Roughly 50,000 registered Iowa Democrats, 35,000 Republicans, and 35,000 no-party voters have requested but not yet returned absentee ballots. The Iowa Secretary of State’s Office sent out a press release yesterday on deadlines for returning those ballots. Excerpt:
Absentee ballots returned by mail and received in the county auditor’s office by 9 p.m. on Election Day, Tuesday, November 4 are eligible for counting. Absentee ballots returned by mail and received by the auditors office after the polls close must be postmarked by November 3 or earlier and be received by the auditor before noon on Monday, November 10. Mail is not always postmarked so it is important to return the ballot as soon as possible. Absentee ballots can also be returned to the county auditor’s office in person no later than 9 p.m. on Tuesday, November 4.
I would not simply drop a ballot in the mail at this point. The risk of it arriving late without a postmark is too great. Either take it to the post office and demand a postmark on the envelope, or hand-deliver it to the county auditor’s office.
If you make a mistake while filling out your absentee ballot, or your ballot gets lost or damaged, or you realize after mailing that you forgot the secrecy or affidavit envelopes, call your county auditor’s office. In many cases you will be able to come in, sign a form to void your original absentee ballot, and fill out a new absentee ballot right there.
I’ve enclosed below the latest data on absentee ballots requested and returned statewide and in each of Iowa’s four Congressional districts. All figures come from the Iowa Secretary of State’s Office. Click here for previous tables going back to September 22.
Absentee ballots requested by Iowa voters as of October 29, 2014
Congressional district | Democrats | Republicans | no-party voters | Libertarian | Iowa Green | total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IA-01 | 54,156 | 41,413 | 31,011 | 152 | 65 | 126,797 |
IA-02 | 58,242 | 41,534 | 29,992 | 155 | 90 | 130,013 |
IA-03 | 52,722 | 47,032 | 23,757 | 154 | 61 | 123,726 |
IA-04 | 38,540 | 50,661 | 23,050 | 99 | 39 | 112,379 |
statewide | 203,650 | 180,640 | 107,810 | 560 | 255 | 492,915 |
Absentee ballots received by Iowa county auditors as of October 29, 2014
Congressional district | Democrats | Republicans | no-party voters | Libertarian | Iowa Green | total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IA-01 | 41,388 | 33,855 | 21,292 | 102 | 38 | 96,675 |
IA-02 | 44,008 | 34,570 | 20,120 | 96 | 65 | 98,859 |
IA-03 | 37,197 | 36,377 | 14,677 | 89 | 35 | 88,375 |
IA-04 | 29,681 | 41,086 | 15,855 | 62 | 23 | 86,707 |
statewide | 152,274 | 145,888 | 71,944 | 349 | 161 | 370,616 |
1 Comment
interesting post on where the early votes are coming from
Interesting readfrom Nate Cohn on The Upshot.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10…
natewithglasses Fri 31 Oct 8:00 AM