Representing over 350 Precincts with Precinct Committee Officers (PCO), elected by local precinct residents.
VOTE on or before Tuesday, Nov 4 8PM
In these local races, the margin between winning and losing is often just a handful of votes. When only 14% of eligible voters participate, the remaining 86% are essentially handing their power to those who do show up. Your single vote can be the deciding factor in who represents you, controls your local budget, sets education policy, or shapes Clark County's future. When you vote, you're not just casting a ballot—you're reclaiming your power to directly influence the decisions that affect your daily life.
At this time, only in-person registrations are allowed to register and receive a ballot for the November 4, 2025 General & Special Election.
If you have not received a ballot, contact the Elections Office at 564-397-2345 to request a replacement ballot. Replacement ballots may also be requested or accessed at VoteWA.gov to print out and return by mail or drop box.
Ballot harvesting is legal in Washington
What does that mean? You can collect completed ballots from your family, friends, and neighbors and turn them in at the elections office or in a dropbox.
The Clark County Elections Office (1408 Franklin Street, Vancouver), is open from 8 am to 4 pm Monday through Friday and 7 am to 8 pm on Election Day. Or return your voted ballot to one of the 22 red permanent ballot drop boxes, available 24 hours a day starting 18 days before an election until 8 pm on Election Day.
Washington State Law does not require that write-in candidates be counted unless they have filed.
A vote in the write-in space for a candidate whose name is actually on the ballot must be counted. For example, if Brad Benton is a candidate and a person writes Brad Benton in instead of blackening the box next to his name, Election Officials must go through all the write-ins to assure that all of Brad’s votes are counted. This burns up hours of observer time.
In summary, votes for Donald Duck or Mickey Mouse slow down the counting process, waste taxpayer money, and burn out volunteers.