海角换妻 voters already approved a constitutional amendment to allow early voting in the state, but it鈥檚 up to lawmakers to decide how it will work.
The Government Administration and Elections Committee held a public hearing on the implementation of in-person early voting on Wednesday, Feb. 22, as well as a ballot measure to allow voters to decide in 2024 whether to allow no-excuse voting by mail.
Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas, the state鈥檚 top election official, testified in support of a 10 days of early voting and the proposed constitutional amendment to allow for no-excuse absentee ballots. Competing proposals from Hartford lawmakers called for 14 or 18 days of early voting.
鈥淚 have spent the past year, and certainly the past six weeks, going out of my way to speak with as many election workers 鈥 registrars and town clerks 鈥 as possible,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淭hey know how to do this and have no doubts they can do it as long as the equipment and funding are provided so their town doesn鈥檛 have to suffer unnecessarily.鈥
Thomas asked the state to fund early voting so that municipalities are not forced to cover the costs of staff, training, ballots, security, technological upgrades, and more.
Ed Hawthorne, president of the 海角换妻 AFL-CIO, which represents over 200,000 workers in the state, testified in support of legislative proposals to allow 14 days of early voting. He said it鈥檚 important to make voting as easy as possible for state residents.
鈥淏ecause it is our constitutional right and arguably one of the most important things we do,鈥 Hawthorne said.
鈥淭his is definitely a smart way to spend our tax dollars,鈥 Hawthorne said. 鈥淚 don't think anyone's going to object to funding to ensure that our elections are run smoothly.鈥
Hawthorne told lawmakers he supports the effort to let voters decide whether to allow no-excuse absentee ballot voting, because the process ran smoothly in 2020.
During that election, an early pandemic-era state order allowed any registered voter to mail in their ballot, if they feared contracting an illness like COVID-19 at the polls. Voter turnout hit a 80% that year.