Early voting for Michigan’s February 27 primary election starts Saturday, February 17 and runs through February 25.
Early voting was approved by Michigan voters with the passage of Proposal 2 in 2022. For the first time in a statewide election, voters across Michigan will be able to cast a ballot in person before Election Day.
Eligible Michigan voters will be able to cast a ballot at a early voting location. Voters who received an absentee ballot will also be able to turn that ballot in at an early voting site.
“With early voting, voters are able to actually take their ballot, vote it in their clerk’s office or satellite office, wherever that early voting site is, and then feed it into a tabulator,” said Melinda Billingsley of Voters Not Politicians, a group that supported Prop 2, in 2022. “Instead of voters waiting to see when their absentee ballot got counted, they are seeing their vote be tabulated right in front of them, the exact same way that voters do on Election Day.”
Billingsley said the new options will help cut back on long lines on Election Day.
“One thing we hope to see is that by spreading this traffic out, we see the whole process be a lot less stressful and go a lot more smoothly for voters and also our clerks and election workers,” she said.
Some clerks have expressed concerns about staffing. Billingsley hopes that efforts to recruit poll workers will help.
“Clerks can partner with a neighboring community or opt into a county level plan to provide early voting,” she said, pointing to a pilot program in Oakland County.
“Election workers said that everything went smoothly and voters really appreciated that option. So especially for our smaller local municipalities, we really think that using something like that countywide option can really alleviate some of those concerns they have,” she said.
You can find your early voting location here.
This story was originally published by Michigan Public. Read more here: https://www.michiganpublic.org/politics-government/2024-02-16/heres-what-to-know-about-early-in-person-voting-that-starts-saturday