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Last-minute voting tips for the harried


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  Voter hotlines by state

Three dozen states and the District of Columbia have hotline phone numbers to help voters. This list is provided by the National Association of Secretaries of State, a nonpartisan organization that represents the nation's chief state election officials.

Alabama                   (800) 274-8683
Alaska                      (888) 465-5857
Arizona                     (877) THE-VOTE
Arkansas                   (800) 247-3312
California                   (800) 345-VOTE
D.C.                           (866) DC-VOTES
Florida                       (866) 308-6739
Hawaii                       (800) 442-VOTE
Illinois                      (866) 513-1121
Indiana                     (866) 461-VOTE
Kansas                      (800) 262-8683
Kentucky                   (502) 573-7100
Louisiana                   (800) 883-2805
Maine                        (207) 624-7650
Maryland                   (800) 222-VOTE
Massachusetts          (800) 462-8683
Michigan                    (800) 292-5973
Minnesota                 (877) 600-VOTE
Mississippi                 (800) 829-6786
Missouri                    (800) NOW-VOTE
Montana                   (888) 884-VOTE
New Jersey               (877) NJ-VOTER
New Mexico              (800) 477-3632
New York                  (800) 458-3453
North Carolina           (866) 522-4723
North Dakota             (800) 352-0867
Ohio                            (877) VOTE-VRI
Oregon                       (866) OREVOTE
Pennsylvania             (877) VOTESPA
South Dakota             (888) 703-5328
Texas                         (800) 252-8683
Utah                            (800) 995-VOTE
Vermont                    (800) 439-8683
Virginia                     (800) 552-9745
Washington               (800) 448-4881
West Virginia             (866) SOS-VOTE
Wisconsin                  (866) VOTEWIS

Provisional ballots
Put simply, a regular ballot is what you want to cast. A provisional ballot is the next best thing, but not ideal because of the complications it brings with it.

Voters who show up at the wrong precinct, for example, or without the correct identification, or whose names don’t appear in the poll books, may wind up being told they cannot cast a regular ballot, but that they can vote a provisional ballot.

A provisional ballot is not actually counted until election officials determine that the voter who cast it is eligible to vote.

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That’s a process that can take days, sometimes longer. Provisional voting also is handled differently in each state, and in some cases, differently by counties within the same state. That means there is no guarantee a provisional ballot will wind up being counted.

“In some states, if you cast a ballot in the wrong precinct, it will not be counted,” said Greene. “While in other states, if you cast the ballot in the wrong precinct, but say you’re in the right county, they will count your vote for the races higher up on the ballot, such as president and statewide races, that you’d be eligible to vote for anywhere throughout the state.

“I think most election officials see provisional ballots as a last resort ballot, a good backup to have, but not something you want to overly rely on because of the voter eligibility issues that arise afterward,” he said.

Don't hestiate to ask questions
Wilson, of the League of Women Voters, said voters who are told at the polls they will need to vote a provisional ballot should ask for an explanation of why.

“Because, if that reason is that the voter is at the wrong precinct, the voter needs to get themselves to the right precinct, or they run a high probability that their provisional ballot won’t count,” she said.

If a voter is at the correct polling place, but registration information can’t be found, the voter should insist upon getting a provisional ballot, rather than walking away without voting, Wilson said.

“Voters need to take that initiative because poll workers are busy on Election Day, and giving out a provisional ballot is a little bit of extra work for them, and they might not necessarily suggest that,” she said.

She also recommends voters ask to speak with the chief election official at the polling precinct if there are questions.

“If they say, “Let me talk to the chief person at this precinct,’ they’ll get the right person,” she said. “And that person does have additional training above and beyond what the typical poll worker has. Very often, speaking with that person can resolve the issue.”

Photo IDs
Three states — Florida, Indiana and Georgia — require photo identification by all voters, something that’s new for Indiana and Georgia voters in a presidential election.

And, the number of states requiring all voters to show some form of ID — be it photo ID or non-photo — has gone from 11 to 25 since the federal Help America Vote Act was passed in 2002, according to electionline.org.

In Georgia, you will have to show one of the following kinds of photo IDs: a state driver’s license (even if it’s expired); a state or federal government-issued photo ID; a valid U.S. passport; an employee ID card with your photograph that has been issued by any branch of the state or federal government; a valid U.S. military ID card; a valid tribal ID card.

In Indiana, acceptable identification includes a driver’s license, passport, military ID or photo ID from the state’s Department of Driver Services. The “criteria” for acceptable IDs are that the name on the photo ID you use has to match the voter registration record; the ID itself needs to have an expiration date that is after Nov. 4; and the ID has to be issued by either the state or federal government.

In Florida, a photo ID that also shows your signature is required, and is checked at the polls “solely to confirm the voter’s identity,” and “not to verify the voter’s ID number or address,” according to the Florida Department of State. “The photograph on the ID is compared to the person standing before the poll worker, and the signature on the ID is compared to the signature on record.”

Four states — Hawaii, Louisiana, Michigan and South Dakota — ask voters for a photo ID. If they don’t have one with them, they can sign an affidavit “attesting to their identity and cast a regular ballot,” according to electionline.org.

Eighteen states require voter ID including photo and non-photo IDs. Those states are: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Colorado, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming.

First-time voters
First-time voters in Kansas and Pennsylvania will need to have “some form of photo or non-photo ID” with them when they go to the polls, said Greene, of electionline.org.

All first-time voters who registered to vote by mail, rather than in person, will need to make sure they have photo ID with them at the polls, no matter which state they live in, said Stimson of the National Association of Secretaries of State.

“And the list of IDs that are permissible under federal law is very long, and includes things like a utility bill or a paycheck, because it shows your name and address. But a government-issued photo ID should also suffice,” she said.

Registering on Election Day
It may seem strange, but there are eight states that allow Election Day-registration. They are: Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

The state of North Dakota does not require registration to vote. But if you try to show up there and cast a ballot, you’ll need to have ID and proof showing you’re a legal state resident and have lived in the voting precinct for 30 days before the election, according to the Secretary of State’s office there.

And, “for the purposes of voting, a person may have only one residence, shown by an actual fixed permanent dwelling, or any other abode.”

One state will not have any lines to deal with, or ID issues at the polls. That’s Oregon, where for the third time, voters are casting their presidential ballots by mail.

© 2009 msnbc.com Reprints


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