Location Election Type What's on the Ballot Congressional District 8 Polling Place Special General Election to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Trent Franks. SEE IMPORTANT VOTER ID INFO BELOW

Important Dates

*As of Aug 9, 2017, voter registration deadlines falling on a legal holiday or weekend move to the next immediate business day, pursuant to changes enacted by SB 1307.

MARICOPA COUNTY

Contact Information

County Recorder

Adrian Fontes

510 S. Third Ave

Phoenix, AZ 85003

602-506-3535

T.D.D. 602-506-2348

ccec@azcleanelections.gov



Go to Website County Election Director

Rey Valenzuela

510 S. Third Ave

Phoenix, AZ 85003

602-506-1511

T.D.D. 602-506-2348

ccec@azcleanelections.gov



Go to Website

Ways to Vote

The CD8 Special General Election is a vote center election. This means CD8 voters can go to any voting location in Mariopca County on Election Day. Early voting, by mail and in-person, is also available:



Early Voting



You can vote early by:

Polling Place - you must visit your assigned polling location in Maricopa County.

ID at the polls is required. IMPORTANT : Maricopa County is experiencing a delay in sending voter registration cards out to voters. If you registered to vote, or updated your registration, and have not received a new voter registration card, you may download a digital voter registration card here. Try our ID at the Polls quiz to see what other forms of ID are accepted.

: Maricopa County is experiencing a delay in sending voter registration cards out to voters. If you registered to vote, or updated your registration, and have not received a new voter registration card, you may download a digital voter registration card here. Try our ID at the Polls quiz to see what other forms of ID are accepted. If you still have your early ballot, you can drop it off at any vote center in Maricopa County. And you don't have to wait in line! All ballots must be received by 7pm.

Voting FAQ

You can vote on Election Day from 6am - 7pm:

Polls are open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day. Don't forget your ID!

Absolutely. If you are on the Permanent Early Voting List (PEVL), you will automatically receive a ballot in your mailbox beginning 27 days before the election. Voters not on PEVL may make a one-time early ballot request.

It depends. If you vote early by mail, ID is not required. Your signature on the early ballot affidavit is compared to your voter registration record by the County Recorder to determine if the signature is valid.



ID is required if you vote early in person, or at a polling place or voting center on Election Day.

Military and Overseas voters have special voting rights under federal and state law (Uniformed & Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA)). These rights include the use of a Federal Post Card Application (FPCA) to register to vote and request an early ballot as well as the use of a Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot (FWAB), which serves as an emergency back-up ballot. Learn More

No, voters do not have to vote everything on their ballot. The votes they do cast will still be counted. However, we encourage voters to vote down the ballot as local races, propositions, judges, etc. can impact voters' daily lives.