Not Here, There: Georgia Primary May Need Do-Over After Voters Mis-Assigned

A close primary election in Georgia may need to be re-run after the discovery that a potentially decisive number of voters were mis-assigned to the wrong district and given the wrong ballot.It’s an increasingly familiar problem… there’s a reason why the “Election Administrator’s Prayer” asks that “the margins be wide”; you never know when a close election might bring problems like this to the surface.

Read More

EAC to Host Data Summit in Philadelphia July 12

The U.S. Election Assistance Commission will host its 2018 Election Data Summit next week on July 12 in Philadelphia, PA in cooperation with the Pennsylvania Department of State. The agenda is packed with interesting topics and speakers and so it will be a great day and should have election officials (and geeks!) from across the nation in attendance.

Read More

electionlineWeekly on Ranked Choice Voting in Maine and New Mexico

The latest electionlineWeekly has a story about Maine’s maiden statewide voyage with ranked choice voting as well as a look at its growing popularity in New Mexico – and its future in other communities across the country. Maine’s experience – which appears to have been successful despite near-constant litigation and a legislature seemingly hellbent on blocking its implementation – could be a signal to other states and communities that ranked choice voting can work there as well, if there is sufficient planning (and budget!) and even a modicum of support from policymakers.

Read More

Maine SoS Matt Dunlap Wins Court Case Seeking PACEI Records

Maine Secretary of State Matt Dunlap won the latest round in his fight with the former Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity after a federal judge ordered the Commission to disclose materials related to its work. Pending an appeal, the order will either generate a trove of documents that suggests where PACEI was heading before it was disbanded, or there will be so few materials that claims of “initial findings” will be revealed to have been vastly overstated.

Read More

North Carolina Moves Toward Putting Voter ID on November Ballot

North Carolina voters could be asked to weigh in this November on a proposed amendment to the state Constitution requiring photo voter ID, thanks to an effort currently underway in the state legislature. Minnesota voters rejected a similar vote in 2012 after a campaign that looked past the general sense that “everyone needs ID” and focused instead on the practical impact of an ID requirement. It looks like it will be another long, contentious summer and fall on Tobacco Road.

Read More

Maryland Programming Problems Could Affect Nearly 19,000 Voters on Eve of Election Day

Over the weekend, Maryland announced that it had discovered an election-eve issue with its voter list that could force nearly 19,000 voters to cast provisional ballots during Tuesday’s state primary. Obviously this isn’t what state officials wanted right before the primary, but these problems have occurred in other states before and seem to be an occasional (unwelcome) byproduct of the effort to streamline the voting experience.

Read More

The Voting Information Project Moves to Democracy Works

On Monday, the news broke that the Voting Information Project will be transferred from The Pew Charitable Trusts to its new organizational home at Democracy Works, Inc. There is no better home for the work going forward than Democracy Works, and I can’t wait to see what they have in store for VIP in the years ahead.

Read More

Double Trouble: NV’s Clark County Issues Result in Duplicate Votes, Second Election [UPDATED]

Nevada’s Clark County (Las Vegas) is scrambling after discovering that 43 voters cast duplicate ballots in its recent primary election – and planning a new election in one close race that may have been affected by the problem. Needless to say, any problem with an election is difficult for an election office – and problems that require a new election are all the more painful. [UPDATED with clarification 6/21/2018 2:45pm]

Read More

Senate Rules Committee to Hold Hearing Today on Election Security

This morning, the U.S. Senate Committee on Rules and Administration will hold a hearing entitled ELECTION SECURITY PREPARATIONS: A STATE AND LOCAL PERSPECTIVE. The hearing is designed, in part, to try to spur movement in Congress on election security after the latest setback: failure to get Secure Elections Act language included in the National Defense Authorizations Act.

Read More