In Washington County, officials chose not to notify voters that their ballots were being rejected. In a victory for voting rights groups, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled against that policy.
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. This news analysis was originally distributed in Votebeat’s free weekly newsletter.
The Texas Association of County Election Officials surveyed its members Sept. 2 and found that county officials struggled with the system, but noted that TEAM representatives were helpful and ...
State Rep. Scott Krug, a veteran of battles over water policy, sees a chance to build bipartisan consensus on election reforms. “I don’t give a s— about getting my head kicked in by both sides,” he ...
Lawmakers hope to unite on a proposal that would speed up election results and reduce opportunities for misinformation.
Some states submitted a limited data set, excluding sensitive personal information, but Justice Department is demanding more.
A longstanding state law allows officials to remove ballots at random to iron out discrepancies in tallies. “Every one of those ballots — it’s an American citizen’s hopes and dreams,” says one former ...
Michael Gableman, a former state Supreme Court justice, now finds himself facing punishment from the very court he served on.
In Livonia, the pay for a day’s election work starts at $170 a day. Just down the highway in Detroit, it’s $300.
A panel of judges from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes’ rules ...
Experts say the claim for monetary compensation as a remedy for a voting rights violation is increasingly rare — and unlikely to succeed.
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