And I'm (Almost) BACK IN THE GAME!

Thanks to amazing medical professionals, patient friends/colleagues and an incredibly supportive family, I’m ready to come off the “disabled list” … blogging, electiongeekery and shenanigans resume Monday, March 28!

Read More

When You're Seventeen: Controversy Erupts Over Voting in Ohio Primary

Controversy (and the inevitable lawsuit) has erupted in Ohio, where plaintiffs – including the Sanders campaign – are suing the Secretary of State over a rule that says 17-year-olds who will be 18 on Election Day in November cannot cast ballots for President in next week’s March 15 primary. They say that’s disenfranchisement; he says it’s the law.

Read More

Long Lines at New ASU Polling Place Prompt Questions, Changes

Student turnout for early voting at Appalachian State University overwhelmed the on-campus site, resulting in long lines – likely the result of poor planning that put all voters (including same-day registrants) in the same line for check-in. The problem has been resolved but it’s a useful lesson for jurisdictions across the country as November (and its high turnout) approaches.

Read More

Jeremy Epstein on "My Day as a Pollworker"

Voting technology expert Jeremy Epstein is one of those election geeks who “walks the talk” as a pollworker … he recently shared a short summary of his day at the polls, which is an excellent peek inside the polling place on Election Day and a useful preview of the issues everyone at the polls will face this fall.

Read More

New Stateline Piece Updates Voting Machine Issue Nationwide

Stateline’s Sarah Breitenbach has a fantastic look at the subject of voting technology and the policies, including budgeting, that support it. It’s a great piece that is worth bookmarking both as a survey of where we are but also as an introduction to this crucial issue for the growing number of people who are beginning to pay attention in this presidential election year.

Read More

Minneapolis Launches Tenant Registration Information Requirement

Effective March 1, rental tenants in the City of Minneapolis will get voter registration information from their landlord when moving into a new place. The info, which will be available in a number of different languages in print and online, is designed to close the gap between eligibility and registration for young people, people of color and other groups who move frequently.

Read More

California SOS Padilla and CACEO President Kelley Op-Ed on Funding for Voting Technology

Last week, two key leaders in the nation’s most populous state – California Secretary of State Alex Padilla and Orange County Registrar Neal Kelley, also president of the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials – co-authored an op-ed calling on the Golden State to address the growing need to fund upgrades to the state’s aging voting technology.

Read More