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Before the 2020 presidential election, certifying election results in the states was routine and generated little public attention. That has changed. Attempts to delay presidential certification in Michigan in 2020 and primary results in New Mexico earlier this year have brought new scrutiny to a process that typically takes place quietly in the weeks after Election Day.
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Colorado's secretary of state's office says it mistakenly sent postcards to about 30,000 noncitizens encouraging them to register to vote. It blames the error on a database glitch and insists anyone who isn't a citizen and tries to register won't be able to.
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Nevada tribes are suing Elko County officials, claiming unequal voting access for the 2022 election.
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An attorney for a Colorado lawmaker has asked El Paso County prosecutors to dismiss a felony charge that his client voted outside the district he lives in. Democratic Sen. Pete Lee's lawyer cited incorrect information presented to a grand jury before Lee's indictment in August.
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The League of Women Voters has canceled a forum this week for candidates in Congressional Districts 4 and 8, but is moving forward with a candidate forum next week for House Districts 48, 50 and 64.
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Mike Lindell said federal agents seized his cellphone and questioned him Tuesday about a Mesa County clerk Tina Peters, who has been charged in what prosecutors say was a "deceptive scheme" to breach voting system technology used across the country.
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The 2022 Midterm elections are on the horizon — are you planning to vote? KUNC and America Amplified are here to help.
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One of the nation’s most closely watched primaries is in Wyoming. Liz Cheney hopes to keep her seat in Congress, but she alienated many of the state's Republicans by voting to impeach President Trump. And that’s created a dilemma for Democrats in one of the state’s few solidly blue areas. Should they change parties to vote for her in the primary?
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A Colorado county clerk and election conspiracy theorist will get a recount of her failed bid for the Republican nomination for Secretary of State. Tina Peters said she raised the $256,000 needed to pay for the recount.
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Mesa County clerk Tina Peters and State Rep. Ron Hanks insist the Secretary of State's office wrongly rejected their first requests, which were denied after they did not pay the recount fees.