VirginiaHB12442026 Regular SessionHouse

Absentee voting; emergency application for absentee ballot.

Sponsored By: Bonita G. Anthony (Democratic)

Became Law

Summary

Absentee voting; emergency application for absentee ballot. Provides that a qualified voter may apply for an emergency absentee ballot if he has applied to receive an absentee ballot by the deadline but has not received his ballot within 10 days of the election and will be unable to vote on election day due to his hospitalization or illness, the hospitalization, illness, or death of a spouse, child, or parent, or other emergency found to justify receipt of an emergency absentee ballot.

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.

Easier absentee voting for emergency workers

During a declared state of emergency, the Commissioner of Elections can make absentee voting easier for emergency and utility workers and others helping in the affected area. The commissioner can centrally issue and accept absentee ballots for federal and state elections and use systems built for military voters. This helps responders get and return ballots while they are deployed to an emergency.

Last-minute in-person absentee voting

You may vote absentee in person at the general registrar’s office through 2:00 p.m. on the day before the election. You must meet the usual in‑person voting rules and state that an emergency will stop you from voting on Election Day. Covered events that happen after 12:00 p.m. on the Saturday before the election include: a work or business duty that takes you out of your county or city, hospitalization of you or an immediate family member, or a death in your immediate family. Immediate family means your child, grandchild, parent, grandparent, legal guardian, sibling, or spouse. It also covers officers of election assigned after that Saturday noon to work in a different precinct.

Emergency absentee ballot via helper, with limits

Any registered, qualified Virginia voter can request an emergency absentee ballot through a designated helper before 2:00 p.m. the day before the election. You must show an emergency: you were unable to apply by the deadline due to hospitalization or illness; a spouse, child, or parent’s hospitalization, illness, or death; another true emergency; or you applied on time but did not get your ballot within 10 days of the election and now face an emergency for Election Day. Your helper must be 18 or older and cannot be an elected official, a candidate, or the deputy, spouse, parent, or child of an official or candidate. You sign the request and declare it is true; false statements are felonies. If you are blind or cannot sign, your helper notes that on the signature line. Your helper must sign as a witness and return the request to the registrar by 5:00 p.m. the day before the election. The registrar gives the ballot to your helper for delivery. You mark the ballot in your helper’s presence, and your helper returns the sealed ballot with a sworn statement to the registrar’s office. The ballot counts only if the registrar receives it before polls close.

Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Bonita G. Anthony

    Democratic • House

Cosponsors

There are no cosponsors for this bill.

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 199 • No: 23

Senate vote 3/2/2026

Passed Senate

Yes: 24 • No: 16

Senate vote 2/26/2026

Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading)

Yes: 40 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/26/2026

Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

Yes: 0 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/24/2026

Reported from Privileges and Elections

Yes: 13 • No: 2

House vote 2/3/2026

Read third time and passed House

Yes: 92 • No: 5

House vote 1/30/2026

Reported from Privileges and Elections with substitute

Yes: 22 • No: 0

House vote 1/28/2026

Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute

Yes: 8 • No: 0

Actions Timeline

  1. Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0761)

    4/13/2026Governor
  2. Approved by Governor-Chapter 761 (effective 7/1/2026)

    4/13/2026Governor
  3. Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB1244)

    3/11/2026House
  4. Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026

    3/10/2026Governor
  5. Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026

    3/10/2026House
  6. Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB1244ER)

    3/9/2026House
  7. Enrolled

    3/9/2026House
  8. Signed by President

    3/9/2026Senate
  9. Signed by Speaker

    3/9/2026House
  10. Passed Senate (24-Y 16-N 0-A)

    3/2/2026Senate
  11. Passed by for the day

    2/27/2026Senate
  12. Read third time

    2/27/2026Senate
  13. Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

    2/26/2026Senate
  14. Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (40-Y 0-N 0-A)

    2/26/2026Senate
  15. Rules suspended

    2/26/2026Senate
  16. Reported from Privileges and Elections (13-Y 2-N)

    2/24/2026Senate
  17. Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB1244)

    2/6/2026House
  18. Referred to Committee on Privileges and Elections

    2/4/2026Senate
  19. Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)

    2/4/2026Senate
  20. Read third time and passed House (92-Y 5-N 0-A)

    2/3/2026House
  21. Moved from Uncontested Calendar to Regular Calendar

    2/3/2026House
  22. Engrossed by House - committee substitute

    2/2/2026House
  23. committee substitute agreed to

    2/2/2026House
  24. Read second time

    2/2/2026House
  25. Read first time

    1/30/2026House

Bill Text

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