Check your ballot status at VoteWA.gov. Find out what each status means here. If you receive a signature cure form, complete and return it to your county elections office by November 25. County certification is November 26.
Check your ballot status at VoteWA.gov. Find out what each status means here. If you receive a signature cure form, complete and return it to your county elections office by November 25. County certification is November 26.
After 8 pm on Election Day, and not before. Unofficial results get posted to the Secretary of State's website on Election Day and are updated until results are certified.
Yes! As long as they are postmarked by 8 pm on Election Day, ballots will still be accepted.
Your signature is important. Trained election officials compare your signed envelope to your voter registration record. If you check your signature now, does it match the signature on your license, ID, or permit, or the one you used to sign your Voter Registration form?
If the signatures don't match, election officials will contact you to update, or "cure", your signature so they do match. This can happen anytime between when you return your ballot and certification.
Counties use a process called an audit to make sure that our voting systems are working correctly. There are two main types of voting system audits being used after an election in the state: random batch audits, where random batches of ballots are counted by hand and compared to the voting systems, and risk-limiting audits, which use statistics to make sure the winner truly won.
But there's one more type of audit all counties use--reconciliation. This type uses a report which compares records to check that figures are consistent, accurate, and complete.
The results of the General Election become official once they are certified by the County Canvassing Board (county officials who oversee elections within their county) and the Secretary of State. The canvassing board must certify the election 21 days after Election Day, and the Secretary of State has up to 30 days after Election Day.
Yes! Recounts can be triggered in one of two ways: automatically (called a mandatory recount) or paid for upon request (called non-mandatory).