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State of Elections

A student-run blog from the Election Law Society

A look at election websites state by state

December 1, 2011

by Jim Ogorzalek

The Internet has increasingly become the main source of information for many Americans. Indeed, many errands we once accomplishedwith a car or a postage stamp are now done simply with a few clicks of the mouse. As Americans have grown more dependent upon sites such as Amazon and Netflix, it stands to reason that they are also increasingly more likely to seek out information regarding their civic duties using the Internet.

Because of this ever-growing dependence upon the Web, it is more important than ever that government institutions engage voters online. While analysts, politicians, and many others have been busy discussing online voting for years, few have taken stock of where state governments are right now when it comes to communicating with voters online. If Internet voting ever does become commonplace in the American electoral landscape, it is only logical that it would come after other necessary steps in the voting process like Internet registration and Internet absentee applications. Before any of those technological advances in the voting process, it makes sense that a state must first determine how to properly communicate information online and create logical ways to access the functionality the state already enlists. In the spirit of calls for what Heather Gerken has termed a “Democracy Index” of how well states run elections, this post attempts to survey states’ online voter information sites to assess where things stand.

Methodology

This study examines each state’s main elections webpage to determine its usefulness to the average voter. The goal is to determine the ease or difficulty with which that voter could find vital information on his or her state’s elections website. It is important to distinguish certain characteristics of a state’s voting system from the state’s website. This study does not seek to analyze a state’s use of online voting or vote by mail (among others). Rather, the goal is to determine how easily voters can get the information they need. For the most part, the study uses quantitative measures—namely, how many clicks of the mouse it takes to find important information. Along with these measurements is a more qualitative measurement used sparingly to examine whether that process is intuitive. (You might be able to come across voter registration information in two clicks, but often only providentially).

The nine categories tested were:

*Wherever a category tested the number of clicks to certain information, the study looked for the fewest possible clicks to that information. Exceptions to this rule were made if a completely non-intuitive route to the information was found with fewer necessary steps. Situations may arise where the study failed to determine the fewest number of clicks. Those situations, may, however, be indicative of the website’s failure to make the links logical and clear.

# While the website’s placement among Google hits is not necessarily a factor over which the state has control, it remains an important measurement of how easily a voter can find the site and pertinent information.

@ Whether a voter could submit voter registration online is not at issue here (as it is very rare). Instead, this category measures whether a voter can fill out the voter registration form online by answering a series of simple questions, eliminating the complexities of the registration form.

 

Best and worst—What’s out there?

            The range of quality of state elections websites is broad. Some states, like Arizona, have attractive websites that provide the voter with easy access to important information. The site limits the amount of information given to the voter on the main page through the use of seven links on the main page. These links could be more attractive through the use of buttons, like those seen across the top of North Carolina’s State Board of Elections site or in Ohio’s Voter Services page. Unfortunately, North Carolina’s website is a little low in functionality. A potential voter would have to make three clicks of the mouse to download registration forms, to download an absentee ballot application, or to find out personal voter information. Compare this to Georgia’s website, where a voter can begin filling out a registration form through a series of simple questions with just two clicks (both linked by large attractive buttons). Similarly, a voter can find out important voter information with just one click of the mouse on the centrally located My Voter Page (MVP) button. Here, a voter can find a wealth of information, such as poll location, registration or absentee status, or a sample ballot of an upcoming election.

Compare any of these sites with Vermont’s, and you will quickly see the full range of websites. Contrast Vermont’s voter page to the Vote Missouri page, and the power of buttons, color choices, and limited links becomes fully apparent. For a quick lesson in the importance of limiting the amount of text on a page, take a quick look at Connecticut’s Elections and Voting site (no you weren’t accidentally linked to Connecticut’s web directory. That is the real site!) and compare that to Arkansas’s VoteNaturally.org (granted, this is not the state’s main page for elections).

These are but a few examples and comparisons meant to draw attention to the choices made when a state creates its elections and voting websites. For data for all the state elections websites, click here. For the full ranking, click here.

Seven Steps to a Better State Elections Website:  

Jim Ogorzalek is a first-year law student at William and Mary.
 
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