Assign Ballot Styles

Once an election's ballot styles have been created in Voter Focus, you will need to assign those ballot styles to the precincts and precinct splits voting in the election.

For general elections, only one ballot style can be assigned to a precinct or precinct split. For primary elections, ballot styles can be assigned for Democrats, Republicans, and non-partisan (NPA) voters, and voters from up to two minor parties, if parties are selected in the Minor Parties in Primary box on the Election Maintenance dialog. The assigned ballot styles for primaries are displayed in the party columns Dem Style, Rep Style, etc.

State law requires that each precinct be assigned a unique ballot style so that precinct-level voting can be reported. The law does not require that precinct splits have unique ballot styles, although separate ballot styles are necessary if the races/issues in the precinct splits vary from the precinct races. When the races/issues are the same, the precinct splits can use the same ballot style as the precinct.

After the candidate qualifying period has closed, we recommend you review your ballot styles and make any adjustments that might be necessary. For example, if no candidate qualified for a minor party race, you could delete the ballot for that race.

Prior to the assignment of ballot styles to precincts (and designation of the federal election style for Fed Elections Only voters), voters who make a Vote-By-Mail request for the election will have XXX in the Style column on the Vote-By-Mail tab of their record. When the Deliver Ballot runs are performed (including runs that create export files for Pitney Bowes Relia-Vote and external mailing houses), the system evaluates the voter's status, party, and precinct to determine their eligibility and ballot style. If the voter is eligible, the XXX placeholder is replaced by the appropriate ballot style.