What it’s actually like to be a poll worker in the 2024 US election

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When voters head to the polls next week, the millions of ballots cast will be processed by at least 700,000 election workers across the United States. Most of those involved are either volunteers or temporary staff who are paid modestly to set up equipment, verify voter registration and identification, and count ballots.

Threats aimed at election workers spiked in 2020 and have remained high since. In response, election officials around the country from both major political parties have worked to educate voters about how elections work, saying the more people understand the process, the more they trust the results.

Why We Wrote This

Election workers play a key role in running voting operations on Election Day. Their role has come under increased scrutiny since the 2020 U.S. elections. Here’s what this position involves – and how people are handling the pressure.

Election workers are unaffiliated with political parties. Often, they serve in the community where they live. Poll workers are different from poll watchers, who volunteer – typically with a party or partisan group – to observe how elections are carried out. Almost all states require training for at least some poll workers. 

“I think that given the temperature of these past elections, I have been concerned,” says Melissa Harris, a poll worker from Georgia. But the importance of her work outweighs those worries. “In order to have an active role and a democracy that we care about, everyone should consider, How can they get out and do something?”

When voters head to the polls next week, the millions of ballots cast will be processed by at least 700,000 election workers across the United States. Most of those involved are either volunteers or temporary staff who are paid modestly, some as little as $5 per day, to set up equipment, verify voter registration and identification, and count ballots.

Amid misinformation about election integrity, threats aimed at election workers spiked in 2020 and have remained high since. In response, election officials around the country from both major parties have worked to educate voters about how elections work, saying the more people understand the process, the more they trust the results.

The specifics of poll workers’ jobs vary by locality since most election administration is conducted at the county level. But generally speaking, these positions around the country follow a similar model.

Why We Wrote This

Election workers play a key role in running voting operations on Election Day. Their role has come under increased scrutiny since the 2020 U.S. elections. Here’s what this position involves – and how people are handling the pressure.

You don’t work for political parties

Election workers are unaffiliated with political parties. Often, they serve in the community where they live. Poll workers are different from poll watchers who volunteer – typically with a party or partisan group – to observe how elections are carried out.

Most states require poll workers to be a U.S. citizen, above 18, and without a criminal background that would prevent them from voting.

Poll workers aren’t typically allowed to discuss politics while they’re on the job, or even wear clothing that expresses political opinions. “Up until 6 a.m. on Election Day, you can have your opinions,” an instructor told a room of about 40 poll workers during a training this month in Media, Pennsylvania, a small town outside of Philadelphia.

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