TAP MENUE ICON TO VIEW NEXT PAGES

ON MOBILE DEVICES

The Election Integrity Act of 2025: 18 Key Provisions

​Purpose and Legal Authority: Explicitly citing 2 U.S.C. § 7 and 3 U.S.C. § 1 to enforce the single lawful Election Day.

​Definition of Election Day: Defining "Election Day" as the 24-hour period on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

​One-Day Voting Only: Mandating all federal voting occurs exclusively on the designated Election Day.

​Prohibition of Early Voting: Ending all early voting periods for federal offices.

​Prohibition of Mail-In Balloting: Eliminating mail-in voting, with strictly defined exceptions only for UOCAVA (military/overseas).

​In-Person Voting Mandate: Requiring all domestic voters to cast ballots in person at their designated precinct.

​Proof of Citizenship Required: Mandatory presentation of documented proof of U.S. citizenship to receive a federal ballot.

​Paper Ballots Only: Requiring the use of physical paper ballots for all federal elections.

​Hand-Counting Mandate: Requiring all ballots to be hand-counted by humans at the precinct level.

​Ban on Electronic Voting Machines: Prohibiting the use of any electronic or mechanical tabulating equipment.

​Ban on Private Contractors: Prohibiting third-party vendors or private entities from managing any part of the election or tabulation.

​Precinct-Level Tabulation: All counting must be completed and results posted at the individual precinct level.

​Midnight Result Deadline: Requiring all precinct results to be finalized and reported by 11:59 PM on Election Day.

​Nullification of Unlawful Ballots: Any ballot cast or received outside of the 24-hour Election Day period is legally void.

​National Election Day Holiday: Establishing Election Day as a federal holiday to facilitate one-day in-person voting.

​Criminal Penalties for Officials: Establishing federal felony charges for officials who knowingly violate the "One Day" mandate.

​Preemption of Conflicting State Laws: Explicitly invoking the Elections Clause to override state laws that allow early or mail-in voting for federal office.

​Severability: Ensuring that if any portion of the Act is challenged, the remainder of the enforcement provisions remain in effect.

​John Dady citizensagainsttyranny1776@gmail.com