Mail-In Voting Is Underway For Service Members, And Their Votes May Be More In Play This Year
American servicemen and women are beginning to cast their votes, and some have a much easier time than other voters who use mail in ballots.Visit KPBS to learn more.
Record numbers are voting by mail. Here’s when states can start processing those ballots.
Record numbers of Americans are voting early and by mail this year, but when these ballots can be processed and counted varies from state to state. Notably, in two key battleground states—Pennsylvania and Wisconsin—election officials cannot begin processing or counting early ballots until Election Day at the earliest. CNN has created a map illustrating when early ballots can be processed.Visit CNN to learn more.
How immigrant voters see the 2020 election
More naturalized citizens are eligible to vote in 2020 than ever before. In this article, six immigrants who are casting their vote in a U.S. presidential for the first time share why voting is important to them and what issues they are considering as they prepare to cast their ballots.Visit CNN to learn more.
Justices allow Alabama to restore ban on curbside voting
In a 5-3 decision, the Supreme Court reversed a lower court’s decision and allowed Alabama counties to ban curbside voting pending an appeal. The decision effectively ensures that the accommodation will not be available for the 2020 election. In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor praised the district court’s ruling as a “modest” and “reasonable accommodation”, noting that the order didn’t require counties to offer curbside voting.Visit the SCOTUSblog to learn more.Image credit: Jake Kitchener via CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
These voters sat out in 2016. Now they could determine the next U.S. president
Millions of Americans who sat out the 2016 election are choosing to vote in 2020. Opinion polls and early voting returns suggest that these voters are backing Democrats by wide margins, but Republicans are working to register and turn out infrequent and first-time voters as well. Some experts believe that President Trump’s polarizing policies and behavior may lead to a higher voter turnout than in 2016. Visit the Reuters to learn more.