Politics & Government

Find Voting Centers And Drop Boxes In Newport Beach

There are three options for casting a ballot on this final day of the election in Newport Beach. Here's how.

Ballot drop boxes, like the one pictured, can be found across Newport Beach for the 2022 Primary Election.
Ballot drop boxes, like the one pictured, can be found across Newport Beach for the 2022 Primary Election. (Orange County Registrar of Voters)

NEWPORT BEACH, CA —If you haven’t already, it’s not too late to vote today!

The polls are open until 8 p.m. Click here to find your voting center.

Newport Beach residents are poised to vote in races for the district attorney's office, several Board of Supervisors positions and Congressional representatives. Residents will also decide the fate of Measure B, which would allow for the direct election of the mayor's position if approved.

Find out what's happening in Newport Beach-Corona Del Marfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The measure courted controversy recently when opponents shared and quickly deleted a video depicting a fictional mayor getting shot.

Early voting has been dismal in the California primaries, meaning that a relatively small number of voters can determine the outcome of several key races. Around 13 percent of registered voters turned in their ballots as of Saturday ahead of Tuesday's Primary Election, according to Political Data Inc.

Find out what's happening in Newport Beach-Corona Del Marfor free with the latest updates from Patch.


RELATED: OC Primary: Todd Spitzer Faces Uneasy Path To Reelection Amid Scandals


All registered voters in California should have received their ballots in the mail weeks ago. Once you’ve made your selection — see here for our full guide to candidates and the primary voting process) — you have three options for returning the signed, sealed and pre-stamped ballot today.

You can drop off ballots at any of the voting centers in Newport Beach, vote in person or drop off ballots at several approved drop box locations around the city. Find your nearest voting center and dropbox here.

Drop boxes are relatively new and allow voters to place ballots in a spot where they are automatically considered on time. In California, mailed ballots must be received by June 14. That means that voters at the mercy of the often slow U.S. Postal Service may stress about whether or not their ballots will arrive on time.

California law requires jurisdictions to provide at least one drop box per 30,000 registered voters. Some counties may require one drop box per 15,000 registered voters.

Drop boxes must be a “secure receptacle established by a county or city and county elections official.” Drop boxes are clearly marked and are available 24-7 until 8 p.m. Tuesday when they are locked.

Drop boxes got caught up in the partisan voting rights maelstrom during the 2020 election. Proponents argued that they expanded access to voting. But opponents argued — without evidence — that they were not secured and contributed to election fraud.


RELATED: 2022 California Primary: How To Vote, What To Know In Newport Beach


Several Republican campaigns and legislatures have tried to limit drop boxes. In 2020, the campaign of President Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee sued Pennsylvania over its use of drop boxes, arguing that they were not properly monitored and susceptible to fraud. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected the argument.

Officials in Ohio and Texas also decreed that counties could have only one drop box per county, even in counties with more than 1 million residents. Both rules have been upheld by courts.

In the 2022 elections, more states are trying to limit their use through ballot initiatives and new laws.

In California in 2020, Republicans set up more than 50 unofficial, unverified drop boxes around the state, particularly near churches, gun shops and Republican party offices in conservative parts of the state. Then-Secretary of State Alex Padilla ordered them to shut down, but the California GOP refused. Hector Barajas, a spokesperson for the California Republican Party, said they were not illegal because the state did not forbid what he termed “ballot harvesting.”


City News Service contributed to this report.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.