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Track Election
Legislation in Your State

LegiTrack is a bill-tracking tool to empower freedom-minded citizens to engage with and influence election integrity through the legislative process.

Legislative Session by State
Prefiling
Regular Session
Out of Session
Special Session
Regular & Special
Prefile & Special

Learn

Understand election integrity bills from your state and our federal government.

Track

Follow bills through the entire legislative process.

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Bill Tracker

All
Bill Name
Introduced
1st Chamber
1st Committee
2nd Chamber
2nd Committee
Enacted

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Drag the handle on the right side to a Collection List or select from the dropdown list. The Collection List must be outside of a page to be connected.

FAQs

What stages does a bill go through?

  1. Drafting: a legislator or group writes the bill

  1. Introduction: it’s formally introduced in one chamber

  2. Committee review: it’s debated, amended, or “killed”

  3. Chamber vote: full House or Senate votes

  4. Second chamber: repeats steps 2–4 in the other chamber

  5. Final approval: both chambers agree on final version

When is the best time for a citizen to get involved?

The sooner the better! When a bill is newly introduced, lawmakers are seeking support from sponsors and like-minded citizens, and this is the opportunity to shape the language within the draft to benefit the people. Tracking legislation from the beginning is essential for citizens to have their voices heard.

How can I make a difference?

Here are important stages and how you can best take action:

1. Bill Drafting & Introduction (Best time to act!)

  • Why it matters: Lawmakers are still shaping the language and testing support.

  • What you can do:

    • Contact your legislator with your concerns or support

    • Suggest amendments or point out issues

    • Organize community awareness before it’s public news

2. Committee Hearings

  • Why it matters: Most bills die or are changed in committee.

  • What you can do:

    • Submit public comment or testify in person or in writing

    • Encourage others to contact committee members

    • Share facts on social media before a vote is taken

3. Floor Votes (House or Senate)

  • Why it matters: Decisions are imminent.

  • What you can do:

    • Contact your rep and ask them to vote yes/no

    • Remind them you are watching and will follow their vote

    • Use mass awareness (emails, calls, social media)

4. Governor’s Desk / Final Approval

  • Why it matters: It’s your last chance before it becomes law.

  • What you can do:

    • Urge the governor to veto or sign

    • Rally others to make a final push

    • Prepare for legal or civic response if passed

A bill I wanted to pass was vetoed. What can I do?

The legislature can override the veto with a supermajority vote, (usually 2/3). This gives citizens a final opportunity to push legislators.

How do I understand real-life impacts within bills?

Begin with this simple guiding question: “Who will this affect and how will their daily life change?”

Locate the Provisions Section where the actual changes are spelled out. With your guiding question in mind, identify what is required or restricted, whether it removes existing rights or protections, and whether or not it creates new penalties or mandates.

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