Anzela Wong
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Podcast Appearances
Eligible voters in South Carolina who want to cast ballots in the state's June 9th primary have until Sunday to register online and Monday to get mail-in applications postmarked.
New Jersey's voter registration deadline is Tuesday.
And in Nevada, eligible voters have until Tuesday to register by mail.
Online and in-person registration in Nevada continues through June 9th, which is also the day of that state's primary.
If you're planning to register by mail, the U.S.
Postal Service recommends stopping by a post office and asking for a free manual postmark at the counter.
And if you've already registered to vote, you may want to go to your state election official's website and check your status.
Eligible voters can sometimes be removed from lists, especially if they move, change their name, or haven't voted in a while.
The Census Bureau is asking households in Huntsville, Alabama, and Spartanburg, South Carolina, to fill out an online survey.
Households that don't may be interviewed in person starting in June by census workers or letter carriers.
It's part of a Trump administration overhaul of the 2026 census test that's drawn skepticism from census watchers who cite a past government accountability office study that found that using postal workers to conduct interviews would not be cost-effective.
This test census asks people about their U.S.
Research shows that's likely to hurt the accuracy of numbers used to redistribute political representation and federal funding.
In a court filing, the Trump administration says it may soon formally propose to alter census numbers that the 14th Amendment says must include the, quote, whole number of persons in each state.
The Census Bureau is asking households in Huntsville, Alabama and Spartanburg, South Carolina to fill out an online survey.
Households that don't may be interviewed in person starting in June by census workers or letter carriers.
As part of a Trump administration overhaul, the 2026 census test that's drawn skepticism from census watchers who cite a past government accountability office study that found that using postal workers to conduct interviews would not be cost effective.