Kansas will depart from its typical presidential caucus format and instead hold a presidential preference primary this year, and that election is set for Tuesday, March 19.
Feb. 20 was the deadline to register to vote or update your voter registration information, to change your party affiliation or to apply for an advance ballot to vote by mail.
What does this mean?
Kansas Reflector reported that the primary is expected to provide Kansas’ political parties with higher voter turnout rates, though some have expressed concern that the primary will be expensive and confusing to voters who are used to the caucus system.
The presidential preference primary can only happen with a vote by the Kansas Legislature. In 2023, a bill to hold the primary passed 86-32 in the House and 28-12 in the Senate. This is not a permanent change, though legislators could vote to do this again for a future presidential election.
Voters will not be directly selecting the party candidates.
“It is a ‘preference’ primary because it is an election where the vote totals are given to a political party to allocate delegates to candidates at the national convention,” according to the Douglas County clerk’s office.
Kansas’ Democratic and Republican parties each have 39 delegates to represent the state at the parties’ national conventions, coming up in August and July, respectively.
The only previous state-run presidential preference primaries in Kansas have been in 1980 and 1992, according to the clerk’s office.
Who can vote?
Registered voters who are affiliated with either the Democratic or Republican party may vote in the presidential primary, according to the Douglas County clerk’s office.
Voters who wish to change their affiliation to the other party needed to do so by Feb. 20, but registered voters who have not declared an affiliation with a party may do so at any point up to and including on Election Day, according to the clerk’s office.
If you need to check your affiliation, you can do so via the Secretary of State’s Voter View website, myvoteinfo.voteks.org/voterview.
Who’s on the ballot?
Democratic candidates on the ballot are incumbent Joseph R. Biden Jr.; Jason Michael Palmer; Dean Phillips; and Marianne Williamson.
Republican candidates on the ballot are Ryan L. Binkley; Ron DeSantis; Nikki R. Haley; and Donald J. Trump.
Each ballot will also include a “None of the names shown” option, according to the Kansas Secretary of State’s office.
Candidates had to either pay a $10,000 filing fee or present a petition with 5,000 signatures of registered Kansas voters of the applicable political party.
How do I vote?
• Vote on Election Day:
Voters should go to their regular polling places between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 19 to cast their ballots on Election Day.
There are some changes to regular polling places. Douglas County voters can check on their precinct’s polling location at this link.
Voters will need a valid photo ID to cast their ballots in person.
Visit this link and click the green bookmark icon to add this election to your Google, Apple, Outlook or other calendar.
• Vote by mail:
All ballots must be received by the elections office by 7 p.m. Tuesday. There is no three-day grace period for ballots to arrive in the mail later this week. (In typical elections, ballots that are postmarked on or before Election Day are still accepted through the rest of the week.)
If you received an advance ballot to vote by mail, you can drop it off at any polling place on Election Day, or in one of the county’s three secure ballot boxes — the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St.; the county elections headquarters, 711 W. 23rd St.; or the county treasurer’s satellite office, 2000 W. 31st St., Suite B.
What about the rest of the 2024 election?
There will be a primary election on Tuesday, Aug. 6, and a general election on Tuesday, Nov. 5. The actual vote for president will be on Nov. 5.
There will be a lot of important local races on Douglas County voters’ ballots.
Check this page, lawrencekstimes.com/election2024, for more information, resources and ongoing coverage of local races.
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Note: We are republishing much of this post from an article that ran in February as an Election Day reminder for voters.
This post is by the Lawrence Times news team.
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