Introducing the Voting Information Project
Americans are looking for easy answers to three basic questions:

How do I find out if I'm registered to vote?
Where do I vote?
What's on the ballot?

State and local elections officials can now spend less time and money gathering and sharing voting information. In partnership with a group of state elections officials, the Voting Information Project developed a standard format to easily collect and distribute voting information. Using this open and non-proprietary data format, elections officials can share their voting information securely. Follow the links below or visit About the Project to learn more about how you can help voters get easy access to essential voting information.



Learn more about how your agency can standardize and share information using the Voting Information Project's open format.
Join the discussion.

Learn more about how you can make information in the Voting Information Project's open format available on your website or learn how to develop tools that help others access and share the information.
Join the discussion.

On Super Tuesday 2008, over half (56%) of the calls to Election Protection hotlines concerned problems with the polling place, while another third (33%) concerned registration problems. A week later on "Potomac Tuesday", approximately nine out of 10 calls to the same hotlines reported polling place or registration problems – with some voters reporting having been sent to the wrong polling place.
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