2024 is a Critical Election Year: YOUR VOTE MATTERS!
Elections are an opportunity to shape the future of your community. As a general election year, voters across the Michigan Lakeshore will have multiple opportunities to decide who represents them at the local, state, and federal level. From presidential primaries in February, to primary races in August and the general election in November we want to keep you informed. A few things you will find on your ballot throughout the year include:
- President
- U.S. Senator
- U.S. House of Representatives
- State Representative
- County Commissioner
- Important funding decisions that will impact schools, parks and public safety
Anyone can vote absentee in Michigan, and you can register to vote up to or even on Election Day at your local clerk’s office. Check out the resources below to find out where and how to vote and to see what’s on your ballot.
Don’t forget to vote in the Aug. 6 primary election and the Nov. 5 general election!
Voting Resources
Voter FAQ
No! If you register to vote in person, you will be asked for a photo ID. If you don’t have one, you can sign a simple form stating that. If you register by mail or through a voter registration drive, write your Michigan driver’s license or personal ID number, or the last four digits of your social security number on the voter registration application where indicated.
The only time you cannot register and vote is when you are serving a sentence in jail or prison. You can register to vote and vote in the election:
- If you are in jail but have not been sentenced.
- If you are serving a sentence but are not in jail or prison.
- If you are on probation or parole but are not in jail or prison; or
- If you served your sentence and are no longer in jail or prison.
If you don’t have a home, you can register to vote using a street corner, park, shelter or any other place where you usually stay as your address. The address can be a local shelter, advocacy organization, outreach center or someone who will accept mail for you.
You can register either at your school address or at your home. If you do decide to register at an address that is different than what is listed on your driver’s license, be aware that any change to your voter registration address will auto-update the state’s records for your driver’s license address as well. You will receive a sticker in the mail to update the address on your license. You must be a resident of the city where you’re registering for 30 days before you vote.
Yes. You first need to register to vote in Michigan at your local clerk’s office. Bring documents that prove your residency. If you vote in Michigan, you cannot vote in your home state.
Voting Absentee
Visit your city/township clerk’s office as soon as possible to cancel your first absentee ballot and request a new one. If you still have the absentee ballot, because you made a mistake or it was only partially destroyed, take it with you. Or go to your polling place on Election Day, fill out a simple form and vote. If you have the absentee ballot, because you made a mistake or it was only partially destroyed, take it with you and surrender it.
Simply take your absentee ballot to your polling place on Election Day, surrender it and vote at the polling place.
No. If you haven’t returned your absentee ballot before Election Day, take it to your city/township clerk’s office by 8 p.m. on Election Day.
Only a member of your immediate family can mail or deliver a ballot to the clerk for you. “Immediate family member” includes mother, father, sister, brother, daughter, son, father-in-law, mother-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, grandparent, grandchild or a person residing in your household.
If you need assistance returning a ballot, call your local clerk and ask them to pick up your ballot. The clerk is required to do this, or send an assistant to do it, if you or a family or household member can’t return the ballot, and the clerk doesn’t need to leave the city, township or village where you’re registered in order to pick it up.
Early Voting
Michigan’s constitution requires cities and townships to offer early voting in each statewide and federal election for at least nine consecutive days, beginning on the second Saturday before the election and ending on the Sunday before the election, for at least eight hours each day.
Early voting will take place at “early voting sites.” An early voting site will operate similarly to an Election Day polling location but can be set up to serve voters from more than one city or township.
No. But if you have it, bring it with you. You will be asked for a photo ID. If you do not have a photo ID or do not have it with you, you can sign a simple form and vote.
Yes. All clerk’s offices are required to be open for at least 8 hours during the weekend before Election Day for registration and in person early voting.
Day of Voting
No. But if you have it, bring it with you. You will be asked for a photo ID. If you do not have a photo ID or do not have it with you, you can sign a simple form and vote. If this is your first time voting in Michigan, you still don’t need a photo ID. However, a small number of first-time voters who registered through the mail or a voter registration drive may need to provide some documentation to vote. Electronic or paper copies of any of the following will work:
A photo ID with your name and picture (regardless of the address or if it has an address):
- Driver’s license or personal ID card from any state
- High school or college ID
- Passport
- Military or government-issued photo ID; or
- Tribal ID card
A non-photo ID with your name and address on it:
- Current utility bill
- Bank statement
- Paycheck stub
- Government check; or
- Any other government document
If you make a mistake, ask for a new ballot right away. You have the right to a new ballot if you catch the mistake before your ballot is inserted into the tabulator machine and counted. If the tabulator machine rejects your ballot, ask for a new one. You have the right to start over. If the tabulator machine isn’t working, you can place your completed ballot into a bin in the tabulator machine. The poll workers will insert your ballot into the tabulator once the machine is working again.