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What’s missing in voting and election news? Help us decide what to cover in 2024.

We’re preparing to cover the presidential primaries and other elections next year. Help us figure out what issues we should focus on in the voting experience.

Help Votebeat decide what to cover in 2024. (Votebeat)

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for our free newsletters here.

Votebeat is preparing to cover the 2024 election cycle, and we want to know what questions you may have about how voting and elections work where you live.

Conversations and coverage around a presidential election can be loud and confusing. Votebeat’s goal is to be here to help voters navigate misinformation and misunderstandings about how our elections actually work.

To help better serve voters and guide our journalism, we want to know what’s on your mind and what’s missing in news coverage of the voting process.

Please fill out the form below to share your thoughts and questions. You can also reach out to community@votebeat.org anytime.

If you can’t see the form on this page, you can view it here.

The Latest

Congress decided in 1993 that they posed an unfair barrier to voter registration. Trump and the Republicans are reaching a different conclusion.

About 200,000 residents who were caught up in a state error will need to show their documents in order to keep voting a full ballot. Some are wondering why.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court declined to stop Musk’s Green Bay rally and giveaway to registered voters who signed his PAC’s petition.

It’s the billionaire’s second brush with legal controversy over voting-related giveaways.

The technology helps speed up vote counting, but critics say it doesn’t leave a verifiable paper trail. Getting rid of it could be costly.

County leaders say voters in the Republican stronghold deserve the same flexibility that Democratic areas such as Milwaukee offer.