NC elections board advances photo ID, polling rules

Summary

North Carolina elections officials advanced proposed rules on photo ID ballot challenges, polling-place noise, and other voting procedures.

Why this matters

The proposed rules could change how county boards handle photo ID exceptions and activity near polling places in future North Carolina elections. The public will have 60 days to comment before the board votes again.

North Carolina’s State Board of Elections voted 3-2 to seek public comment on proposed rules covering photo ID, absentee ballots, and conduct at polling places. The board’s two Democratic members opposed the move.

One proposal would make it easier for county boards of elections to reject ballots cast by voters who do not show photo ID. Voters without photo ID can cast a provisional ballot and complete an exception form explaining why they do not have ID.

Under current instructions in a “numbered memo” from former state elections staff, county boards must vote unanimously to determine that a voter lied on the form before rejecting the ballot. Under the proposal, a majority vote would be enough. Republicans currently hold three of five seats on county boards.

One lawmaker also proposed that state staff send county boards guidance on how to respond if federal agents appear at polling places or seek to seize ballots. The board rejected that proposal along party lines.

Federal law bars armed forces from polling places, and some Democrats and voting-rights advocates have said they are concerned that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents could appear at polling places or that ballots could be confiscated.

After a 60-day public comment period, the board will consider revisions and vote again.

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