Vote Early This Weekend

Beat the Rush: Voting Centers are Open Saturday & Sunday

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Image: Twitter DC Elections/@Vote4DC

The Primary Election is June 21. This is where voters affiliated with particular parties choose their candidates for office in the General Election.

But you don’t need to wait — DC early Vote Centers are open both Saturday, June 18 as well as Sunday, June 19 from 8:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.. They will be closed on Monday, June 20 for the Federal Holiday and back open on Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. for DC Primary Election Day. 90 Vote Centers will be open on June 21.

“I voted” stickers arrayed on a table at the Eastern Market poll, Tuesday, Nov. 3. E.O’Gorek/CCN

You can vote at any vote center, no matter where you live —the days of assigned polling places are evidently gone. Ward 6 has three early vote centers: Walker Jones Middle School (1125 New Jersey Ave. NW), King Greenleaf Recreation Center (201 N St. SW) and Sherwood Recreation Center (640 Tenth St. NE). But you can find the full list here!

The General Election takes place November 8, and will involve the candidates selected by each party and those running as independents. But DC is largely a blue city, so the primary elections usually function as the main event.

All voters who registered by May 31 are eligible to vote in their party primaries. The DC Board of Elections (DCBOE) started mailing ballots to voters May 16. You can mail those back immediately and track them online (https://votedc.ballottrax.net/voter/), but they must be postmarked by June 21 and received by June 28.

Alternatively, ballot drop boxes opened May 27. You can drop them off at one of the 6 Ward 6 locations (see list) or search for one on your route here.

If you are a registered voter, you won’t need any particular identification to vote, unless you are doing same-day voter registration. Then you’ll need to bring proof of residence. That can include a DC-issued ID (i.e., driver’s license or REAL id), a government check or paycheck, a bank statement, a current utility bill, a lease, or any official document that includes your name and current District address.

A ballot drop box sits outside Payne Elementary School (1445 C St. SE). Photo: E. O’Gorek/ccn

If you are incarcerated, regardless of the offense, you can vote. If you are under court supervision or residing at a halfway house after release, you can vote.

If an Absentee Ballot was mailed and you were released from incarceration before it arrived, you may vote at any Voting Center during Early Voting or at any Vote Center on Election Day. Upon your release, please contact the Board of Elections to make any updates to your mailing address.

DCBOE usually posts results for mail and early in-person shortly after polling places close on Election Day, followed by the day-of results. But nothing is official until results are certified on July 8.

Limited races: Councilmembers for Ward 1, 3, 5 and 6; Ward-based committee members of the DC Democratic State Committee.

Citywide races: mayor, attorney general, DC Council Chair, At-Large councilmembers, US Shadow Representative, Delegate to Congress (Note: The Full Minimum Wage for Tipped Workers Amendment Act, a referendum on whether DC should get rid of the tipped wage scale, has been pushed to the November General Election).

Find out more about the June Primaries by visiting dcboe.org/Elections/2022-Elections