Student Voting Project | Connecticut
Residency and domicile, what do they mean, exactly?
Learn what it really means to have residency and what that entails...
The Truth About Financial Aid
Students are often warned that voter registration might affect their financial aid. This is untrue for the vast majority of students. Learn more...
Tuition
Registering to vote more than likely won't hurt your wallet. Read more about in-state and out-of-state tuition as it relates to voting...
Taxes, your parents and you
Registering to vote cannot affect your parent's ability to claim you as a dependent. But it could hit you in the pocket, learn why....
Insuring your health and car
Registering to vote will have almost no affect on your insurance, car or health. Read more...
Driver's Licenses and Car Registration
Registering to vote may entail a trip to the DMV afterwards. See why...
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Voting at School
ID Requirements
If you register in person in Connecticut, you will be asked to show ID. You'll have to show your driver's license, birth certificate, or Social Security card. If you don't have one of these with you, you can get another voter to swear to your identity, place of birth, age, and residence, or any other proof the elections official will accept.
If you're a first-time voter who registers by mail, you'll have to prove your identity by either having your Connecticut driver's license number or the last four digits of your Social Security number matched up to government databases, or providing ID when you vote in person or with your absentee ballot. Acceptable ID under this rule includes a current and valid photo ID, including a student ID, or a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck or government document that has your name and address. Cell phone bills and student housing bills will fulfill this requirement, as will any form of pre-printed mail with your local address on it. If you can't show ID when you vote, you can vote a provisional ballot, which will be counted if you are an eligible voter.
Finally, at the polls, all voters will be asked to show apreprinted ID with your name and either your address, signature, or photograph. If you don't have ID, you'll be able to signan affidavit and vote a regular ballot.
Registration Requirements
The regular voter registration deadline is fourteen days before a general election, and mail applications have to be postmarked by that date. The postmark deadline for a primary electionis five days before the election. You may also register in person with the registrar of voters until the seventh day before a general election, and up to noon the day before a primary election. Finally, you can apply for a presidential ballot, which will allow you to vote for President and Vice-President, up to the close of the polls on Election Day.
If you register in person, you'll have to show your driver's license, birth certificate, or Social Security card. If you don't have one of these with you, you can get another voter to swear to your identity, place of birth, age, and residence, or any other proof the elections official will accept.
You can also request that elections officials come to your campus to hold a voter registration drive by getting 25 students to sign an application.
Residency Requirements
To count as a resident under Connecticut law, you have to be a "bona fide" resident. While some older cases suggest that you might have to have intent to remain in Connecticut permanently, the Secretary of State's office has said that you only need to have an "intent to remain indefinitely" Basically, if you don't know what you're going to do after graduation, you can become a Connecticut resident.
Students who lived in Connecticut before moving to another state for school, and who wish to establish or keep their Connecticut voting residency, should have no problem doing so unless they've already registered to vote in another state. Like all states, Connecticut allows students to keep their voting residency even if they move out of the county or state to attend school, and the only way you might lose this residency is by establishing residency in a new state. While registering to vote in another state is not automatically considered abandonment of residency in Connecticut, some judges or officials might view it as such.
Fighting Residency Challenges
The local election official has the right to initially deny your registration on the basis of residency, or to decide you're not eligibleto remain registered, but you have the right to appeal that denial to the registrars or the full board of admissions for electors in your town. They'll hold a hearing and make a written ruling on your residence. You can appeal that decision to the State Elections Enforcement Commission, and you can also appeal the Commission's decision in court.
Your residence can be challenged on Election Day by partisan challengers, other voters, or anyone else legally in the polling place. The chief poll worker will then decide whether you're eligible; if they decide you are, you can vote a regular ballot. If they decide you're ineligible, you'll vote by provisional ballot for federal offices and by something called a "challenged ballot" for state offices. If the registrars for your town find you to bean eligible voter, your provisional ballot will be counted, but your challenged ballot will only be counted if the election is contested afterwards.
Absentee Requirement
You can vote absentee in Connecticut if you'll be absent from your election district during all voting hours. First-time voters can vote absentee. The formal deadline for an absentee ballot application is the day before the election, but if you are mailing your ballot in you should send in your application earlier to make sure you have enough time to return your ballot. Blank applications are available on the web site of the Secretary of State. A mailed absentee ballot must be received by close of polls Election Day. If you're a first-time voter, you'll have to include a copy of your ID as described above in your absentee ballot envelope. Neither your application nor your ballot needs to be notarized or witnessed.
Voting at Home
ID Requirements
If you register in person in Connecticut, you will be asked to show ID. You'll have to show your driver's license, birth certificate, or Social Security card. If you don't have one of these with you, you can get another voter to swear to your identity, place of birth, age, and residence, or any other proof the elections official will accept.
If you're a first-time voter who registers by mail, you'll have to prove your identity by either having your Connecticut driver's license number or the last four digits of your Social Security number matched up to government databases, or providing ID when you vote in person or with your absentee ballot. Acceptable ID under this rule includes a current and valid photo ID, including a student ID, or a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck or government document that has your name and address. Cell phone bills and student housing bills will fulfill this requirement, as will any form of pre-printed mail with your local address on it. If you can't show ID when you vote, you can vote a provisional ballot, which will be counted if you are an eligible voter.
Finally, at the polls, all voters will be asked to show apreprinted ID with your name and either your address, signature, or photograph. If you don't have ID, you'll be able to signan affidavit and vote a regular ballot.
Registration Requirements
The regular voter registration deadline is fourteen days before a general election, and mail applications have to be postmarked by that date. The postmark deadline for a primary electionis five days before the election. You may also register in person with the registrar of voters until the seventh day before a general election, and up to noon the day before a primary election. Finally, you can apply for a presidential ballot, which will allow you to vote for President and Vice-President, up to the close of the polls on Election Day.
If you register in person, you'll have to show your driver's license, birth certificate, or Social Security card. If you don't have one of these with you, you can get another voter to swear to your identity, place of birth, age, and residence, or any other proof the elections official will accept.
You can also request that elections officials come to your campus to hold a voter registration drive by getting 25 students to sign an application.
Residency Requirements
To count as a resident under Connecticut law, you have to be a "bona fide" resident. While some older cases suggest that you might have to have intent to remain in Connecticut permanently, the Secretary of State's office has said that you only need to have an "intent to remain indefinitely" Basically, if you don't know what you're going to do after graduation, you can become a Connecticut resident.
Students who lived in Connecticut before moving to another state for school, and who wish to establish or keep their Connecticut voting residency, should have no problem doing so unless they've already registered to vote in another state. Like all states, Connecticut allows students to keep their voting residency even if they move out of the county or state to attend school, and the only way you might lose this residency is by establishing residency in a new state. While registering to vote in another state is not automatically considered abandonment of residency in Connecticut, some judges or officials might view it as such.
Fighting Residency Challenges
The local election official has the right to initially deny your registration on the basis of residency, or to decide you're not eligibleto remain registered, but you have the right to appeal that denial to the registrars or the full board of admissions for electors in your town. They'll hold a hearing and make a written ruling on your residence. You can appeal that decision to the State Elections Enforcement Commission, and you can also appeal the Commission's decision in court.
Your residence can be challenged on Election Day by partisan challengers, other voters, or anyone else legally in the polling place. The chief poll worker will then decide whether you're eligible; if they decide you are, you can vote a regular ballot. If they decide you're ineligible, you'll vote by provisional ballot for federal offices and by something called a "challenged ballot" for state offices. If the registrars for your town find you to bean eligible voter, your provisional ballot will be counted, but your challenged ballot will only be counted if the election is contested afterwards.
Absentee Requirement
You can vote absentee in Connecticut if you'll be absent from your election district during all voting hours. First-time voters can vote absentee. The formal deadline for an absentee ballot application is the day before the election, but if you are mailing your ballot in you should send in your application earlier to make sure you have enough time to return your ballot. Blank applications are available on the web site of the Secretary of State. A mailed absentee ballot must be received by close of polls Election Day. If you're a first-time voter, you'll have to include a copy of your ID as described above in your absentee ballot envelope. Neither your application nor your ballot needs to be notarized or witnessed.
Click here for a glossary of terms from the Student Voting Guide.
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