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Ballot access requirements for political candidates in Indiana

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Ballot access for major and minor party candidates
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Select a state below to learn more about ballot access requirements for candidates in that state.

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Note: This article is not intended to serve as a guide to running for public office. Individuals should contact theirstate election agencies for further information.


In order to get on the ballot in Indiana, a candidate for state or federal office must meet a variety of state-specific filing requirements and deadlines.These regulations, known as ballot access laws, determine whether a candidate or party will appear on an election ballot. These laws are set at the state level. A candidate must prepare to meet ballot access requirements well in advance of primaries, caucuses, and the general election.

There are three basic methods by which an individual may become a candidate for office in a state.

  1. An individual can seek the nomination of a state-recognized political party.
  2. An individual can run as an independent. Independent candidates often must petition in order to have their names printed on the general election ballot.
  3. An individual can run as a write-in candidate.

This article outlines the steps that prospective candidates for state-level and congressional office must take in order to run for office in Indiana. For information about filing requirements for presidential candidates,click here. Information about filing requirements for local-level offices is not available in this article (contactstate election agencies for information about local candidate filing processes).

DocumentIcon.jpgSeestate election laws

Year-specific filing information

2026

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2026 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2026

U.S. House

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. House candidates in Indiana in the 2026 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. House candidates, 2026
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaU.S. HouseBallot-qualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/A2/6/2026Source
IndianaU.S. HouseUnaffiliated2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/A7/15/2026Source


State House

The table below details filing requirements for Indiana House of Representatives candidates in the 2026 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for Indiana House of Representatives, 2026
StateChamber namePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaHouse of RepresentativesBallot-qualified partyN/AN/A2/6/2026Source
IndianaHouse of RepresentativesUnaffiliated2% of votes cast in the district for secretary of state in the last electionN/A7/15/2026Source

State Senate

The table below details filing requirements for Indiana State Senate candidates in the 2026 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for Indiana State Senate, 2026
StateChamber namePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaState SenateBallot-qualified partyN/AN/A2/6/2026Source
IndianaState SenateUnaffiliated2% of votes cast in the district for secretary of state in the last electionN/A7/15/2026Source


For filing information from previous years, click "[Show more]" below.

Show more

2024

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2024 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2024

U.S. Senate

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. Senate candidates in Indiana in the 2024 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. Senate candidates, 2024
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaU.S. SenateDemocratic or Republican4,500 (500 per congressional district)N/A2/6/2024Source
IndianaU.S. SenateUnaffiliated2% of all votes cast in the last election for secretary of stateN/A7/1/2024Source

U.S. House

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. House candidates in Indiana in the 2024 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. House candidates, 2024
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaU.S. HouseBallot-qualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/A2/6/2024Source
IndianaU.S. HouseUnaffiliated2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/A7/1/2024Source

2022

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2022 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2022

U.S. Senate

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. Senate candidates in Indiana in the 2022 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. Senate candidates, 2022
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaU.S. SenateDemocratic or Republican4,500 (500 per congressional district)N/A2/4/2022Source
IndianaU.S. SenateUnaffiliated2% of all votes cast in the 2018 election for secretary of stateN/A7/15/2022Source

U.S. House

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. House candidates in Indiana in the 2022 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. House candidates, 2022
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
IndianaU.S. HouseBallot-qualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/A2/4/2022Source
IndianaU.S. HouseUnaffiliated2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/A7/15/2022Source

2020

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2020 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2020

U.S. House

The table below details filing requirements for U.S. House candidates in Indiana in the 2020 election cycle. For additional information on candidate ballot access requirements in Indiana, clickhere.

Filing requirements for U.S. House candidates, 2020
StateOfficePartySignatures requiredSignature formulaFiling feeFiling fee formulaFiling deadlineSource
Indiana1st Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana2nd Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana3rd Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana4th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana5th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana6th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana7th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana8th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana9th Congressional DistrictQualified partyN/A (only declaration of candidacy required)N/AN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana1st Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana2nd Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana3rd Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana4th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana5th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana6th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana7th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana8th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source
Indiana9th Congressional DistrictUnaffiliatedUnknown (district-level election results unavailable for calculations)2% of total votes cast for the secretary of state in the district in the last electionN/AN/A7/15/2020Source

State House

The table below details filing requirements for Indiana House of Representatives candidates in the 2020 election cycle.

Filing requirements for state legislative candidates, 2020
Chamber namePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
Indiana House of RepresentativesQualified partyN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana House of RepresentativesUnaffiliated2% of votes cast for secretary of state in the last election in the districtN/A7/15/2020Source

State Senate

The table below details filing requirements for Indiana State Senate candidates in the 2020 election cycle.

Filing requirements for state legislative candidates, 2020
Chamber namePartySignatures requiredFiling feeFiling deadlineSource
Indiana State SenateQualified partyN/AN/A2/7/2020Source
Indiana State SenateUnaffiliated2% of votes cast for secretary of state in the last election in the districtN/A7/15/2020Source

2018

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2018 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2018

See below for 2018 candidate filing deadlines.

February 9, 2018

2016

See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2016 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2016

The calendar below lists important filing deadlines for political candidates in Indiana in 2016.

Dates and requirements for candidates in 2016
DeadlineEvent typeEvent description
January 20, 2016Campaign financeAnnual 2015 campaign finance reports due
February 2, 2016Ballot accessDeadline for major party candidates for governor and the United States Senate to file petitions with county officials for verification
February 5, 2016Ballot accessFinal filing deadline for major party candidates running in the primary
April 15, 2016Campaign financePre-primary reports due
May 3, 2016Election datePrimary election
June 30, 2016Ballot accessDeadline for independent and minor party candidates to file petitions with county officials for verification
July 5, 2016Ballot accessFiling deadline for write-in candidates
July 15, 2016Ballot accessFiling deadline for independent and minor party candidates
October 21, 2016Campaign financePre-election reports due
November 8, 2016Election dateGeneral election
Source:Indiana Election Division, "2016 Indiana Election Calendar," accessed November 25, 2015
Alaska Public Offices Commission, "APOC Annual Calendar," accessed November 25, 2015

2015

To view historical information for 2015, click [show] to expand the section.
 
See also:Indiana elections, 2014 andIndiana municipal elections, 2015

In Indiana, only municipal elections were scheduled to occur in 2015. A calendar listing important dates for the 2015 municipal elections can be accessedhere.[1]


2014

To view historical information for 2014, click [show] to expand the section.
 
See also:Signature requirements and deadlines for 2014 U.S. Congress elections andIndiana elections, 2014

Indiana held a primary election on May 6, 2014, and a general election on November 4, 2014. Voters elected candidates to serve in the following state and federal offices:

The deadline to file paperwork to create a new political party in time for the general election was August 21, 2014. At that time, the new political party also had to submit the names of their candidates for the general election.[2]

In order to participate in the primary election inIndiana, candidates must have filed a Declaration of Candidacy by February 7, 2014. Independent and minor party candidates only participate in the general election. They needed to file a petition of nomination with the County Voter Registration Office by June 30, 2014, to be certified and then turn in a Declaration of Candidacy form with their certified petition of nomination to theIndiana Secretary of State by July 15, 2014.[3][4]

Contact information for county offices and the Election Division can be found on this page under the section titled "Election-related agencies." Challenges against candidates had to be filed by September 1, 2014.[4]

These deadlines, as well as campaign finance reporting deadlines, are listed in the table below.

Legend:     Ballot access     Campaign finance     Election date




Dates and requirements for candidates in 2014
DeadlineEvent typeEvent description
February 7, 2014Ballot accessCandidate filing deadline for primary election
April 15, 2014Campaign financeFirst Quarterly Report due for state executive candidates
April 18, 2014Campaign financePre-primary Report due for state legislative candidates
May 6, 2014Election DatePrimary election date
June 30, 2014Ballot accessDeadline for nominating petitions to be filed with the County Voter Registration Office
July 15, 2014Ballot accessFiling deadline for independent and minor party candidates for the general election
July 15, 2014Campaign financeSecond Quarterly Report due for state executive candidates
August 21, 2014Ballot accessDeadline to establish a new political party
September 1, 2014Ballot accessDeadline to challenge a candidate's placement on the ballot
October 15, 2014Campaign financeThird Quarterly Report due for state executive candidates
October 17, 2014Campaign financePre-election Report due for state legislative candidates
October 28, 2014Campaign financeFourth Quarterly Report due for state executive candidates
November 4, 2014Election DateGeneral election
January 21, 2014Campaign financeAnnual Report due

Process to become a candidate

DocumentIcon.jpgSee statutes:Title 3, Article 8 of the Indiana Code

A candidate in Indiana may run with an officially recognized political party, as an independent, or as a write-in. The process to qualify varies depending on the type of candidate and the office being sought. No fee is required to file for office inIndiana. Before the general election, registered voters have the right to challenge any candidate's placement on the ballot. Challenges must be filed with theIndiana Election Division 74 days before the general election.[4]

Democratic or Republican candidates

A Democratic or Republican candidate seeking the office ofU.S. Senator must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a declaration of candidacy and nomination petition with theIndiana Election Division in person or by mail by noon 88 days prior to the primary election.[5]
  2. The declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a nomination petition. This petition must contain at least 4,500 signatures, including a minimum of 500 signatures from each of the state's congressional districts. Before being filed with the Indiana Election Division, petition signatures must be certified by county voter registration officials.

A candidate seeking the office ofU.S. Representative must do the following:[4]

  1. A candidate must a declaration of candidacy with theIndiana Election Division in person or by mail by noon (Indianapolis time) 88 days before the primary election.[5]

A candidate seeking a state office (such asgovernor ortreasurer) must do the following:[4][6]

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests with the Indiana Ethics Commission. The commission will then give the candidate a Certificate of Filing, which must be filed with theIndiana Election Division before the division can accept any other forms.
  2. A candidate must file a declaration of candidacy with theIndiana Election Division in person or by mail by noon 88 days prior to the primary election.[5]
  3. The declaration of candidacy must be accompanied by a nomination petition. This petition must contain at least 4,500 signatures, including a minimum of 500 signatures from each of the state's congressional districts. Before being filed with the Indiana Election Division, petition signatures must be certified by county voter registration officials.[5]
  4. A Democratic or Republican party candidate must be nominated at the party's state convention. Party officials must file a certificate of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15.

A candidate seeking office in theIndiana State Legislature must do the following:[4]

  1. The candidate must file a statement of economic interests (filing location varies based on office). If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana State Senate, this form must be filed with the Principal Secretary of the Indiana State Senate. If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana House of Representatives, this form must be filed with the Principal Clerk of the Indiana House of Representatives. Statements of economic interests must be filed as original documents, submitted in person or sent by mail. No faxes or photocopies will be accepted. Candidates may turn this form in as early as January 2 of the election year. TheIndiana Election Division will not accept any other form until the statement of economic interests, stamped by the corresponding office, has been submitted.[7]
  2. A candidate must file a declaration of candidacy with theIndiana Election Division in person or by mail by noon (Indianapolis time) 88 days before the primary election.[5]

Libertarian candidates

A Libertarian candidate seeking the office of United States Senator must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file with the Libertarian Party.
  2. A candidate must be nominated at the party's state convention. After the convention, the party must file a certificate of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15 in the year of the general election.[8]

A candidate seeking the office of United States Representative must do the following:[4]

  1. A candidate must file with the Libertarian Party.
  2. A candidate must be nominated at the party's state convention. After the convention, the party must file a certificate of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15 in the year of the general election.[8]

A candidate seeking a state office (such asgovernor ortreasurer) must do the following:[4][6]

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests with the Indiana Ethics Commission. The commission will then give the candidate a certificate of filing, which must, in turn, be filed with theIndiana Election Division before the division can accept any other forms.
  2. A candidate must be nominated at the party's state convention. Party representatives must then file a certificate of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15.

A candidate seeking office in theIndiana State Legislature must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests (filing location varies based on office). If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana State Senate, this form must be filed with the Principal Secretary of the Indiana State Senate. If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana House of Representatives, this form must be filed with the Principal Clerk of the Indiana House of Representatives. Statements of economic interests must be filed as the original document, submitted in person or sent by mail. No faxes or photocopies will be accepted. A candidate may turn this form in as early as January 2 of the election year. TheIndiana Election Division will not accept any other forms until the statement of economic interests, stamped by the corresponding office, has been submitted.[4][7]
  2. A candidate must file with the Libertarian Party.
  3. A candidate must be nominated at the party's state convention. After the convention, the party must file a certificate of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15 before the general election.[8]

Minor party or independent candidates

A minor party or independent candidate seeking the office of United States Senator must do the following:[4][9]

  1. A candidate must collect signatures from registered voters equal to 2 percent of the total votes cast for secretary of state in the last election. The petition circulation period begins 118 days before the primary election and ends June 30. Signatures must then be certified by the applicable county voter registration office.
  2. A candidate must file a candidate consent form and the certified petition of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15 in the year of the election.

A candidate seeking the office of United States Representative must do the following:[4][9]

  1. A candidate must collect signatures from registered voters equal to 2 percent of the total votes cast for secretary of state in the last election in the congressional district the candidate seeks to represent. The petition circulation period begins 118 days before the primary election and ends June 30. Signatures must then be certified by the applicable county voter registration office.
  2. A candidate must file a candidate consent form and the certified petition of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15 in the year of the election.

A candidate seeking a state office (such asgovernor ortreasurer) must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests with the Indiana Ethics Commission. The commission will then give the candidate a filing certificate, which must, in turn, be filed with theIndiana Election Division before the division can accept any other forms.
  2. A candidate must collect signatures from registered voters equal to 2 percent of the total votes cast for secretary of state in the last election. The petition circulation period begins 118 days before the primary election and ends June 30. Signatures must then be certified by the applicable county voter registration office.
  3. A candidate must file a candidate consent form and the certified petition of nomination with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15.

A candidate seeking office in theIndiana State Legislature must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests form (filing location varies based on office). If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana State Senate, this form must be filed with the Principal Secretary of the Indiana State Senate. If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana House of Representatives, this form must be filed with the Principal Clerk of the Indiana House of Representatives. Statements of economic interests forms must be filed as original documents, submitted in person or sent by mail. No faxes or photocopies will be accepted. A candidate may turn the form in as early as January 2 in the year of the election. TheIndiana Election Division will not accept any other filings until the statement of economic interests, stamped by the corresponding office, has been submitted.[4][7]
  2. A candidate must collect signatures from registered voters equal to 2 percent of the total votes cast for secretary of state in the last election in the election district the candidate seeks to represent. The petition circulation period begins 118 days before the primary election and ends June 30. Signatures must then be certified by the applicable county voter registration office.
  3. A candidate must file a candidate consent form and the certified petition of nomination form with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 15.

Write-in candidates

A write-in candidate seeking the offices of United States Senator or United States Representative must do the following:[4][10]

  1. A candidate must file a declaration of intent with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 3 in the year of the election.

A candidate seeking a state office (such asgovernor ortreasurer) must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests with the Indiana Ethics Commission. The commission must then give the candidate a certificate of filing, which must, in turn, be filed with theIndiana Election Division before the division can accept any other forms.
  2. A candidate must file a declaration of intent with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 3 in the year of the election.

A candidate seeking office in theIndiana State Legislature must do the following:

  1. A candidate must file a statement of economic interests form (filing location varies based on office). If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana State Senate, this form must be filed with the Principal Secretary of the Indiana State Senate. If a candidate is seeking office in theIndiana House of Representatives, this form must be filed with the Principal Clerk of the Indiana House of Representatives. Statements of economic interests forms must be filed as original documents, submitted in person or sent by mail. No faxes or photocopies will be accepted. A candidate can file the form in as early as January 2 in the year of the election. TheIndiana Election Division will not accept any other forms until the statement of economic interests, stamped by the corresponding office, has been submitted.[4][7]
  2. A candidate must file a declaration of intent with theIndiana Election Division by noon (Indianapolis time) on July 3 in the year of the election.

Petition requirements

See also:Methods for signing candidate nominating petitions

In some cases, political parties and/or candidates may need to obtain signatures via the petition process to gain ballot access. This section outlines the laws and regulations pertaining topetitions andcirculators inIndiana.

A registered voter that agrees to sign a candidate's petition must provide his or her name in legible, printed form and his or her residential address. Once a petition is completed, it must be filed with the county voter registration office to certify each signature's validity. Contact information for Indiana's county voter registration offices can be found on this page under the section titled "Election-related agencies."[11]

The code does not specify circulator requirements.


Contact information

Election agencies

Seal of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission
See also:State election agencies

Individuals seeking additional information about election administration in Indiana can contact the following local, state, and federal agencies.

Indiana Election Administrators

Click here for a list

Indiana Secretary of State, Election Division

302 West Washington Street, Room E-204
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
Phone: 317-232-3939
Fax: 317-233-6793
Email:elections@iec.in.gov
Website:https://www.in.gov/sos/elections/

U.S. Election Assistance Commission

633 3rd Street NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 301-563-3919
Toll free: 1-866-747-1471
Email:clearinghouse@eac.gov
Website:https://www.eac.gov



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Do you need information about elections inyour area? Are you looking foryour local election official?Click here to visit theU.S. Vote Foundation and use their election official lookup tool.


Term limits

Indiana state executives are term-limited. These limits are established inArticle 5 of theIndiana Constitution.

State executives

State Executive Officials
See also:State executives with term limits,States with gubernatorial term limits andIndiana state executive official elections, 2016

The state executive term limits inIndiana are as follows:[12][13]

State legislators

See also:State legislatures with term limits

Indiana does not place term limits on state legislators.

Congressional partisanship

Portal:Legislative Branch
See also:List of United States Representatives from Indiana andList of United States Senators from Indiana

Below is the current partisan breakdown of the congressional delegation fromIndiana.

Indiana congressional partisan composition
PartyU.S. SenateU.S. HouseTotal
Democratic022
Republican279
Independent000
Vacancies000
Total2911

State legislative partisanship

Portal:State legislatures

Below is the current partisan breakdown of members of the state legislature ofIndiana.

Indiana State Senate

Partisan composition, Indiana State Senate
As of February 2026
PartyMembers
Democratic10
Republican40
Other0
Vacancies0
Total50

Indiana House of Representatives

Partisan composition, Indiana House of Representatives
As of February 2026
PartyMembers
Democratic30
Republican70
Other0
Vacancies0
Total100

Related legislation

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The table below lists bills related to ballot access requirements for candidates that have been introduced during (or carried over to) the current legislative session in Indiana. The following information is included for each bill:

  • State
  • Bill number
  • Official bill name or caption
  • Most recent action date
  • Legislative status
  • Sponsor party
  • Topics dealt with by the bill

Bills are organized by most recent action. The table displays up to 100 results. To view more bills, use the arrows in the upper-right corner. Clicking on a bill will open its page onBallotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker, which includes bill details and a summary.

The Ballot Bulletin

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TheBallot Bulletin is a weekly email that delivers the latest updates on election policy. The Ballot Bulletin tracks developments in election policy around the country, including legislative activity, big-picture trends, and recent news. Each email contains in-depth data from ourElection Administration Legislation Tracker. You'll also be able to track relevant legislation, with links to and summaries of the bills themselves.

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See also

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External links

Official state and federal links

Other information

Footnotes

  1. Indiana Election Division, "2015 Election Calendar," accessed January 12, 2015
  2. This information comes from correspondence with Indiana Election Division on September 18, 2013.
  3. Indiana Secretary of State, "2014 Indiana Election Calendar," accessed November 27, 2013
  4. 4.004.014.024.034.044.054.064.074.084.094.104.114.124.13Indiana Secretary of State, "2014 Indiana Candidate Guide" accessed November 27, 2013Cite error: Invalid<ref> tag; name "in2014guide" defined multiple times with different content
  5. 5.05.15.25.35.4Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-2-4," accessed February 26, 2025Cite error: Invalid<ref> tag; name "inmajorpartycancode" defined multiple times with different contentCite error: Invalid<ref> tag; name "inmajorpartycancode" defined multiple times with different content
  6. 6.06.1Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-4-1," accessed February 26, 2025
  7. 7.07.17.27.3Indiana Code, " 2-2.2-2-1," accessed February 26, 2025
  8. 8.08.18.2Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-7-8," accessed February 25, 2025
  9. 9.09.1Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-6," accessed February 26, 2025
  10. Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-2-2.5," accessed February 26, 2025
  11. Indiana Code, "Section 3-8-6," accessed February 25, 2025
  12. Indiana Constitution, "Article V," accessed November 11, 2013
  13. Council of State Governments, "2012 Book of the States" accessed November 27, 2013
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