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Zwicker, Danielsen & Reynolds-Jackson Bill to Require In-Person Early Voting By Machine for General and Primary Elections Now Law

(TRENTON) – Registered voters will be able to cast their ballots in person at designated polling places before general and primary elections under legislation signed into law Tuesday by Governor Phil Murphy. The measure was previously approved by the full Assembly 58-11-1 and the Senate 28-8 earlier this month.

Under the new law (A-4830) sponsored by Assembly Democrats Andrew Zwicker (D- Middlesex, Somerset, Mercer, Hunterdon) Joseph Danielsen (D-Middlesex, Somerset) and Verlina Reynolds-Jackson (D-), designated polling sites will be available for in-person voting ten days before a general election up until the Sunday before the election. Polls will be open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The early voting period for a non-presidential primary election will be available on the Friday before the primary election until the Sunday before the election. For a presidential primary election, early voting will be available from the Wednesday before the election to the Sunday before. Early voting for May municipal elections will be held on the Friday before the election until the Sunday before.

Each county board of elections will designate five to ten early polling locations, depending on the number of registered voters in the county. The voting process during the early voting period will be conducted using optical-scan voting machines that read hand-marked paper ballots or other voting machines that produce a voter-verifiable paper ballot. Additionally, county boards will create and execute written plans for security of voting machines, ballots and records during the early voting period.

The law is effective immediately and applies to the 2021 general election and general elections thereafter; the 2022 primary election and future primary elections; and, if adopted by a municipal governing body, a municipal election conducted in May 2022 and future municipal elections conducted in May.

The law’s sponsors released the following joint statement:

“Voting must be easy, convenient and accessible; our democracy depends on participation of the people. However, the current system makes it difficult for the people to exercise their constitutional right to vote. Heading to the polls on Election Day may require voters to take off work on a weekday, find care for their children or demand hours of their time. It shouldn’t be this hard to cast a ballot.

          “New Jersey has joined the ranks of two dozen other states that allow in-person early voting, giving voters more opportunities to cast their ballots at their convenience. More people voting strengthens our democracy.”

          The measure now goes to the Senate for further review.