Attorney General Tim Griffin on Wednesday nixed a possible popular name and ballot title for a proposed Arkansas constitutional amendment aimed at requiring all elections in Arkansas to be conducted with hand-marked and hand-counted paper ballots and removing language in the Arkansas Constitution that permits elections to be conducted by voting machines.
Attorney General Tim Griffin on Wednesday nixed a possible popular name and ballot title for a proposed Arkansas constitutional amendment aimed at requiring all elections in Arkansas to be conducted with hand-marked and hand-counted paper ballots and removing language in the Arkansas Constitution that permits elections to be conducted by voting machines.
Attorney General Tim Griffin on Wednesday nixed a possible popular name and ballot title for a proposed Arkansas constitutional amendment aimed at requiring all elections in Arkansas to be conducted with paper ballots and removing language in the Arkansas Constitution that permits elections to be conducted by voting machines.
A ballot committee called Restore Election Integrity Arkansas is proposing an Arkansas constitutional amendment aimed at requiring all elections in Arkansas to be conducted with paper ballots and removing language in the Arkansas Constitution that permits elections to be conducted by voting machines.
A ballot committee called Restore Election Integrity Arkansas is proposing an Arkansas constitutional amendment aimed at requiring all elections in Arkansas to be conducted with paper ballots and removing language in the Arkansas Constitution that permits elections to be conducted by voting machines.