Updated November 03, 2009
'No Excuse' Ballot May Determine Outcome of Future New Jersey Races
FOXNews.com
A state law is now allowing busy or apathetic residents to vote in any election by mail with a "no excuse" ballot.
There's probably no excuse unfamiliar to New Jersey residents who don't vote.
From "the lines were too long" to "had to pick up the kids" to "couldn't get out of work" to "needed to wash my hair" to "had to milk the cows."
But a state law is now allowing busy or apathetic residents to vote in any election by mail with a "no excuse" ballot.
"Everyone now has tremendously busy schedules now, whether it's long commuting schedules or child care issue so sometimes actually getting to the polls during the appropriate hours is tough for some people," said Susan Evans, a spokeswoman for the New Jersey Division of Elections.
The heated gubernatorial election between Democratic Gov. John Corzine and Republican challenger Chris Christie is the first time voters were able to request a "no excuse" ballot that allowed them to avoid the polls for any reason as well as receive a ballot for every general election for the rest of their lives.
The "no excuse" ballot was first signed into law back into 2005 and unlike absentee ballots, voters don't need a disability or a reason they will not be in their voting district on the day of elections.
"We just wanted to see if we could make a more convenient option for people who do have scheduling difficulties," Evans said.
State elections officials issued 185,000 mail-in ballots for Tuesday's race, far less than the 235,000 mail in ballots issued for last year's presidential election. Generally, just 80 percent of absentee ballots that are requested are actually turned back in.
Election officials began counting the mail-in ballots when polls opened and results were expected to be tallied an hour or two after the polls close.
But new requests will allow people to begin asking for ballots forever more. The big question that remains is what effect the in-perpetuity ballots will have on future elections.
Fox News' Gretchen Gailey contributed to this report.
Latest Politics Videos
-
-
Security Breach?
-
Nov 26, 2009
Couple crashes White House state dinner
-
-
-
Bumpy Road Ahead?
-
Nov 25, 2009
A look inside U.S. economic indicators
-
-
-
Money Management
-
Nov 25, 2009
Use remaining stimulus for jobs bill?
-
-
-
Keep Spending?
-
Nov 25, 2009
Pelosi: Jobs more important than deficit
-
-
-
Presidential Pardon
-
Nov 25, 2009
Obama lets Courage the turkey live
-
-
-
Pomp and Protocol
-
Nov 25, 2009
Obamas hold first state dinner
-
Real Clear Politics Poll
| Job Approval | Approve | Disapprove | Spread |
| Obama | 49.9% | 44.3% | +5.6% |
| Congress | 27.0% | 64.3% | -37.3% |
| Direction of Country | Right Direction | Wrong Track | Spread |
| RCP Average | 37.7% | 57.2% | -19.5% |
Most Active In Politics
Most Read
Most Commented
-
House Passes Health Care Bill
November 08, 2009 1,132 comments
-
Health Care Bill Moves Toward Senate Debate
November 22, 2009 979 comments
-
Comment Box: Send Us Your Findings on Health Care Reform
November 19, 2009 963 comments
-
AP Turns Heads for Devoting 11 Reporters to Palin Book 'Fact Check'
November 18, 2009 857 comments
-
Lawmakers Propose 'War Surtax' to Pay for Troop Increase in Afghanistan
November 23, 2009 813 comments
-
Afghan Decision Set for Tuesday
November 26, 2009
-
Logs Shed Light on Health Debate
November 25, 2009
-
U.S. to Pitch Emissions Cuts
November 26, 2009
-
Dobbs Reaches Out to Latinos
November 25, 2009
-
U.S. Mulls New Panel to Tackle Deficit
November 25, 2009
-
Film premieres can damage your soul
November 26, 2009
-
Sisters are doing it for themselves, thanks
November 26, 2009
-
Conferences — what a waste of money
November 26, 2009
-
Behind the scenes at the biggest deal on Earth
November 26, 2009
-
We have strategy, kit and leadership. Let’s go
November 26, 2009



recommend

Subscribe to Comments






