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A4934 • 2026

Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.

Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.

Elections
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Stewart, Kenyatta
Last action
2026-05-07
Official status
Introduced, Referred to Assembly State and Local Government Committee
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.

Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.

What This Bill Does

  • Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.
  • Topic: State and Local Government Fiscal note: This bill has been certified by OLS for a fiscal note.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-05-07 New Jersey Legislature

    Introduced, Referred to Assembly State and Local Government Committee

Official Summary Text

Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to receive mail-in ballots.
Topic:
State and Local Government
Fiscal note:
This bill has been certified by OLS for a fiscal note.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
A4934

ASSEMBLY, No. 4934

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

222nd LEGISLATURE

�

INTRODUCED MAY 7, 2026

Sponsored by:

Assemblyman� KENYATTA STEWART

District 35 (Bergen and Passaic)

SYNOPSIS

���� Provides for qualified voters who are incarcerated to
receive mail-in ballots.

CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT

���� As introduced.

��

An Act
concerning the provision of mail-in ballots to qualified
voters who are incarcerated and supplementing P.L.2009, c.79 (C.19:63-1 et
seq.).

����
Be It
Enacted
by the Senate and General Assembly of
the State of New Jersey:

���� 1.��� a.� The Secretary of
State, in coordination with the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections, shall
provide to qualified voters who are detained or incarcerated for reasons other
than a conviction for an indictable offense an application for a mail-in ballot.�
The application shall enable the voter to request to vote by mail-in ballot and
to provide the address where the voter is detained or incarcerated as a
secondary address to which the ballot shall be sent in accordance with section
3 of P.L.2009, c.79 (C.19:63-3).

���� b.��� Except as otherwise
provided by this section, an application for a mail-in ballot submitted
pursuant to subsection a. of this section shall be treated as any other
application submitted pursuant to P.L.2009, c.79 (C.19:63-1 et seq.), and the voter
submitting the application shall receive and return their mail-in ballot as
provided by P.L.2009, c.79 (C.19:63-1 et seq.).

���� c.���� If a voter who requests
to vote by mail-in ballot pursuant to subsection a. of this section is
subsequently transferred to another location, then the Department of
Corrections shall ensure the delivery of the mail-in ballot to the voter;
provided, however, that such act shall not result in the department or any
employee thereof being considered a messenger or bearer within the meaning of
P.L.2009, c.79 (C.19:63-1 et seq.).�

���� d.��� Nothing in this section
shall be construed to confer the right to vote to persons incarcerated as the
result of a conviction for an indictable offense or otherwise disqualified from
voting in this State.� If a person is convicted of an indictable offense after
having completed an application for a mail-in ballot pursuant to subsection a.
of this section, any ballot sent to or received from the person shall be deemed
void and shall not be counted.

���� 2.��� This act shall take
effect January 1 next following the date of enactment.

STATEMENT

���� This bill provides for qualified
voters who are detained or incarcerated to apply for and receive mail-in
ballots.

���� Under current law, persons who
are incarcerated as a result of a conviction for an indictable offense, or
felonies, are ineligible to vote.� This bill does not change that.� However,
certain persons may be incarcerated for nonindictable offenses or detained
pending trial, in which case the person retains the right to vote but requires
access to a mail-in ballot from the location at which they are detained or
incarcerated to exercise that right.

���� This bill requires that the Secretary
of State, in coordination with the Commissioner of the Department of
Corrections, provides an application for a mail-in ballot to qualified voters
detained or incarcerated for reasons other than a conviction for an indictable
offense.� The application will enable the voter to request to vote by mail-in
ballot and to provide the address where the voter is detained or incarcerated
as a secondary address to which the ballot can be sent.� If a voter who
requests to vote by mail-in ballot pursuant to this bill is subsequently
transferred to another location, then the Department of Corrections will ensure
the delivery of the mail-in ballot to the voter.