Primary-source first
State and territory pages are built to send people to official election offices, Vote.gov, the FEC, the EAC, or FVAP before they rely on a summary.
Editorial Policy
VoteReady Midterms is a nonpartisan informational publisher. The goal is to shorten the path from a voter question to an official election authority, while being explicit about what is verified, what needs local confirmation, and how errors are corrected.
State and territory pages are built to send people to official election offices, Vote.gov, the FEC, the EAC, or FVAP before they rely on a summary.
When a detail varies by county, ballot type, voter category, or late-breaking state guidance, the site marks it for confirmation instead of pretending the answer is universal.
Advertising, sponsorships, or analytics settings do not change source labels, correction decisions, or which official links are prioritized on voter-help pages.
State pages prioritize official election authority links. National guidance is anchored to Vote.gov, the Federal Election Commission, the Election Assistance Commission, and the Federal Voting Assistance Program.
Facts that are stable and clearly published can be labeled as verified. Details that often change by county, ballot method, court order, or local practice are intentionally marked so readers confirm them with the official source before acting.
Review timestamps are shown to help readers understand freshness, but a timestamp is not a guarantee that a state or local rule has not changed after publication.
Corrections can be reported by email and should include the affected page, the official source URL, and a short description of the issue. Broken official links and misleading task labels are prioritized because they can block voter action.
When a correction changes voter instructions or a source destination, the affected page is updated and the page review date is refreshed in the local dataset used to generate the site.
Questions about interpretation are resolved in favor of the official election authority. If the official source is unclear, the site uses cautionary language rather than a definitive instruction.
Any advertising must remain visually separate from official-source guidance. Ads, sponsorships, or measurement tooling cannot rewrite deadline copy, suppress source caveats, or influence which official resources are linked.
AdSense code is disabled by default in production until the site owner enables it and confirms that consent tooling for regulated regions is in place. If monetization is enabled, privacy disclosures and consent handling must be updated before traffic is scaled.
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