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Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal Please allow 3-5 business days for your ballot to be posted as received. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal The Office of the Secretary of State encourages voters to use an official ballot drop box or to place their ballot in the mail early. To check the status of your voted ballot, sign in to https://t.co/OjsyreFEj6 and click "Ballot Status." — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal See RCW 29A.60.190. The Secretary intends to follow Washington law in administering the election and certifying election results and expects county auditors to do the same. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal Rather, a ballot is timely received under Washington law if it is either received by 8:00 p.m. on election day, or the ballot bears a postmark on or before election day and is received within 21 days of the general election, when the Secretary must certify election results. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal Unlike Wisconsin, Washington law does not require that ballots be received by election day to be counted in the general election. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@reydal Hi there. The U.S. Supreme Court’s Oct. 26, 2020 decision in Democratic National Committee, et al., v. Wisconsin State Legislature, et al., does not affect Washington’s election deadlines. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@adam_babuka @greggutfeld Please see our statement: https://t.co/aHABN3rZLr — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
Statement from our office regarding unverified source of election information: https://t.co/tPZFqcCzHn
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@EmergencyMexico Ballots are not held indefinitely. Ultimately, once a valid ballot is returned for a voter and the signature is verified, it will be counted. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@EmergencyMexico If a ballot is placed on hold, it means the county is waiting to see if the live ballot will be returned before processing any other ballot received for that voter. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
RT @KING5Seattle: Washington Secretary of State says election systems 'fully secure' as Election Day nears https://t.co/DDcemXG9OM — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee Please allow 3-5 business days for your ballot to be posted as received. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee The Office of the Secretary of State encourages voters to use an official ballot drop box or to place their ballot in the mail early. To check the status of your voted ballot, sign in to https://t.co/OjsyreXfHG and click "Ballot Status." — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee See RCW 29A.60.190. The Secretary intends to follow Washington law in administering the election and certifying election results and expects county auditors to do the same. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee Rather, a ballot is timely received under Washington law if it is either received by 8:00 p.m. on election day, or the ballot bears a postmark on or before election day and is received within 21 days of the general election, when the Secretary must certify election results. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee Unlike Wisconsin, Washington law does not require that ballots be received by election day to be counted in the general election. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@Samuraiko @GovInslee The U.S. Supreme Court’s Oct. 26, 2020 decision in Democratic National Committee, et al., v. Wisconsin State Legislature, et al., does not affect Washington’s election deadlines. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@RangerJohnAllen Washington has been a vote-by-mail state since 2011, and does not offer traditional polling place voting. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@RangerJohnAllen Pages 3 and 5 of the Washington State Voters’ Pamphlet provides more information on how to register to vote in person and receive other services at county election office or voting centers. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@pdcjay @Peoples_Pundit @Barnes_Law The only reason a signature will be not be accepted is if it does not match the signature on file, and the county elections office will reach out to the voter with a form to correct their signature before the ballot is rejected. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@pdcjay @Peoples_Pundit @Barnes_Law Washington voters do not register by party and ballots remain inside both the return envelope and secrecy sleeve/envelope during the signature verification process. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@livydude If you did not receive your ballot, please contact your county elections office for more information or to receive a replacement: https://t.co/aRLU2qASpB — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@GOOESQ @iamPSDNYM If the signature does not match, the county elections office will reach out to the voter to give them an opportunity to correct their signature. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@GOOESQ @iamPSDNYM Once a returned ballot is received by county election offices, the signature on the return envelope is checked against the signature on file in the voter’s registration record. The ballot is only accepted if the signature on the return envelope matches the signature on file. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@GOOESQ @iamPSDNYM If someone logs in to https://t.co/OjsyreXfHG and accesses an online ballot, the ballot previously mailed to the voter is placed on hold. It is not invalidated or canceled. Only one active ballot can be live at one time, even if multiple physical ballots have been issued. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@puppetoo7 @BarackObama If you're a registered voter and did not receive your ballot, please contact your county elections office for more information or to receive a replacement or you can print one out by logging in to https://t.co/OjsyreXfHG. Contact info: https://t.co/aRLU2qASpB — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@jeanne01117273 @realDonaldTrump For more information, please contact your county elections office: https://t.co/aRLU2qASpB — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@jeanne01117273 @realDonaldTrump It’s not too late to vote! Voters can return their ballots until 8 p.m. on November 3. If a voter did not receive their ballot, they can contact their county elections office for a replacement or print one out on https://t.co/OjsyreXfHG. — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@KALIBR0 If you are a registered voter and have not received your ballot, please contact your county elections office for a replacement ballot or you can log in to https://t.co/OjsyreXfHG to print one out a replacement. Contact info: https://t.co/aRLU2qASpB — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
RT @kcelections: And we're back up and running! Track your ballot at https://t.co/oJuHh5oOCY. https://t.co/kQaMlPzcl1 — PolitiTweet.org
Washington Office of the Secretary of State @secstatewa
@BrianOKelley1 @WAGOP That said, if a voter needs to make a correction on their ballot before returning it, they can read the ballot instructions for correcting a vote or request a replacement ballot from their county elections office. — PolitiTweet.org