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The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada and its coalition partners are launching their statewide Election Protection program as early voting begins Saturday for Nevada’s primary election.

Early voting for Nevada’s primary election runs from Saturday through June 5. Primary Election Day is June 9. ACLU of Nevada, alongside colleague organizations including Silver State Voices, All Voting is Local, and Institute for a Progressive Nevada, will deploy trained, nonpartisan observers to monitor polling locations across the state and to make sure all eligible voters can access Nevada’s free and fair election processes.

In 2024, ACLU of Nevada ran the largest election protection program in Nevada history, with hundreds of trained observers monitoring polling locations across all 17 counties.

Nonpartisan Civic Participation Resources

The Nevada Election Protection program is focused on protecting voter access, identifying barriers at polling places, and documenting issues that may affect the ability to vote. In addition to in-person poll monitoring, the Let Nevadans Coalition will be operating the Election Protection Hotline throughout the early voting period and on Election Day.

Election Protection Hotlines

  • English: 866-OUR-VOTE (866-687-8683)
  • Spanish: 888-VE-Y-VOTA (888-839-8682)
  • Asian Languages: 888-API-VOTE (888-274-8683)
  • Arabic: 844-YALLA-US (844-925-5287)

Any Nevada voter may use the hotline for:

  • Questions about voter registration deadlines
  • Requesting absentee ballots
  • Mail ballot issues
  • How to vote in person
  • Signature or ballot curing questions
  • Polling place access or intimidation concerns
  • Questions requiring legal or county guidance

 

ACLU of Nevada executive director Athar Haseebullah (he/him) said:
“Across the country, voting rights are being attacked through disinformation, intimidation, and policies designed to make participation harder. Our Election Protection program exists because the right to vote must be protected in real time, on the ground, where voters are actually casting their ballots. After running the largest election protection program in Nevada history in 2024, we are once again deploying trained observers across the state to ensure every eligible voter is heard. Nevada can and should be a firewall against attacks on voting rights, and we are prepared to do our part.”

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In Nevada, people who are detained in a city or county jail are either pre-trial or serving a misdemeanor sentence and, therefore, have not lost their right to vote. Despite never losing this right, eligible voters detained in Nevada jails have continuously been denied meaningful access to the ballot box. Recognizing the unique constraints and widespread disenfranchisement of voters taking place in Nevada jails, the 2023 Nevada Legislature passed Assembly Bill 286, mandating that jail administrators work with the city or county clerk to implement policies and procedures that would ensure eligible voters detained in these facilities can register to vote and cast their ballot in an election. Since the bill took effect on January 1, the ACLU of Nevada has been monitoring the implementation of the policies and procedures outlined in AB286, which should have been in place for the Presidential Preference Primary; however, public records requests revealed that the Elko County Jail had not implemented such policies and continues not to be compliant. ACLUNV attorneys sent a demand letter to the jail, urging them to be compliant with the law, or legal action would take place. The jail continues not to be compliant. Without the implementation of these policies and procedures as outlined in the bill, eligible voters detained in Elko County Jail will continue to be disenfranchised and have their voices silenced ahead of a critical election year. UPDATE: On May 29, 2024, ACLU of Nevada and Elko County reached a settlement, and the jail is now fully compliant with AB286.
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Firewall for Freedom

Across the nation, the federal government is attempting to dismantle long-standing protections for free speech, privacy, equality, and democracy. But freedom doesn’t just live in the courts or in Washington. It begins right here, in Nevada. Our cities, counties, and communities can be the first line of defense against federal overreach. ACLU of Nevada’s FIREwall for Freedom campaign is both a proactive and responsive strategy to protect our rights and our people from unlawful federal interference. When local leaders refuse to be complicit in unconstitutional acts, when city councils pass protections, and when neighbors look out for each other, that’s how democracy endures. Local policies, local leadership, and local courage can stop unconstitutional federal actions before they take root.