Oregon voter registration for the Nov. 4, 2025 Special Election closed on Oct. 14, as announced by Secretary of State Tobias Read.
Just 17 of Oregon’s 36 counties will hold elections this November, allowing voters a chance to weigh in on everything from fire department levies to bonds for recreation facilities and whether citizens should be able to veto expensive public projects. More than half of all counties – 19, to be exact – have nothing on the ballot.
The deadline for online registrations is 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday. Ballots will begin to be mailed out the next day.
OREGON- Ballots for the November 4 special election are being mailed out across Oregon. There are multiple measures up for a vote around the region. On the Coos County ballot, voters will decide on a measure to annex land into the Fairview Rural Fire Protection District.
The Oregon Trail School District is asking voters to approve a $172 million bond to pay for building updates and maintenance plus safety upgrades and improvements to the district’s recreational facilities.
Ballots for the November 4 Special Election will begin showing up in mailboxes today, Multnomah County Elections said.
Ballots were mailed to Baker County’s more than 13,000 voters on Wednesday, Oct. 15. There is a single item on the ballot for the Nov. 4 election — a measure that, if approved, would give voters veto power over proposed public event centers with a projected construction cost exceeding $1 million.
When Oregon legislators approved limits on political contributions last spring, they promised they’d soon move beyond the basics of the law and deliver needed clarifications and improvements on how it would work.
Democrats from across the state and some from across the country have come to the 13th bi-annual Oregon Summit at the Sunriver Resort. Over the course of the weekend, participants will be in sessions listening to Oregon State Democratic party leaders talk about the future.