Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In March 2015, the Oregon legislature passed a bill to adopt an automatic voter registration procedure using information from the State DMV. [4] The state has roughly 2.2 million registered voters out of an estimated 3 million eligible voters as of 2014 [update] and the bill will potentially register half of the 800,000 unregistered, eligible ...
The Oregon Legislative Assembly adopted a bill allowing for online voter registration in 2009 and it went into effect in March 2010. [19] State lawmakers further amended the voter registration process in the 2015 legislative session, approving a first-in-the-nation automatic voter registration law. [20] [21]
The following is a list of political parties officially recognized by the Oregon State Elections Division as statewide parties as of March 2023 (alphabetical, by title in official record). [1] Constitution Party (see also Constitution Party (United States)) Democratic Party (see also Democratic Party (United States)) Independent Party of Oregon [2]
Lopez-Duboff organized a voter registration drive, hoping it would lead to record youth engagement. For many students, women's rights, abortion access, climate change, and homelessness were ...
As Oregon Voters' Pamphlets are mailed out ahead of the Nov. 5 general election, the Oregon Secretary of State’s office is clearing up why former President Donald Trump and his running mate JD ...
The voter registration deadline is on Oct. 15. Oregon mails ballots to actively registered voters from Oct. 16 to Oct. 22. Election Day for the general election is Tuesday, Nov. 5.
The Independent Party of Oregon (IPO) is a centrist political party in the U.S. state of Oregon with more than 140,000 registrants since its inception in January 2007. [6] The IPO is Oregon's third-largest political party and the first political party other than the Democratic Party and Republican Party to be recognized by the state of Oregon as a major political party.
Hispanic voter share keeps growing. Hispanic voters are steadily on the rise, according to an Arizona Republic analysis. The group made up only 18.5% of registered voters in 2016.