In-Person Early Primary Voting Begins May 1

Early in-person voting in all 55 counties for West Virginia’s 2024 primary election runs from Wednesday, May 1 through Saturday, May 11.

Early in-person voting in all 55 counties for West Virginia’s 2024 primary election runs from Wednesday, May 1 through Saturday, May 11. 

The Secretary of State’s office said all counties will offer early voting during regular weekday hours at all county courthouses or courthouse annexes, and on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

Several counties will have additional community voting locations that are easily accessible to voters. Days and hours for community early voting locations will vary by county.

“Early voting is a convenient opportunity for many West Virginia voters to cast a ballot when it fits their schedule,” said Secretary of State Mac Warner, who is on the Republican primary ballot for governor. “With 10 days of early voting, which include two Saturdays, voters have plenty of opportunities to plan and participate safely and securely in our primary election.”

To find early voting locations in all 55 counties, click here.

Primary election day is Tuesday, May 14. 

Tuesday Last Day To Register To Vote For Primaries

April 23 is the last day for West Virginia residents to register to vote in the state’s primary election May 14. Early voting will be held in person from May 1 to May 11.

April 23 is the last day for residents to register to vote in West Virginia’s primary election.

The primary election will be held May 14, with in-person early voting from May 1 to May 11.

West Virginia residents who live overseas, are deployed abroad for military service or have certain disabilities may be eligible to receive an absentee mail-in ballot.

Mail-in ballots must be requested by May 8, six days before the primary election. They must be mailed and postmarked by May 14, and received by election officials by May 19 in order to count.

To preview your primary ballot and review the candidates and measures you can vote for, visit the West Virginia Secretary of State’s sample ballot lookup tool.

For more information on registering to vote in West Virginia, visit the secretary of state’s website.

For more information on absentee voting in West Virginia, visit GoVoteWv.com, which is published through the secretary of state’s office.

Find Your Sample Ballot With New Virtual Tool

A new online tool shows residents the candidates and measures they can vote on in this year’s primary election in advance, so that they can take more time to consider their decisions.

Based on address and district information, a new online tool provides West Virginia residents with a sample ballot for this year’s primary election so they can prepare to make voting decisions in advance.

The Sample Ballot Lookup Tool was launched Tuesday by West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner. In a press release, Warner said he hopes the tool will allow residents to make more informed decisions.

“We are asking voters to take a little time to educate themselves before they go to vote to learn more about the candidates and the initiatives that will be on their ballot,” he said. “The online search tool for Sample Ballots is safe and accurate to use.”

This year, West Virginia’s primary election will be held May 14, with in-person early voting beginning May 1.

The deadline to register to vote in the primary election is April 23.

To view your sample ballot, visit the Secretary of State’s Sample Ballot Lookup Tool online.

For more information on registering to vote in West Virginia, visit the Secretary of State’s website.

Manchin’s Retirement Leaves A Statewide Void For Democrats

The retirement of U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin marks the end of an era, as Manchin is the last Democrat to hold statewide office in West Virginia. Sam Workman, director of the Institute for Policy Research and Public Affairs at West Virginia University, spoke to WVPB about what Manchin’s departure means for Democrats and what it would take to fill the void he’ll leave.

The retirement of U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin marks the end of an era, as Manchin is the last Democrat to hold statewide office in West Virginia. 

Sam Workman, director of the Institute for Policy Research and Public Affairs at West Virginia University, spoke to reporter Curtis Tate about what Manchin’s departure means for Democrats and what it would take to fill the void he’ll leave.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Tate: Can a Democrat still win a statewide office in West Virginia? What would it take?

Workman: I think the West Virginia that used to exist, where a Democrat talked a lot about coal, and especially coal families and what we were going to do for coal families, I don’t think that’s the West Virginia that exists. The West Virginia that exists is about recreational economy issues. It’s about health care. It’s about the manufacturing and the sort of energy projects we’re going to do in the western part of the state. And I think for a Democrat to win, they have to slot in those issues and be a little more forward looking than your standard, progressive sort of challenger to Manchin of recent times. 

Manchin’s an older sort of politician who could kind of go at people with the elements of policy and whatnot. I don’t think that’s as viable a strategy anymore. I think the Democrats in the state really need to think about how their platform relates to the investments and the jobs that we have right now, not the ones we used to have. 

Tate: Who steps in to fill the void Manchin leaves?

Workman: I’m going to give you a two part answer to that question. The first part is that looking to compare anyone to Joe Manchin, that gives them a tough road ahead, because Joe Manchin, in my lifetime, is the best politician. Now understand what I’m saying. Not saying that everyone agrees with him, rah rah. But as just a sheer politician, he’s the best politician the state has witnessed in my lifetime. I don’t think (Robert) Byrd or (Jay) Rockefeller could have held that seat as long as he did. He understands politics on the ground in difficult situations, probably better and has a better feel for it than anyone that I have come across on either side of the aisle, frankly. So that’s part one. 

Part two is I think, no one steps up to the Democrats and fills those shoes in this election cycle. When we talk about the reemergence of the Democratic Party in West Virginia, I think you’re talking about something that is two, three cycles away, in terms of elections. Because we do have good sort of politicians at lower levels. If you take the state party chair, Mike Pushkin, a very prominent figure, in general does a good job of sort of navigating the waters of politics here on the ground. This guy (Zach) Shrewsbury, from my home county of Fayette County, he’s got a little more wind in his sails now with Manchin out of there. I still think folks like that run into the problem of sort of thinking about the West Virginia they grew up in and not the one that exists today. Steve Williams, the mayor from Huntington, he’s kind of a little late to statewide politics. But he’s fairly well known. He’s been a great mayor of Huntington. So there are people. I guess what I’m saying is there are people out there. 

Tate: Gov. Jim Justice is likely the successor to Manchin. But he’s got to get through a Republican primary with Rep. Alex Mooney. Won’t that expose many of his vulnerabilities?

Workman: Sort of the godsend to the governor, if he gets through the primary, Manchin was no longer waiting on the other side, which he most certainly would have. And, as I think I may have said to you at some point before, each of those folks would have been the best politician the other has ever faced, for certain. So it’s very hard for me to see the governor not getting through the primary. And that’s not a statement about representative Mooney, he’s a very able, obviously very able and agile politician, because he took down Rep. (David) McKinley, largely in his own district. So Mooney has the acumen to make it tough. But the governor is so entrenched in the minds of the state. 

He’s also entrenched in national Republican minds. The pandemic and the fallout from it gave the governor a lot of airtime and space and national politics. He was on all the big shows, at one point or another, talking about our vaccine programs, which were initially very successful, all this sort of stuff. But it’s very hard, barring health issues, barring financial or legal troubles, or something we don’t know yet. It’s very hard to see the governor – it would be a monumental collapse, I think, for the governor to lose this. I think Gov. Justice is probably our next senator and I just do not see in the span of one year, a Democrat making up all that space from such a low starting point for Democratic politics in the state. It’s very difficult to see that.

Tate: Joe Manchin is already a national figure, if not a household name. So what purpose would running for president as a third-party candidate serve for him?

Workman: I think it’s also the case that becoming a national figure may put him in a spot to take a cabinet position of some sort. I know if I were a betting person, I would say he would love probably to be energy secretary and have some measure of authority over how all of the money for energy transitions that he has secured, have some ability to direct those funds on the ground. So I think it comes from both believing that that middle was there, genuinely because it’s who he is. And it’s how he’s won. It’s how he’s built his political career.

But I also think there might be some angling here to be part of a presidential administration as a cabinet member or whatnot. So we all know, it’s almost structurally impossible for a third party candidate to win, right? Our elections are structured in a way that really prevents it. It’s why we’ve not really seen it.

All Registered West Virginia Voters Can Cast Absentee Ballots In Primary Election Due To COVID-19

All registered voters will receive an absentee ballot application for the May 12 primary, according to the West Virginia Secretary of State’s office on Thursday. 

Staff for Mac Warner said clerks throughout the state will mail roughly 1.2 million applications for absentee ballots by the week of April 6, to those already registered to vote. 

There will still be in-person voting at the end of April and in May, despite a stay at home order from the governor on Monday, March 23.

But, due to that order and an earlier State of Emergency declaration, Warner says every registered voter in West Virginia can vote in the upcoming primary from home. 

West Virginians have until April 21 to register to vote. According to Director of Communications Mike Queen, county clerks can mail a ballot up to 48 hours after an application is processed. 

The secretary of state’s office will reimburse county clerks for the costs this will incur, using a combination of state funds and money from the federal Help America Vote Act.

Registered voters will have until May 6 to send their absentee ballot applications back to their county clerk’s office, either by mail, fax or scan-and-email. Queen said that includes taking a photo of the application from a cellular device and emailing the pictures to the county clerk.  

Once an application is received and approved, clerks will mail voters an absentee ballot. 

Voters must return absentee ballots to their county clerks with a postmark on or before May 12. Postage will be paid for on the ballots. 

The last day to register to vote for primary elections is April 21. Early, in-person voting is still scheduled from April 29 to May 9. In-person voting is scheduled to take place on May 12. 

Queen said Thursday the office doesn’t anticipate having to cancel or reschedule in-person options at this time, although he said county clerks are preparing to facilitate social distancing options. 

“We are purchasing hand sanitizers and cleaning supplies,” Queen said. “We’re also taking precautions for the health and safety of social distancing, not only for the poll workers but for the voters as well.”

For the 9,000 poll workers who staff West Virginia’s 1,723 precincts, Queen said his office estimates roughly 1,000 to 2,000 volunteers are senior citizens, who are more susceptible to the coronavirus. The secretary of state’s office is encouraging more low-risk people between the ages of 18 and 40 to apply.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

Facing Coronavirus, W.Va. Secretary Of State Expands Access To Absentee Ballots For May 12 Primary

 

As other states announce plans to delay primary elections over the concern of the growing coronavirus pandemic, West Virginia still plans to hold elections Tuesday, May 12. 

The date is still almost two months away, but state officials say they’re taking precautions to ensure a safe election season.  

West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner said during a press conference Wednesday his office will “ramp up the absentee process,” so people don’t necessarily have to visit the polls to cast their vote.  

In West Virginia, voters are not automatically eligible to vote absentee and must apply to receive their ballots, based on immobility, out-of-state travel, military service abroad or a serious medical reason. 

Warner said people will be able to use the coronavirus as a medical reason to vote from home. That applies to people diagnosed, people who are quarantining and people who are at a higher risk of catching the virus, he said.  

Across the country, states with upcoming primary elections are struggling to hire and retain voluntary poll workers. Warner said the very population that staffs polling sites, often retirees, are the people who face the highest risk of contracting the virus.  

“Folks, this coronavirus situation is this generation’s national emergency,” Warner said Wednesday. “The people that are the least susceptible to the coronavirus situation is the younger demographic. So, now that’s my plea. On behalf of the county clerks, please step up and volunteer to work at the polls.” 

People can apply for their ballots immediately. Warner said he hopes ballots will go out as soon as next week. Voters can either receive their ballots electronically, pick them up in person, or call and request a paper version from their county clerk’s office.  

To vote using an electronically-obtained ballot, voters are required to print the document and mail the completed ballot to their local county clerk’s office.  

Early voting dates remain the same, running from Wednesday, April 29, to Saturday, May 9. 

Warner said Wednesday his office has no public plans for the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 3.  

The absentee ballot changes are not anticipated to impact a new law for voters with disabilities, which Gov. Jim Justice signed into law last month. As of this year, West Virginians with disabilities affecting their ability to vote privately can submit their ballots remotely, using technology from a group called Democracy Live

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member. 

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