Which 3 states allow you to change your vote once you've cast it?

Hi
I heard a news commentator saying that
3 states allow you to change your vote once you’ve cast it, but didn’t elaborate? Which ones are they?
I look forward to your feedback.

I believe there are states in which you can cast an in-person ballot canceling a mail-in ballot. Perhaps you can do something similar with early walk-in voting. It’s difficult to imagine you can return to the polls to recast a ballot as that would require them that they retain some identification with every ballot cast.

According to FOX news there are a few states. No battleground states, unless you consider Pa. . And I think they mentioned either Arizona and Nevada. They also said NY and Michigan.

Foxnews.com: Officials in 2 States Say Early Voters Want to Change Their Ballots

It’s not unreasonable. An absentee ballot is intended to be a convenience to people who will not be present near their voting precinct on election day. But a voter still has up to election day to make up his mind, and can change his mind, the same as a person who expects to be at the ballot box on election day.

It does raise a question about voter secrecy, though. If your ballot is secret, how is it possible that a voting clerk can go and get it out and hand it back to you?

Thanks Alley Dweller. I’d love to know what the third one is. Fox news anchors have mentioned it a few times but never elaborate. Thank you all.

Seriously? The people you vote for are secret because they are inside a sealed document that has your name on the outside.

The way it’s done here is you mail the ballot back inside a plain envelope that’s inside an outer envelope with your name, address, voter ID barcode etc.

They leave all the ballots sealed up until it’s time to count. So until that time they can find one by name if needed. Once it’s time to count, the outer envelopes are opened and discarded while the inner envelopes are put in a big sack. Which are then opened by a different crew in a different room.

As always, any bureaucratic procedure is only as reliable as the people executing it. And the remedy for deterring cheating is usually to have people from both parties watching the steps of the process.

Here in Minnesota they certainly advertise that you can change your vote, but not too widely. When you vote before the election (it’s not just absentee voting starting this year, now anyone can vote early), you write your driver’s license number or the last four digits of your SSN on the sealed envelope that contains a second sealed envelope with the actual ballot. Up to a week before the election (Halloween!) you can ask for original ballot to be pulled so you can vote again. I haven’t heard numbers about how many people actually do this though.

From Heavy.com:

Thanks aldiboronti. Very helpful. Thank you all.

Actually, it is absentee ballots. What people are calling ‘early voting’ here in Minnesota is actually in-person absentee balloting, made possible by a law that allows ‘no-excuse absentee balloting’.
The only difference is that (during the last week), ‘early voting’ ballots are run thru the vote scanner so that if you made a mistake (like voted for 2 presidential candidates), it will tell you and give you a chance to correct it. You can’t do that with an absentee ballot that you mail in. (I don’t know if those votes are actually counted at that time, or if they are saved and re-scanned in the precinct on election day for the official count.)