Be a more informed voter in Niagara, ND!
Find Niagara Election Information on Candidates, Absentee Ballots, Voting by Mail, Polling Place Times, Polling Place Locations, and more.
Voter Registration
North Dakota does not require voter registration. Therefore, an eligible voter may vote in an election if the voter provides acceptable identification. North Dakota law still provides cities with the ability to register voters for city elections.
VOTER QUALIFICATIONS
Age: Must be at least 18 years old on Election Day
Citizenship: Must be a United States citizen
Residency: Must be a legal resident of North Dakota and a resident in the precinct for at least 30 days preceding the election.
Obtaining an Absentee Ballot
Online: Complete the online application.
In person: You may obtain and complete an absentee ballot request in person at your county auditor's office.
By Mail: Download an Absentee/Mail Ballot Application and mail it to your county auditor's office.
Absentee ballots are to be made available by the 40th day before the election. For more information on absentee voting, click here.
Military and overseas voting: Military and Overseas voters may obtain a ballot by means of the absentee/mail ballot application. See North Dakota's guide for military and overseas voters for more information.
Submitting an Absentee Ballot
Location and time: Applications for absentee ballots may be delivered to the appropriate county auditor or election official by mail, in person, or by fax. For more information, please consult with your voting assistance officer, the Secretary of State's office, or your county auditor's office. Whether you vote absentee or by mail ballot, your return envelope must be postmarked no later than the day before the election.
VOTING ON ELECTION DAY
The voting hours in North Dakota vary by county. Polling place voting hours are available online through the Polling Place Search. A voter who is standing in line at the time the polls close will be allowed to vote. However, a voter who arrives after the polls close may not be allowed to vote.
Acceptable ID for verification at the polling place:
-North Dakota Driver’s license
-North Dakota Nondriver’s identification card
-Tribal government issued identification (including those issued by BIA for a tribe located in North Dakota, any other tribal agency or entity, or any other document that sets forth the tribal member’s name, date of birth, and current North Dakota residential address)
-Long term care identification certificate (provided by North Dakota facility)
If an individual’s valid form of identification does not include the North Dakota residential address or date of birth, or the North Dakota residential address is not current, the individual may supplement the identification with any of the following:
-a current utility bill
-a current bank statement
-a check or a document issued by a federal, state, local, or tribal government (including those issued by BIA for a tribe located in North Dakota, any other tribal agency or entity, or any other document that sets forth the tribal member’s name, date of birth, and current North Dakota residential address)
-a paycheck
Additional Information
Deciding how to vote: https://votesmart.org
Polling Place: Polling Precinct Locator
How to Vote: North Dakota voting information
Problems with voting: North Dakota HAVA Complaint Form
Verifying absentee ballot status: Absentee Ballot Verification
The initiative would prohibit an individual from being elected or appointed to serve in the United States Senate or United States House of Representatives if the individual would become 81 years old by December 31 of the year preceding the end of their term. The initiative would provide that, in the case of a court ruling blocking the enforcement of the age limit, any candidate who would be restricted from serving due to the age limit, would be barred from appearing on the ballot to be nominated or elected to serve in the House or Senate. If a court ruling requires such a candidate to appear on the ballot, the initiative would require a note on ballots next to the candidate's name stating the candidate's age at the end of their term. Specifically, the notice would read, "Candidate would be [candidate age on December 31st of the year immediately preceding the end of term] years old by end of term.
Amends language used in the state constitution to describe certain state institutions such as changing "insane" to "individuals with mental illness", "feebleminded" to "individuals with developmental disabilities", and "deaf and dumb" to "deaf and hard of hearing."
Establishes a single-subject rule for initiatives (both statutory and constitutional), as determined by the secretary of state. Increases the signature requirement for constitutional amendment initiatives from 4% of the resident population to 5% of the resident population of the state. Requires proposed constitutional initiatives that have qualified for the ballot to be placed on the next primary election ballot, and, if approved, be placed on the next general election ballot, where it must be approved again to become effective.
Decreases the amount of money that can be expended from the state legacy fund, a fund that receives 30% of tax revenue from oil and gas production, from 15% to 5% of the principal of the fund over a period of two years, and provides for a distribution to be made from the state legacy fund to a legacy earnings fund rather than have the accrued earnings be sent to the general fund.
Prohibits property taxes except to pay for bond debts.
Ballot Title:
This initiated measure would amend sections 1, 14, 15, and 16 and repeal sections 4, 5, 7, 9 and 10 of Article X of the North Dakota Constitution. It would prohibit political subdivisions from levying any tax on real or personal property except for the payment of bonded indebtedness incurred before the end of the thirty-day period following the date this amendment was approved by the voters, until such debt is paid, and would require the state to provide replacement payments to political subdivisions of no less than the amount of tax levied on real property during the 2024 calendar year.
It would limit the debt of a political subdivision to an amount not to exceed two and one-half percent of the full and true value of the real property in the political subdivision, except that an incorporated city, by a two-thirds vote, could increase the indebtedness of the city one and one-half percent beyond the two and one-half percent limit and a school district, by a majority vote, could increase the indebtedness of the school district two and one-half percent beyond the two and one-half percent limit.
It would allow an incorporated city, without regard to the existing indebtedness of the city, to become indebted in an amount not exceeding two percent of its full and true value for water and sewer projects. It would require a political subdivision incurring indebtedness to provide for annual revenues to pay the debt payments when due and would prohibit a political subdivision from issuing general obligation bonds secured with tax levied on the assessed value of property on or after January 1, 2025.
Legalizes recreational marijuana, allowing individuals to possess up to 1 oz of marijuana, 4g of concentrate, 300mg of edibles; and allowing individuals to grow three plants with a limit of six plants per household.
Upholds Senate Bill 201, which provides new statutory requirements for regulating linear transmission facilities, to allow counties to impose a surcharge on certain pipeline companies, and to establish a landowner bill of rights.