Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
While over 30 million Americans will have voted early and in person by
the end of this week, millions more will have requested a mail-in ballot
application. Hopefully most, if not all, will also return their completed
ballot, and vote in this all-important election.
The deadline for accepting mail-in ballots varies from state to state.
Deadlines may require that mail-in ballots arrive by or before election
day (November 3rd), or maybe just be postmarked by election day, or
postmarked by election day and received within three days after election
day, or postmarked before election day and counted within two weeks
after the election, or some combination thereof. Click on the link to the
NPR map to check the rules for your state’s deadline.
Don’t take any chances on your mail-in ballot being rejected, or arriving
too late, or not being counted at all. If this is your preferred, or only way
to vote, do so immediately if not sooner. Your vote matters, so make
sure your vote gets counted.
Copyright © 2020 United States Hispanic Leadership Institute, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.