to participate in intra-party elections and decision-making.

States with party affiliation questions edit

Federal district of state Party affiliation question? Year of adoption
  Alabama No N/A
  Alaska Yes ?
  Arizona Yes ?
  Arkansas Yes ?
  California Yes ?
  Colorado Yes ?
  Connecticut Yes ?
  Delaware Yes ?
  District of Columbia Yes ?
  Florida Yes ?
  Georgia (U.S. state) No N/A
  Hawaii No N/A
  Idaho Yes 2011
  Indiana No N/A
  Illinois No N/A
  Iowa Yes ?
  Kansas Yes ?
  Kentucky Yes
  Louisiana Yes ?
  Maine Yes ?
  Maryland Yes ?
  Massachusetts Yes 1916
  Michigan No N/A
  Minnesota No N/A
  Mississippi No N/A
  Missouri Upcoming 2023
  Montana No N/A
  Nebraska Yes ?
  Nevada Yes ?
  New Hampshire Yes ?
  New Jersey Yes ?
  New Mexico Yes ?
  New York Yes ?
  North Carolina Yes ?
  North Dakota No N/A
  Ohio No N/A
  Oklahoma Yes ?
  Oregon Yes ?
  Pennsylvania Yes ?
  Rhode Island Yes ?
  South Carolina No N/A
  South Dakota Yes ?
  Tennessee No N/A
  Texas No N/A
  Utah Yes ?
  Vermont No N/A
  Virginia No N/A
  Washington No N/A
  West Virginia Yes ?
  Wisconsin No N/A
  Wyoming Yes ?

Deadline to re-register with a party for a primary election edit

Federal district of state Deadline to re-register with a political party for a partisan primary election Deadline to re-register with a political party for the 2020 U.S. Presidential Caucuses and Primary elections
  Colorado 29th day prior to the partisan primary election[110] 2020-02-03[110]
  Connecticut 3 months prior to the partisan primary election[111] [data missing][112]
  Delaware The last Saturday in May of the year of the partisan primary election [data missing][113]
  District of Columbia 21st day prior to the partisan primary election[114] [data missing][114]
  Idaho 10th Friday prior to the partisan primary election[115][a] [data missing][116]
  Kansas 14th day prior to the partisan primary election[117][b] [data missing][118]
  Kentucky December 31 of the year prior to the partisan primary election[119] [data missing][119]
  Maine 15th day prior to the partisan primary election[117][c] [data missing][120]
  New Hampshire 1st Tuesday of June of the year of the partisan primary election[121][d] [data missing][122]
  New Jersey 55th day prior to the partisan primary election[117][e] 2020-04-08[123]
  New York The Friday 10 weeks before the Presidential Primary Election in 2020 [124] 2020-02-14[125]
  Oregon 21st day prior to the partisan primary election[126] 2020-04-28
  Rhode Island 30th day prior to the partisan primary election[127] [data missing][128]
  Wyoming 14th day prior to the partisan primary election[129] [data missing][129]
  1. ^ In Idaho, unaffiliated registered voters may re-register up to and on the partisan primary day
  2. ^ In Kansas, unaffiliated registered voters may re-register up to and on the partisan primary day
  3. ^ In Maine, unenrolled registered voters may re-register up to and on the partisan primary day
  4. ^ In New Hampshire, unafflicted registered voters may re-register up to and on the partisan primary day
  5. ^ In New Jersey, unaffiliated registered voters may re-register up to and on the partisan primary day

Youth voting edit

In some cities, people younger than 18 can vote in local elections, such as for city councils and school boards. Takoma Park, Maryland, was the first city to allow youth voting, starting in 2013. Other nearby cities, including Hyattsville, Greenbelt and Riverdale Park adopted similar measures.[130]

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Alexander Keyssar. 2009. The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States. Basic Books.
  • Jimmy Carter Tried to Make It Easier to Vote in 1977. The Right Stopped Him With the Same Arguments It’s Using Today (Excerpt from Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980 by Rick Perlstein)

References edit

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voter, registration, united, states, required, voting, federal, state, local, elections, united, states, only, exception, north, dakota, although, cities, north, dakota, register, voters, city, elections, voter, registration, takes, place, county, level, many,. Voter registration in the United States is required for voting in federal state and local elections in the United States The only exception is North Dakota although cities in North Dakota may register voters for city elections 1 Voter registration takes place at the county level in many states and at the municipal level in several states Most states set cutoff dates for voter registration and to update details ranging from 2 to 4 weeks before an election while a third of states have Election Day or same day voter registration which enables eligible citizens to register or update their registration when they vote before or on election day Map of the District of Columbia states and territories in the United States that require voter registration to vote Voter registration required for federal and state elections No voter registration required for federal or state elections although some local city elections may require voter registrationA group of African American children gather around a sign and booth to register voters Early 1960s It has been argued that some registration requirements deter some people especially disadvantaged people from registering and therefore exercising their right to vote resulting in a lower voter turnout Several consequences of registering for voting are mentioned sometimes as deterrents for registration like to serve jury duty to be drafted into the military or to update car insurance in case of changing address of residence for example But many of these claims are false or like being listed as potential juror are only applicable to certain jurisdictions or are not the only way to be called in to serve 2 According to a 2012 study 24 of the voting eligible population in the United States are not registered to vote equaling some 51 million U S citizens 3 4 While voters traditionally had to register at government offices by a certain period of time before an election in the mid 1990s the federal government made efforts to facilitate registering in an attempt to increase turnout The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 the Motor Voter law now requires state governments to either provide uniform opt in registration services through drivers license registration centers disability centers schools libraries and mail in registration or to allow Election Day voter registration where voters can register at polling places immediately prior to voting In 2016 Oregon became the first state to make voter registration fully automatic opt out when issuing driver licenses and ID cards since followed by 15 more states and the District of Columbia Political parties and other organizations sometimes hold voter registration drives that is events to register new voters In 31 states and the District of Columbia persons registering to vote may at the same time declare an affiliation with a political party 5 Contents 1 History 2 No registration jurisdiction 3 Federal jurisdiction 4 Effect on participation 5 Registration centers 6 Online Registration 7 Automatic voter registration 7 1 Voter re registration 7 2 Partial Automatic 7 3 Election Day same day 8 Permanent amp portable registration 8 1 Preregistration 9 Registration Drives 10 Party affiliation 10 1 States with party affiliation questions 10 2 Deadline to re register with a party for a primary election 11 Youth voting 12 See also 13 Further reading 14 ReferencesHistory editIn 1800 Massachusetts was the first state to require voter registration as a prerequisite for voting statewide 6 which was followed by Maine 1821 Pennsylvania 1836 and Connecticut 1839 During the 19th century and especially after the Civil War more states and cities would establish voter registration as a prerequisite to voting partially to prevent voting by immigrants in cities However it was not until 1913 when Nebraska became the first state to establish a permanent statewide voter register overseen by an election commissioner According to a 2020 study voter registration laws adopted in the period 1880 1916 reduced turnout as much as 19 percentage points 7 North Dakota abolished voter registration in 1951 for state and federal elections the only state to do so 1 It has since 2004 required voters to produce ID at time of casting a vote This has led to North Dakota being accused of voter suppression because many Native American were denied a vote because the address on their tribal IDs had a post office box address which continues to be a common practice 8 In 2002 Arizona made online voter registration available In 2016 Oregon became the first state to implement a fully automatic opt out voter registration system tied to the process of issuing driver licenses and ID cards No registration jurisdiction editNorth Dakota is the only state that does not have voter registration which was abolished in 1951 although cities in North Dakota may register voters for city elections 1 9 In North Dakota voters must provide identification and proof of entitlement to vote at the polling place before being permitted to vote North Dakota is exempt from the requirements of the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993 Because of this exemption North Dakota has since 2004 required voters to produce an approved form of ID before being able to vote one of which was a tribe ID commonly used by Native Americans It was common and lawful for a post office box to be used on this ID instead of a residential address because there are no street addresses on reservations In 2016 a change required tribal ID to have a residential address to be accepted and North Dakota has been accused of voter suppression with many Native Americans being denied a vote because they did not have an approved form of ID with a residential address 10 North Dakota s ID law especially adversely affected large numbers of Native Americans with almost a quarter of Native Americans in the state otherwise eligible to vote being denied a vote on the basis that they do not have proper ID compared to 12 of non Indians A judge overturned the ID law in July 2016 also saying The undisputed evidence before the Court reveals that voter fraud in North Dakota has been virtually non existent 11 However the denial of a vote on this basis was also an issue in the 2018 mid term election 10 Federal jurisdiction editWhile the United States Congress has jurisdiction over laws applying to federal elections it has deferred most aspects of election law to the states The United States Constitution prohibits states from restricting voting rights in ways that infringe on a person s right to equal protection under the law 14th Amendment on the basis of race 15th Amendment on the basis of sex 19th Amendment on the basis of having failed to pay a poll tax or any tax 24th Amendment or on the basis of age for persons age 18 and older 26th Amendment The administration of elections however vary widely across jurisdictions In general US citizens over the age of 18 have the right to vote in federal elections 12 In a few cases permanent residents green card holders have registered to vote and have cast ballots without realizing that doing so was illegal Non citizens convicted in criminal court of having made a false claim of citizenship for the purpose of registering to vote in a federal election can be fined and imprisoned for up to a year Deportation and removal proceedings have resulted from several such cases 13 Some municipalities allow non citizen residents to vote in municipal or school district elections All states except Maine and Vermont and the District of Columbia deny the vote to convicted felons for some duration a practice known as felony disenfranchisement In 16 states voting is only prohibited during incarceration 21 states additionally prohibit voting during parole or probation but allow voting after Eleven states either indefinitely suspend voting rights or require special action to have voting rights restored 14 Effect on participation edit nbsp A Sumter County Florida Voter Information Card A 2012 study by The Pew Charitable Trusts estimates that 24 of the voting eligible population in the United States are not registered to vote a percentage that represents at least 51 million eligible U S citizens 15 16 The study suggests that registration requirements contribute to discouraging people from exercising their right to vote thereby causing a lower voter turnout The extent of discouragement and its effect on increasing the socioeconomic bias of the electorate however remain contested In a 1980 landmark study Raymond E Wolfinger and Steven J Rosenstone came to the conclusion that less restrictive registration requirements would substantially increase the electoral turnout According to their probit analysis if all states adopted the procedures of the most permissive state regulations which would mean eliminating the closing date opening registration offices during the forty hour work week opening registration offices in the evening or on Saturday permitting absentee registration for the sick disabled and absent p 73 turnout in the 1972 presidential election would have been 9 1 higher with 12 2 million additional people having voted 17 In a seminal 1988 book sociologists Richard Cloward and Francis Fox Piven argued that lowering registration requirements would improve socioeconomic equality in the composition of the electorate 18 Findings such as this have inspired lawmakers to facilitate the registration process eventually leading to the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 or Motor Voter act that required states to allow voter registration at various public offices including drivers license registration centers disability centers schools libraries as well as mail in registration unless a state adopts Election Day voter registration The way towards passing this piece of federal legislation was however lengthy and rocky as these reforms were highly contested In an expanded 1990 edition of their 1988 book titled Why Americans still don t vote and why politicians want it that way Cloward and Piven argued that the reforms were expected to encourage less privileged groups which happen to lean towards the Democratic Party 19 While the turnout at federal elections did substantially increase following the electoral reforms the effect fell short of Wolfinger and Rosenstone s expectations while Cloward s and Piven s hope of improving the demographic representativeness of the electorate wasn t fulfilled at all Political scientist Adam Berinsky concluded in a 2005 article that the reforms designed to make voting easier in their entirety had an opposite effect actually increasing the preexisting socioeconomic biases by ensuring that those citizens who are most engaged with the political world those with politically relevant resources continue to participate whereas those individuals without such resources fall by the wayside 20 As Berinsky reaffirms in a 2016 piece the only way to increase turnout while improving representativeness is making more people become interested in politics 21 Registration centers editTraditionally voter registration took place at government offices but the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993 which came into effect on January 1 1995 simplified registration The Act requires state governments to provide opt in registration services through drivers license registration centers disability centers schools libraries as well as providing for mail in registration However six states are exempt from the streamlined processes under the Act North Dakota Idaho Minnesota New Hampshire Wisconsin and Wyoming Online Registration edit nbsp Online voter registration in the United States Online voter registration available a Online voter registration allowed for those updating their driver s license or state IDs Online voter registration to be implemented Online voter registration legislation passed at least one chamber No online voter registration availableAs of August 2020 online voter registration was available in 41 states the District of Columbia and Guam with two additional states Maine and Oklahoma phasing in implementation 22 North Dakota does not have voter registration Since a federal judicial order in September 2020 Texas allows residents to register to vote online if and when they are renewing their driver s licenses or state identification cards 23 State or federal district Date online voter registration implemented Website nbsp Alabama 2016 12 01 24 Alabama Votes nbsp Alaska 2015 11 25 Alaska Online Voter Registration nbsp Arizona 2002 07 26 Service Arizona Voter Registration nbsp California 2012 09 19 27 California Online Voter Registration nbsp Colorado 2010 04 01 28 Go Vote Colorado nbsp Connecticut 2014 01 01 29 Connecticut Online Voter Registration nbsp Delaware 2014 04 22 I Vote Delaware nbsp District of Columbia 2015 25 District of Columbia Online Voter Registration nbsp Florida 2017 10 01 22 Register to Vote Florida Voter Registration nbsp Georgia 2014 03 25 Georgia Online Voter Registration nbsp Guam 2022 30 Guam Online Voter Registration nbsp Hawaii 2015 08 04 31 Hawaii Online Voter Registration nbsp Idaho 2017 12 06 32 Idaho Votes nbsp Illinois 2014 06 17 33 Illinois Online Voter Registration nbsp Indiana 2010 07 01 34 Indiana Online Voter Registration nbsp Iowa 2016 01 04 35 Iowa Online Voter Registration nbsp Kansas 2009 05 25 Kansas Online Voter Registration nbsp Kentucky 2016 03 01 36 Kentucky Online Voter Registration nbsp Louisiana 2010 04 25 Geaux Vote nbsp Maine 2023 11 37 N A nbsp Maryland 2012 07 01 38 Maryland Online Voter Registration nbsp Massachusetts 2015 06 23 39 Massachusetts Online Voter Registration nbsp Michigan 2019 12 02 40 Michigan Online Voter Registration nbsp Minnesota 2013 09 26 41 MN Votes nbsp Missouri b 2014 22 Vote Missouri nbsp Nebraska 2015 09 22 42 Nebraska Online Voter Registration nbsp Nevada 2012 09 25 Nevada Online Voter Registration nbsp New Jersey 2020 09 04 43 44 New Jersey Online Voter Registration nbsp New Mexico 2016 01 01 45 New Mexico Online Voter Registration nbsp New York 2011 22 New York Electronic Voter Registration nbsp North Carolina c 46 2020 03 20 North Carolina Online Voter Registration nbsp Ohio 2017 01 01 47 Ohio Online Voter Registration nbsp Oklahoma 2020 48 Not fully implemented yet 48 d nbsp Oregon 2010 03 01 49 OreStar nbsp Pennsylvania 2015 08 27 50 PA Online Voter Registration nbsp Rhode Island 2016 08 01 51 RI Online Voter Registration nbsp South Carolina 2012 10 02 52 S C Online Voter Registration nbsp Tennessee 2017 08 29 53 GoVote TN Voter Registration nbsp Texas 2020 09 23 N A e nbsp Utah 2010 06 25 Utah Online Voter Registration nbsp Vermont 2015 10 12 54 Vermont Online Voter Registration nbsp Virginia 2013 07 23 55 Virginia Voter Registration nbsp Washington 2008 01 25 MyVote nbsp West Virginia 2015 09 25 West Virginia Online Voter Registration nbsp Wisconsin 2017 01 09 56 My Vote Wisconsin In Missouri a person can register to vote online and electronically provide a signature using a mobile device tablet computer or touchscreen computer but not a standard desktop computer The state reviews the information and prints out the registration form which it sends to the person s local elections office for verification In Missouri a person can register to vote online and electronically provide a signature using a mobile device tablet computer or touchscreen computer but not a standard desktop computer The state reviews the information and prints out the registration form which it sends to the person s local elections office for verification Prior to March 30 2020 applicants could only apply online as an extra option in the process of conducting a separate transaction through the North Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles In response to the closure of most DMV offices due to COVID 19 the NCDMV opened online voter registration for all holders of North Carolina driver s licenses and state ID cards and removed the need for a transaction In Oklahoma registered voters can update their registration information online but new voters and voters who have changed names or moved to a different county must fill out a paper form Since a federal judicial order in September 2020 Texas allows residents to register to vote online if and when they are renewing their driver s licenses or state identification cards Voters with neither card must register by paper Automatic voter registration edit nbsp Map of the District of Columbia states and territories in the United States that allow automatic voter registration Automatic voter registration available Automatic voter registration to be implemented No automatic voter registration availableAs of September 2023 24 states and the District of Columbia had automatic registration of citizens who interact with state agencies such as the DMV along with 3 other states that have passed legislation or committed administratively to create automatic registration systems but not yet implemented it 57 58 59 Those interacting with the state agencies have the option to opt out of registering On January 1 2016 the Oregon Motor Voter Act implemented automatic voter registration of eligible citizens tied to the process of issuing driver licenses and ID cards with the person having the right to opt out 60 By April 2016 three more states California West Virginia and Vermont adopted the system and in May 2016 Connecticut announced plans to implement it administratively rather than by legislation 61 62 Alaskan voters approved Measure 1 on November 8 2016 to allow residents to register to vote when applying annually for the state s Permanent Dividend Fund 63 64 Voter approval of Measure 1 made Alaska the first state to implement automatic opt in voter registration via ballot initiative New York passed automatic voter registration on December 22 2020 with implementation to commence in 2023 65 Several more states have considered legislation for automatic registration 66 On August 28 2017 Illinois set July 1 2018 for implementation of automatic voter registration at motor vehicle agencies and a year later at other state agencies 67 State or federal district Automatic voter registration implemented nbsp Alaska 2017 03 01 68 nbsp California 2017 04 59 nbsp Colorado 2017 02 59 nbsp Connecticut 2018 69 nbsp Delaware 2023 70 71 nbsp District of Columbia 2018 06 26 72 nbsp Georgia 2016 09 59 nbsp Hawaii 2021 nbsp Illinois 2018 07 02 73 nbsp Maine 2022 01 74 75 nbsp Maryland 2019 07 01 59 nbsp Massachusetts 2020 01 59 nbsp Michigan 2019 09 09 76 nbsp Minnesota 2023 05 05 77 nbsp Nevada 2020 01 78 nbsp New Jersey 2018 11 01 79 59 nbsp New Mexico 2020 80 nbsp New York 2020 12 22 81 nbsp Oregon 2016 01 01 82 nbsp Pennsylvania 2023 09 19 nbsp Rhode Island 2018 06 59 nbsp Vermont 2017 01 59 nbsp Virginia 2020 04 83 nbsp Washington 2019 07 59 nbsp West Virginia 2019 07 59 Voter re registration edit In many jurisdictions in the United States registered voter must re register to vote upon changing residential addresses even within the same county 84 85 or changing names 85 In the 31 states and District of Columbia where voters register by political party 5 a voter desiring to switch party affiliation must also re register 85 to vote in closed primaries 86 Some jurisdictions have automatic voter re registration whereby existing registrants are automatically re registered after changing home addresses A 2022 study found that automatic voter re registration would increase voter turnout in the US by 5 8 percentage points 84 Partial Automatic edit This type does transfer some data from DMV electronically to election officials For instance name age and address However does not fully meet the definition of an fully automated system because it is still relying on paper forms in some way 87 Election Day same day edit nbsp Map of the District of Columbia states and territories in the United States that allow same day voter registration Same day and early voting period voter registration available Same day voter registration available Early voting period voter registration available Same day and early voting period voter registration not implemented yet No same day and early voting period voter registration availableThe majority of states require voters to register two to four weeks before an election with cutoff dates varying from 30 to 15 days Some states allow Election Day voter registration also known as EDR which enables eligible citizens to register to vote or update their registration when they arrive to vote Some states call the procedure same day registration SDR because voters can register and vote during the early voting period before Election Day EDR allows eligible citizens to register or update their registration at the polls or their local election office by showing valid identification to a poll worker or election official who checks the identification consults the registration list and if they are not registered or the registration is out of date registers them on the spot As of March 27 2018 17 states and the District of Columbia offer same day voter registration which allows any qualified resident of the state to go to register to vote and cast a ballot all in that day Additionally 1 state Washington has enacted same day vote registration which has yet to be implemented 88 Also 9 states have voter registration possible for a portion of their early voting periods Five states are exempt from the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 because they have continuously since 1993 had EDR Idaho Minnesota New Hampshire Wisconsin and Wyoming Maine lost the exemption when it abolished EDR in 2011 though it was restored later that year North Dakota is also exempt because it does not have voter registration In June 2011 Maine abolished EDR which had been in place since 1973 and abolished absentee voting during the two business days before an election 89 However the stipulation banning EDR was overturned in a November 2011 citizen referendum people s veto titled Question 1 90 when Maine voters reinstated EDR with 59 in favor 91 Voter turnout is much higher in states using EDR than in states that do not A 2013 report analyzing turnout in the 2012 United States presidential election had SDR states averaging at a turnout of 71 well above the average voter turn out rate of 59 for non SDR states 92 According to official turnout data report in the 2014 edition of America Goes to the Polls 93 voter turnout in EDR states has averaged 10 14 percent higher than states that lack that option 94 Other research suggests that EDR increases turnout between three and fourteen percentage points 95 96 97 98 99 A 2004 study summarizes the impact of EDR on voter turnout as about five percentage points 100 A 2021 study found that same day voter registration disproportionately increase turnout among young voters young voters move more frequently which disproportionately burdens them under traditional voter registration laws 101 Federal district or state Same day voting registration implemented Early voting period registration implemented nbsp California 2012 88 data missing 88 nbsp Colorado 2013 88 data missing 88 nbsp Connecticut 2012 88 N A 88 nbsp District of Columbia 2010 88 N A 88 nbsp Hawaii 2014 88 data missing 88 nbsp Idaho 1994 88 N A 88 nbsp Illinois 2005 and 2015 88 N A 88 nbsp Iowa 2007 88 data missing 88 nbsp Maine 1973 102 88 N A 88 nbsp Maryland 2013 and 2018 88 data missing 88 nbsp Michigan 2019 103 88 2019 103 88 nbsp Minnesota 1974 88 N A 88 nbsp Montana 2005 88 N A 88 nbsp Nevada 2019 88 nbsp New Hampshire 1996 88 N A 88 nbsp New Mexico 2019 80 104 88 data missing 80 104 88 nbsp North Carolina 2007 88 data missing 88 nbsp Utah 2018 88 data missing 88 nbsp Vermont 2015 88 data missing 88 nbsp Virginia 2022 88 N A nbsp Washington 2018 88 2019 88 nbsp Wisconsin 1975 88 N A 88 nbsp Wyoming 1994 88 N A 88 Permanent amp portable registration edit nbsp Map of the District of Columbia states and territories in the United States that allow permanent amp portable voter registration Permanent amp portable voter registration available for registered voter Briefly but no longer allow for permanent amp portable voter registration available for registered voters who move to a precinct that has an electronic poll book or are an active military member Provisional ballots available for registered voters who move No permanent amp portable registration availableAs of 2014 Delaware Hawaii Oregon and Texas allow registered voters who have moved within the state to update their registrations when they vote and are given a regular ballot when they vote Florida briefly allowed any registered voter who moved to another county and another voting precinct to vote by provisional ballot except if the precinct to which you have moved has an electronic poll book or you are an active military member in which case the voter was given a regular ballot when they voted 105 As of 2014 the District of Columbia Maryland Ohio and Utah allow registered voters who have moved within the state or the District of Columbia to vote in their new county without re registering at their new address but they can only vote a provisional ballot which could require further action from the voter before it is counted 106 Preregistration edit nbsp Map of the District of Columbia states and territories in the United States that allow preregistration prior to turning 18 years old Preregistration after turning 16 years old Preregistration after turning 17 years old Preregistration prior to turning 18 years old No preregistration can only vote after turning 18 years old UnknownPreregistration allows individuals younger than 18 years of age to register to vote but not to actually vote until they reach 18 All states have some form of preregistration starting at age 16 except for North Dakota which does not have any registration 107 Federal district or state Preregistration requirements nbsp Alabama 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Alaska Within 90 days preceding 18th birthday 107 nbsp Arizona 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Arkansas 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp California 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Colorado 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Connecticut 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Delaware 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp District of Columbia 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Florida 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Georgia 17 5 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Hawaii 16 year olds may preregister and 17 year olds may register but not vote 107 nbsp Idaho 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Illinois 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Indiana 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Iowa 17 5 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Kansas 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Kentucky 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Louisiana 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Maine 17 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Maryland 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Massachusetts 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Michigan 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Minnesota 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Mississippi 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Missouri 17 5 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Montana 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Nebraska 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Nevada 17 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp New Hampshire 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp New Jersey 17 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp New Mexico 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp New York 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp North Carolina 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Ohio 18 year olds by the election date 107 nbsp Oklahoma 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Oregon 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Pennsylvania 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Rhode Island 16 year olds may preregister and 17 year olds may register if they will be 18 years old by the election 107 nbsp South Carolina 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp South Dakota 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Tennessee 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Texas Individuals 17 years and 10 months old may register nbsp Utah 16 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Vermont 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Virginia 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Washington 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp West Virginia 17 year olds may preregister 107 nbsp Wisconsin 18 years old by the election date 107 nbsp Wyoming 18 years old by the election date 107 Registration Drives editSee also Voter registration campaign nbsp An October 2008 voter registration rally held on behalf of Barack Obama s presidential campaign on Philadelphia s Benjamin Franklin ParkwayA voter registration drive is an effort undertaken by a government authority political party or other entity to register to vote persons otherwise entitled to vote In many jurisdictions the functions of electoral authorities includes endeavours to get as many people to register to vote as possible In most jurisdictions registration is a prerequisite to a person being able to vote at an election In the United States such drives are often undertaken by a political campaign political party or other outside groups partisan and non partisan that seeks to register persons who are eligible to vote but are not registered In all U S states except North Dakota registration is a prerequisite to a person being able to vote at federal state or local elections as well as to serve on juries and perform other civil duties Sometimes these drives are undertaken for partisan purposes and target specific demographic groups considered to be likely to vote for one candidate or other on the other hand such drives may be undertaken by non partisan groups and targeted more generally In 2004 the Nu Mu Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity held a voter registration drive in DeKalb County Georgia from which Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox Dem rejected all 63 voter registration applications because the fraternity did not obtain specific pre clearance from the state to conduct their drive Nu Mu Lambda filed Charles H Wesley Education Foundation v Cathy Cox Wesley v Cox 108 asserting that the Georgia s long standing policy and practice of rejecting mail in voter registration applications that were submitted in bundles by persons other than registrars deputy registrars or authorized persons violated the requirements of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 by undermining voter registration drives A senior U S District Judge upheld earlier federal court decisions in the case which found that private entities have a right under the federal law to engage in organized voter registration activity in Georgia at times and locations of their choosing without the presence or permission of state or local election officials 109 National organizations that regularly work to register voters and promote citizens engagement in elections include Advancement Project Close Up Foundation Democrats Abroad HeadCount League of Women Voters Let America Vote National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Nonprofit VOTE Our Time Rock the Vote Southern Regional Council Southwest Voter Registration Education Project Student Association for Voter Empowerment The Voter Participation Center U S Vote Foundation United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Vote org Voto LatinoParty affiliation edit nbsp States which feature partisan voter affiliation questions on voter registration forms States which have passed legislation to feature partisan voter affiliation questions on voter registration forms No partisan affiliation questions on voter registration formsIn 31 states and the District of Columbia voters are allowed to mark their party affiliation or their unaffiliated status on their voter registration form In those states which host closed primaries for political parties voters are often mandated to declare their party affiliation prior to receiving a primary ballot whether on the day of the primary or by a prior deadline 5 In addition voters who are party affiliated in their voter files are most often allowed to participate in intra party elections and decision making States with party affiliation questions edit Federal district of state Party affiliation question Year of adoption nbsp Alabama No N A nbsp Alaska Yes nbsp Arizona Yes nbsp Arkansas Yes nbsp California Yes nbsp Colorado Yes nbsp Connecticut Yes nbsp Delaware Yes nbsp District of Columbia Yes nbsp Florida Yes nbsp Georgia U S state No N A nbsp Hawaii No N A nbsp Idaho Yes 2011 nbsp Indiana No N A nbsp Illinois No N A nbsp Iowa Yes nbsp Kansas Yes nbsp Kentucky Yes nbsp Louisiana Yes nbsp Maine Yes nbsp Maryland Yes nbsp Massachusetts Yes 1916 nbsp Michigan No N A nbsp Minnesota No N A nbsp Mississippi No N A nbsp Missouri Upcoming 2023 nbsp Montana No N A nbsp Nebraska Yes nbsp Nevada Yes nbsp New Hampshire Yes nbsp New Jersey Yes nbsp New Mexico Yes nbsp New York Yes nbsp North Carolina Yes nbsp North Dakota No N A nbsp Ohio No N A nbsp Oklahoma Yes nbsp Oregon Yes nbsp Pennsylvania Yes nbsp Rhode Island Yes nbsp South Carolina No N A nbsp South Dakota Yes nbsp Tennessee No N A nbsp Texas No N A nbsp Utah Yes nbsp Vermont No N A nbsp Virginia No N A nbsp Washington No N A nbsp West Virginia Yes nbsp Wisconsin No N A nbsp Wyoming Yes Deadline to re register with a party for a primary election edit Federal district of state Deadline to re register with a political party for a partisan primary election Deadline to re register with a political party for the 2020 U S Presidential Caucuses and Primary elections nbsp Colorado 29th day prior to the partisan primary election 110 2020 02 03 110 nbsp Connecticut 3 months prior to the partisan primary election 111 data missing 112 nbsp Delaware The last Saturday in May of the year of the partisan primary election data missing 113 nbsp District of Columbia 21st day prior to the partisan primary election 114 data missing 114 nbsp Idaho 10th Friday prior to the partisan primary election 115 a data missing 116 nbsp Kansas 14th day prior to the partisan primary election 117 b data missing 118 nbsp Kentucky December 31 of the year prior to the partisan primary election 119 data missing 119 nbsp Maine 15th day prior to the partisan primary election 117 c data missing 120 nbsp New Hampshire 1st Tuesday of June of the year of the partisan primary election 121 d data missing 122 nbsp New Jersey 55th day prior to the partisan primary election 117 e 2020 04 08 123 nbsp New York The Friday 10 weeks before the Presidential Primary Election in 2020 124 2020 02 14 125 nbsp Oregon 21st day prior to the partisan primary election 126 2020 04 28 nbsp Rhode Island 30th day prior to the partisan primary election 127 data missing 128 nbsp Wyoming 14th day prior to the partisan primary election 129 data missing 129 In Idaho unaffiliated registered voters may re register up to and on the partisan primary day In Kansas unaffiliated registered voters may re register up to and on the partisan primary day In Maine unenrolled registered voters may re register up to and on the partisan primary day In New Hampshire unafflicted registered voters may re register up to and on the partisan primary day In New Jersey unaffiliated registered voters may re register up to and on the partisan primary dayYouth voting editIn some cities people younger than 18 can vote in local elections such as for city councils and school boards Takoma Park Maryland was the first city to allow youth voting starting in 2013 Other nearby cities including Hyattsville Greenbelt and Riverdale Park adopted similar measures 130 See also editVoter ID laws in the United StatesFurther reading editAlexander Keyssar 2009 The Right to Vote The Contested History of Democracy in the United States Basic Books Jimmy Carter Tried to Make It Easier to Vote in 1977 The Right Stopped Him With the Same Arguments It s Using Today Excerpt from Reaganland America s Right Turn 1976 1980 by Rick Perlstein References edit a b c The Voter s Self Defense System Vote Smart Retrieved August 31 2017 The Most Common Myths About Voter Registration Debunked lifehacker com Inaccurate Costly and Inefficient Evidence That America s Voter Registration System Needs an Upgrade PDF The Pew Charitable Trusts February 2012 Retrieved February 16 2015 Make It Easy The Case for Automatic Registration Democracy 2013 Retrieved February 16 2015 a b c Cook Rhodes July 12 2018 Registering By Party Where the Democrats and Republicans Are Ahead Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved January 21 2022 Acts 1800 Chapter 74 PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 5 2020 Retrieved May 7 2020 Perez Vanessa M February 1 2021 America s first voter identification laws The effects of personal registration and declining political party competition on presidential election turnout 1880 1916 Electoral Studies 69 102263 doi 10 1016 j electstud 2020 102263 ISSN 0261 3794 North Dakota native tribes agree to settle voter ID lawsuits NBC News Secretary of State North Dakota Voter Registration in North Dakota Retrieved August 4 2010 a b NBC News North Dakota native tribes agree to settle voter ID lawsuit to combat voter suppression February 14 2020 As November Approaches Courts Deal Series Of Blows To Voter ID Laws NPR August 2 2016 The Right to Vote United States Citizenship and Immigration Services Archived from the original on October 17 2011 Retrieved October 25 2011 Kirk Semple Immigrants Find Voting Can Come At a Cost New York Times October 15 2010 Felon Voting Rights ncsl org October 1 2020 Retrieved October 30 2020 Inaccurate Costly and Inefficient Evidence That America s Voter Registration System Needs an Upgrade PDF The Pew Charitable Trusts February 2012 Retrieved February 16 2015 Make It Easy The Case for Automatic Registration Democracy 2013 Retrieved February 16 2015 Raymond E Wolfinger and Steven J Rosenstone 1980 Who Votes Yale University Press pp 73 78 ISBN 978 0 300 02552 1 Frances Fox Piven Richard A Cloward 1988 Why Americans don t vote Random House ISBN 978 0394553962 Toby S James 2012 Elite Statecraft and Election Administration Bending the Rules of the Game Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 30842 8 Adam Berinsky July 2015 The perverse consequences of electoral reform in the United States PDF American Politics Research 33 4 471 491 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 524 5567 doi 10 1177 1532673X04269419 S2CID 18424415 Adam Berinsky February 8 2016 Making Voting Easier Doesn t Increase Turnout Stanford Social Innovation Review Retrieved April 7 2016 a b c d e Online Voter Registration www ncsl org a b Texas begins letting people register to vote online when they re updating their driver s licenses September 24 2020 Gore Leada February 1 2016 You can now register to vote online in Alabama al a b c d e f g h i List of States Adopting Electronic Registration Online Voter Registration or Both PDF ONLINE VOTER REGISTRATION OLVR SYSTEMS IN ARIZONA AND WASHINGTON EVALUATING USAGE PUBLIC CONFIDENCE AND IMPLEMENTATION PROCESSES California launches online voter registration Los Angeles Times September 20 2012 Online Voter Registration Voter Registration and Absentee Ballots Online Voter Registration www ncsl org Retrieved May 7 2023 Office of Elections launches online voter registration system August 4 2015 Idaho launches online voter registration the Spokesman Review Online voting registration begins in Illinois ABC7 Chicago Voter Registration Iowa Residents Can Register to Vote Online kcrg com Online voter registration comes to Kentucky Maine to allow online voter registration in November 2023 Associated Press July 23 2021 Online Voter Registration PDF Massachusetts Launches Online Voting Registration System www wbur org SOS Benson announces beginning of online voter registration and availability of eNotary services in Michigan www michigan gov Retrieved January 23 2020 Editorials Online voter registration offers multiple advantages Mark Ritchie PostBulletin Bureau Martha Stoddard World Herald Want to register to vote online in Nebraska Now you can Omaha World Herald Wildstein David September 4 2020 Online voter registration in N J goes live New Jersey Globe Retrieved September 10 2020 New Jersey Department of State Press Releases September 8 2020 NJ Division of Elections nj gov Online Voter Registration Now Available in New Mexico NCSBE Press Release Ohio s Online Voter Registration System is Now Live a b Online Voter Registration Bill Graves The Oregonian March 1 2010 Oregon offers online voter registration oregonlive Pennsylvania Launches Online Voter Registration August 27 2015 Pina Alisha A R I secretary of state Voter registration is easier with new online system The Providence Journal South Carolina Launches Online Voter Registration System Sisk Chas August 29 2017 After A Year In The Works Online Voter Registration Goes Live In Tennessee wpln org Online Voter Registration Now Open In Vermont Vermont Public October 12 2015 Virginia residents can now register to vote online CBS 6 News Richmond WTVR July 23 2013 The Launch of Online Voter Registration in Wisconsin through MyVote wi gov Automatic Voter Registration a Summary Brennan Center for Justice National Conference of State Legislatures Automatic Voter Registration ncsl org April 22 2019 Retrieved October 7 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k Automatic Voter Registration Brennan Center for Justice July 24 2018 Retrieved October 10 2018 Oregon Secretary of State Oregon Motor Voter Act FAQ sos Oregon gov Retrieved August 31 2017 Automatic Voter Registration Brennan Center for Justice April 1 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Shumlin signs into law automatic voter registration Vermont Business Magazine April 28 2016 Retrieved April 28 2016 Lieutenant Governor Byron Mallott March 7 2016 Proper Filing Letter PDF Alaska Division of Elections Retrieved December 10 2016 Unofficial Results November 8 2016 General Election PDF Alaska Division of Elections November 23 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Cuomo Signs Automatic Voter Registration Measure spectrumlocalnews com Retrieved December 22 2020 Automatic Voter Registration Brennan Center for Justice Retrieved May 12 2016 Illinois governor signs automatic voter registration law Washington Post August 28 2017 Archived from the original on September 1 2017 Retrieved August 31 2017 PFD Automatic Voter Registration amp Updates to Registrations FAQ s PDF Automatic Voter Registration in Connecticut PDF DMV voter registration approved by General Assembly Cape Gazette Bill Detail Delaware General Assembly Automatic Voter Registration Begins at DC DMV on June 26 2018 dmv dmv dc gov Automatic voter registration at DMV begins in IL Automatic Voter Registration League of Women Voters www lwvme org Retrieved January 24 2020 Dwyer Paul State lawmakers get update on automatic voter registration www wabi tv Retrieved January 24 2020 SOM Secretary Benson announces modernized voter registration on National Voter Registration Day www michigan gov Retrieved January 23 2020 Minnesota Secretary Of State Sec Simon Celebrates Signing of Historic New Elections Legislation www sos state mn us Retrieved May 8 2023 TABITHA MUELLER SHANNON MILLER JAZMIN OROZCO RODRIGUEZ KRISTYN LEONARD Nevada voter rolls swell as automatic registration takes effect Elko Daily Free Press The Nevada Independent Retrieved January 24 2020 Michelle Brunetti Post Voter registration now automatic at NJ Motor Vehicle Commission Press of Atlantic City Retrieved January 24 2020 a b c Gov Lujan Grisham enacts same day automated voter registration Office of the Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham Retrieved January 24 2020 Cuomo Signs Automatic Voter Registration Measure Oregon Secretary of State sos oregon gov LIS gt Bill Tracking gt HB235 gt 2020 session lis virginia gov a b Kim Seo Young Silvia 2022 Automatic Voter Reregistration as a Housewarming Gift Quantifying Causal Effects on Turnout Using Movers American Political Science Review 1 8 doi 10 1017 S0003055422000983 ISSN 0003 0554 a b c Update or Change Your Voter Registration USA gov Retrieved October 11 2022 You will need to update or change your voter registration if you Move within your state Change your name Want to change your political party affiliation State Primary Election Types National Conference of State Legislatures January 6 2021 Ponoroff Christopher 2010 Voter Registration in a Digital Age PDF Brennan Center For Justice pp 3 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as Same Day Voter Registration www ncsl org June 11 2011 Bill to end same day registration approved Portland Press Herald August 14 2011 Citizens rise up in Maine Archived November 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Boston Globe November 8 2011 Huff Post Politics Maine Election Day Registration Restored By Voters Timpe Brenden March 14 2013 New Report Higher Voter Turnout Linked to SDR Demos U S think tank Retrieved May 29 2013 America Goes to the Polls 2014 Nonprofit Vote www NonprofitVote org Retrieved August 31 2017 Pillsbury George Johannesen Julian March 2015 America Goes to the Polls 2014 PDF www NonprofitVote org Nonprofit VOTE Brians Craig Leonard Grofman Bernard March 1 2001 Election Day Registration s Effect on U S Voter Turnout Social Science Quarterly 82 1 170 183 doi 10 1111 0038 4941 00015 ISSN 1540 6237 Rhine Staci L January 1 1996 An Analysis of the Impact of Registration Factors on Turnout in 1992 Political Behavior 18 2 171 185 doi 10 1007 BF01498789 JSTOR 586605 S2CID 154760679 Ansolabehere Stephen Konisky David M December 21 2006 The Introduction of Voter Registration and Its Effect on Turnout Political Analysis 14 1 83 100 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 170 1688 doi 10 1093 pan mpi034 ISSN 1047 1987 Burden Barry C Canon David T Mayer Kenneth R Moynihan Donald P January 1 2014 Election Laws Mobilization and Turnout The Unanticipated Consequences of Election Reform American Journal of Political Science 58 1 95 109 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 644 6582 doi 10 1111 ajps 12063 ISSN 1540 5907 Neiheisel Jacob R Burden Barry C July 1 2012 The Impact of Election Day Registration on Voter Turnout and Election Outcomes American Politics Research 40 4 636 664 doi 10 1177 1532673X11432470 ISSN 1532 673X S2CID 10525201 Highton Benjamin September 1 2004 Voter Registration and Turnout in the United States Perspectives on Politics 2 3 507 515 doi 10 1017 S1537592704040307 ISSN 1541 0986 S2CID 145629037 Grumbach Jacob M Hill Charlotte 2021 Rock the Registration Same Day Registration Increases Turnout of Young Voters The Journal of Politics 84 405 417 doi 10 1086 714776 ISSN 0022 3816 S2CID 213194639 Maine towns back Yes on 1 same day voter signup Politics Bangor Daily News October 11 2011 Retrieved December 17 2015 a b News Update Transition to QVF Refresh Recount Request Deadline Elapses and More Michigan Secretary of State Retrieved January 24 2020 a b Reichbach Matthew March 27 2019 Gov signs same day voter registration bill The NM Political Report Retrieved January 24 2020 FAQ Voting Division of Elections Florida Department of State dos myflorida com Millions to the Polls a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax Preregistration for Young Voters www ncsl org Charles H Wesley Education Foundation v Cathy Cox Cox Violated Voter Rights Judge Declares Archived from the original on August 29 2014 a b 2020 Election Calendar PDF Registration Deadlines CT gov Connecticut s Official State Website Deadline looming to switch party before Connecticut primary The Seattle Times May 8 2018 Party affiliation change deadline approaching May 18 2018 a b Deadline to change party affiliation status Primary Elections in Idaho sos idaho gov Friday is deadline to change party affiliation in Idaho Moscow Pullman Daily News a b c Deadlines to change party affiliation in closed primary states PDF Deadline nears to change party affiliation The Hutchinson News a b Deadline to Change Party Affiliation Ahead of 2018 May Primary is Dec 31 Deadline to Change Party Enrollment in Time to Vote in June 12 Primary Party Affiliation in New Hampshire PDF June 5 2018 Deadline to Change Party Affiliation for Voting in the September 11 2018 State Primary Election Division of Elections Reminds Registered Voters of Upcoming April 11 Deadline for Change of Party Affiliation Declaration Forms for Primary Election to be Filed with County Commissioners of Registration Insider NJ April 1 2018 New York Consolidated Laws Election Law ELN 5 304 Findlaw You Have Until February 14th To Change Your Party Registration For The 2020 Presidential Primary Retrieved September 27 2020 Voting and Voter Registration Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved September 1 2022 Frequently Asked Questions State of Rhode Island Board of Elections R I voters have until June 14 to switch party affiliations before Sept 12 primary The Providence Journal a b Wyoming Secretary of State sos wyo gov More cities consider letting 16 year olds vote in local elections Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved January 21 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Voter registration in the United States amp oldid 1176262306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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