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New York Leads Nation In Election Legislation With 24 Bills Passed

Legislators in New York surpass all other states combined, covering absentee ballots and oversight

As of Jan. 19, 2024, legislators in New York have passed 24 election-related bills out of at least one chamber of the legislature, more than all other state legislatures combined. The legislation in New York covers a range of election-related topics including absentee ballot drop-boxes, maintenance of voter rolls, and oversight of election officials, workers, and volunteers. All 24 bills originated in the state senate. 

As of Jan. 19, 2024, legislators in New York have passed 24 election-related bills out of at least one chamber of the legislature, more than all other state legislatures combined.  PHOTO BY CLAY BANKS/UNSPLASH

New York lawmakers considered more than 500 election-related bills and enacted 70 across 2022 and 2023 legislative sessions. 

California (1 bill) 

Kentucky (1)

Louisiana (1)

Massachusetts (1)

New Hampshire (1)

New Jersey (1)

New York (24)

Ohio (1)

South Carolina (1)

Washington (2)

Wisconsin (3)

West Virginia (3)

In New Jersey, A3690 passed both chambers of the state’s legislature in 2023 but Gov. Phil Murphy (D) signed it on Jan. 4, 2024. The new law permits 17 year-old voters to vote in primaries if they will turn 18 by the time of the general election.

As of Jan. 19, 2024, legislators in New York have passed 24 election-related bills out of at least one chamber of the legislature, more than all other state legislatures combined.  PHOTO BY CLAY BANKS/UNSPLASH

 It will take effect on Jan. 1, 2026. Separately, S4209 passed both chambers of the New Jersey legislature on Jan. 8th. The bill would eliminate certain permissible election dates for school budget elections.

In Louisiana, HB17 passed both chambers of the legislature on Jan. 19 and was sent to Gov. Jeff Landry (R) for signature on the same day. The legislation makes significant changes you Louisiana’s unique primary system and creates closed primaries for elections for Congress and several state offices, including for the state’s supreme court. Votes on the bill largely followed party lines in the legislature, with Republicans mostly supporting the Democrats mostly opposing the proposed change. Gov. Landry is expected to sign the legislation, which wil take effect in 2026. 

As of Jan. 19, 38 state legislatures are in regular session including 15 Democratic trifecta states, 17 Republican trifecta states, and six states with divided government. Early in the year, variations in legislative calendars between states may contribute to unusually large discrepancies in activity between Democratic, Republican, and divided government states. In 2023, Republican trifecta states enacted 207 election-related bills compared to 124 for Democratic trifecta states, and 48 for states with divided government.

Produced in association with Ballotpedia

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