Electoral precinct

A precinct or voting district,[1] in the United States, is the smallest unit into which electoral districts are divided. A larger geographic unit such as a county, township, or city council district is typically subdivided into precincts and each address is assigned to a specific precinct. Each precinct has a specific polling station where its residents go to vote; however, more than one precinct may use the same polling station.

A 2004 survey by the United States Election Assistance Commission reported an average precinct size in the United States of approximately 1,100 registered voters. Kansas had the smallest average precinct size with 437 voters per precinct, while the District of Columbia had the largest average size at 2,704 voters per precinct.[2]

Electoral precincts usually do not have separate governmental authorities, but there are limited exceptions in some states. In Ohio, the voters within a precinct may vote on liquor control laws that will apply only within that precinct (called "local option elections").[3] When precinct boundaries are redrawn during redistricting, the result of the vote continues to bind the areas that were formerly inside the precinct's boundaries, although it does not bind any areas that have been newly added to the precinct since the vote.[3] In addition, in Alabama, in those counties that have not abolished the constable system, constables are elected from individual electoral precincts.[4]

In a political party, individuals, known by various titles such as precinct committeeman, precinct captain, or Precinct Committee Officer, are elected by ballot or county party executive committee, to represent precinct residents in every level of party operations. They report to the party on how the voters in a precinct feel about candidates and issues, and encourage people to vote.

The Canadian equivalent of a precinct is known as a polling division.[5] Canadian political parties do not have elections for positions representing the voters in a polling division, although parties may assign volunteers to canvass a poll, or to be an outside scrutineer pulling the vote (i.e. reminding supporters to go to vote) on Election Day or an advance polling day, or to be an inside scrutineer in the polling station noting who has come to vote so that can be communicated to an outside scrutineer.

References

  1. "Geographic Terms and Concepts - Voting Districts". US Census Bureau. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
  2. "Polling Places 2004 General Election". EAC Election Day Survey. The U.S. Election Assistance Commission. Archived from the original on December 14, 2006.
  3. Office of the Ohio Secretary of State (2017). "Guide to Local Liquor Options Elections" (PDF). Retrieved 2020-02-22.
  4. Ala. Code § 36-23-1(a), accessed 2020-02-23.
  5. Elections Canada (September 2010). "Chapter 4 – Boundaries, Polling Places and the Voter Information Card". Retrieved 2020-02-22.
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