Explore Life Kit
This story comes from Life Kit, NPR's family of podcasts to help make life better — covering everything from exercise to raising kids to making friends. For more, sign up for the newsletter and follow @NPRLifeKit on Twitter.
Every election year, people wonder whether their votes matter. And yet, every election year, important races are decided by the narrowest of margins.
In 2018, 88 seats for statewide legislatures were decided by less than half a percentage point; 16 races were decided by 10 votes or fewer; two were decided by a single vote.
There was one 2017 contest that was tied after a recount and court hearing. State law said the winner would be determined at random. In that case, the name was plucked from a blue glass bowl: a selection that determined control of an entire body of government for a state with 8 million people.
If just one more person had voted, the people could have decided the outcome themselves.
Life Kit is here to help you figure out how to vote.
1. Get registered to vote. Do it early and update your information with your local elections office if you move.
Most voters don't start thinking about registration until Election Day approaches, which is exactly when everyone else is thinking about it. Election officials can be inundated then, or a key deadline may have passed.
Since voting is run by states and also by local governments like counties and townships, the rules are different everywhere. Some states allow registration on the day of an election; others require you to register weeks in advance.
If you're going to be 18 years old on Election Day, you should fill out a voter registration form as soon as possible. Even today.
There are lots of websites that can get you to the right place to register once you tell them where you live; for instance, Vote.org.
The last important note is that you need to change your registration every time you move. Even if you think you're already registered correctly, you can double-check it today.
2. Get informed and make sure the information you're finding online about your candidates and voting rules is legit.
You can start with your local public radio station or newspaper. There are also nonprofits like the League of Women voters that put out candidate guides. Just a look at a candidate's official website or even a social media account like Instagram can tell you a lot about candidates' priorities and the communities they care about.
Voting is not a test! You can bring notes or a voter guide with you to the polls on Election Day so you don't have to memorize everything.
Another hot tip: If you live in the U.S., you can't vote over the phone or the Internet in any U.S. election, and anyone who says otherwise is lying.
3. Go vote! Make sure you plan ahead — know where, when and how you're going to vote. Don't wait until the last minute.
Voting is different all across the country, but there are three basic ways to cast a ballot: in person on Election Day; in person before Election Day; and by mail.
The No. 1 question election officials hear around election time is, "Where do I vote?" There are a number of good websites that will tell you where your polling place is if you plug in your address. Try Vote.org, Rock the Vote or the National Association of Secretaries of State.
— Voting in person on Election Day
- Plan ahead for how and when you'll get to the polling station. Will you drive? Take the bus? Go before work? At lunch? On your way to the gym?
- Precincts are often the most crowded first thing in the morning and at the end of the day. So if it's possible, try to go in the middle of the day.
- You may need identification. Some states require photo ID. These laws have been changing a lot in recent years, so it's worth double-checking. Two websites with good information are Ballotpedia and the National Council of State Legislatures.
- Once you're signed in to your polling place, you're going to cast a ballot, either with paper and a pen or on an electronic machine. Read the instructions, and make sure you fill out the ballot correctly.
- "If it's an oval, fill it out completely. If it's an arrow, make sure that it's a straight line," says Jocelyn Benson, Michigan's secretary of state. If you don't, you run the risk of having your vote thrown out.
— Voting at an early-voting site
- More than half of states allow voting before Election Day. It's a way for people who might have inflexible hours or another reason to vote when it's convenient for them. If you vote early, it counts just the same.
- The big difference even in states that allow early voting is the number of days the early-voting sites are open, so check with your state's secretary of state website.
— Vote by mail and absentee ballot
- The last way to vote, and the way that is becoming increasingly popular, is voting by mail.
- In Oregon, Washington state and Colorado, every registered voter gets mailed a ballot, and many other states allow you to request a mail-in ballot without an excuse. If you do have an excuse for why you can't vote in person, even more states will allow you to request an absentee or mail-in ballot.
A couple of things to watch out for with vote-by-mail ballots:
- The biggest one is deadlines. In some states your ballot has to arrive by a certain date; in others, it has to be postmarked by a certain date. Check your state rules when you get your ballot.
- Some states also have signature match rules for your mail-in ballot, where workers will check to make sure your signature on the ballot matches the signature they have on file, which could have been from many years ago. If you're worried about your signature, you can follow up with your elections supervisor to make sure it's fine.
4. Have the voter hotline number 866-OUR-VOTE burned into your brain or saved in your phone.
That way if something happens, or if you see something sketchy, you have a resource to go to. There might be times when things go wrong. A poll worker says you're not registered. You can't physically access your polling space because there's no wheelchair ramp. Someone is harassing people at your polling place.
That phone number — 866-687-8683 — may be your No. 1 resource. It's the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Under Law hotline for anyone with any sort of voting question or problem. The committee also has hotlines for different languages and field programs in 30 different states.
If for whatever reason you show up at your polling place and you aren't on the rolls, or even if you show up and you don't have the proper ID to vote, you'll usually be asked to vote with a provisional ballot.
This is a ballot that is exactly what it sounds like: Something needs to be worked out before your vote counts. You might have to bring a document to your election official within a certain time period, or your election supervisor might have to double-check that you actually are registered.
But it does not mean your vote won't count.
Another problem that gets a lot of media attention is voter intimidation: Someone is actually at a polling place harassing people trying to vote.
This behavior is illegal everywhere.
You can call the lawyers committee hotline to report this sort of behavior, or you can file a complaint with the Justice Department.
Voting should be easy and accessible, and anyone who is making voting hard is in the wrong.
"how" - Google News
October 22, 2019 at 11:03AM
https://ift.tt/31DVTNQ
How To Vote, Where To Vote And When To Vote - NPR
"how" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2MfXd3I
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "How To Vote, Where To Vote And When To Vote - NPR"
Post a Comment