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New Jersey Center for Civic Education | New Jersey Mock Election
 New Jersey Center For Civic Education | Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

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New Jersey Center for Civic Education
New Jersey Mock Election

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Current Issues

  • 2025 Ballot Question

  • 2024 Ballot Question

  • How to Vote in New Jersey/How Students Can Help

  • 2023 Ballot Question - Climate Change and Energy Resources in NJ

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Current Issues

Issue questions are included in the mock election to familiarize students with the idea that as adults they will vote on public questions as well as candidates. We will continue to offer links to the issues from recent mock elections for teachers who may be looking for sample issue questions for the current class of students. The information regarding ranked-preference voting in primaries is included to facilitate class discussions on possible means to address the current partisan environment. Since voting is an essential civic responsibility, we have included information regarding voting procedures in New Jersey so that students can participate in the actual election by encouraging parents and other adults to cast their vote in a safe manner of their choosing. It is also hoped that high school students eligible to vote will embrace this important civic responsibility. Please note that some older students are eligible to serve as poll workers.

2025 Ballot Question

Should the United States Constitution be amended to restrict the redrawing of congressional districts to only once every decade following the new census?

The ballot question will be optional and is intended for those students whose teacher discussed the issue in class, so that students can cast an informed vote.

The 2025 New Jersey Student Mock Election is focused on New Jersey state government, which has a great impact on daily life in the state. However, the 2026 congressional mid-term elections loom large in the state's and nation's political consciousness, and one of the powers mainly left to the states in the United States Constitution is the control of elections. Texas has precipitated a nation-wide debate on the practice of redistricting for partisan advantage at times other than immediately following the new decennial census, setting off a chain-reaction of redistricting debates and proposals in other states. Given the importance of the question for fair elections and how it illustrates the importance of who controls state government, the mock election has chosen the above ballot question in the hope that it will inform class discussions in the coming year. Below are some initial resources, with more to follow. 

Mid-Decade Congressional Redistricting: Key Issues | Congress.gov | Library of Congress . See end of summary for proposed legislation regarding the issue.

National Conference of State Legislatures summary of issue: Mid-Decade Redistricting

NBC News:  A decade of Supreme Court rulings have given states increasingly unfettered power in redistricting  

PBS.org: Is political gerrymandering illegal? 6 things to know as Texas dispute carries on | PBS News

Some states have procedures for independent commissions to oversee the decennial redistricting, and some state constitutions restrict mid-decade redistricting. What does the New Jersey Constitution say?

PBS Digital Studios YouTube Video: Gerrymandering: Is Geometry Silencing Your Vote

National Constitution Center podcast (one hour 12 minutes): The History and Future of Partisan Gerrymandering in America - Podcast | Constitution Center

The origin of the term "gerrymander": Where Did the Term “Gerrymander” Come From? (Smithsonian Magazine) and   Elbridge Gerry and the Original Gerrymander | Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

Here is a tool teachers and students can use to attempt to draw their own fair districts using census block data. It is recommended for ease of use they attempt to draw the 12 New Jersey congressional districts, rather than the 40 state legislative districts.

New Jersey Center For Civic Education Teaching Elections PowerPoint 2025. This contains several slides regarding redistricting. It is also available on our Teacher Resources page for information regarding New Jersey government, media literacy, and teaching controversial issues such as elections.

 

 

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