
Digital Democracy Project members are the first in the nation to choose bills, discuss featured bills, and submit bills. We can't wait to hear your voice!
Vote Yes on this bill if you want people incarcerated for felony convictions to regain the right to register and vote immediately, expanding democratic participation while they are in prison.
Organizations that support this bill may include civil rights and voting rights groups, criminal justice reform and reentry organizations, prisoner advocacy groups, and faith-based social justice organizations.
Vote No on this bill if you want to keep the current law that blocks people in prison for felonies from registering and voting.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include some victims' rights groups, certain law enforcement associations, tough-on-crime advocacy groups, and organizations focused on stricter election rules.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want eligible residents to register and vote the same day at polling places or early voting sites with proof of address, provisional ballots as a backup, and penalties and investigations to deter fraud.
Organizations that support this bill may include voting rights and civil liberties groups, student and youth organizations, good-government coalitions, and community groups focused on reducing barriers to the ballot.
Vote No on this bill if you want to keep advance registration deadlines, avoid possible longer lines and higher administrative costs on Election Day, and require more time for officials to verify voter information before ballots are cast.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include election-security advocacy groups, some local election administrators concerned about costs and staffing, and organizations that favor stricter registration deadlines.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want the Kennedy Center renamed the Donald J. Trump Center and all official references, signs, and materials updated.
Organizations that support this bill may include conservative advocacy groups, supporters of Donald J. Trump, and groups favoring renaming public institutions to reflect recent leaders.
Vote No on this bill if you want to keep the John F. Kennedy Center name and avoid the costs and controversy of a renaming.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include arts and cultural nonprofits connected to the Kennedy Center’s legacy, historic preservation groups, and organizations that prefer keeping established public names.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want a state-appointed board to build and run the Florida Museum of Black History in St. Johns County, with clear deadlines, a nonprofit partner, and county staff support during planning.
Organizations that support this bill may include museum associations, Black history and civil rights groups, educators, local tourism and business chambers, and St. Johns County officials who favor cultural investment.
Vote No on this bill if you do not want the board created, do not want the county to provide staff support, or want to avoid possible costs and political influence over the museum.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include taxpayer watchdogs, limited‑government groups, and critics of political appointments who worry about costs or undue influence.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want code inspectors to use body cameras under standardized policies, with training, public-record retention, and fewer legal barriers to recording public encounters.
Organizations that support this bill may include municipal governments, code enforcement associations, and transparency advocates who want clear rules, training, and video evidence of inspector-public interactions.
Vote No on this bill if you want to limit government recording during inspections, maintain stronger consent requirements, and reduce potential privacy risks from storing and releasing footage.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include civil liberties and privacy groups, tenant and homeowner advocates, and some business groups concerned about recording on private property and data retention.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to end most local business taxes, simplify business paperwork statewide, and prevent cities from raising existing gross-receipts merchant tax rates.
Organizations that support this bill may include statewide and local business associations, small business and startup groups, and taxpayer advocacy organizations seeking lower compliance costs and fewer local taxes.
Vote No on this bill if you want to preserve local authority to levy business taxes, protect city and county revenues tied to business licensing, and avoid potential shifts to other fees or service cuts.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include city and county government associations, local government finance officer groups, and public service or labor organizations concerned about reduced municipal revenue and service impacts.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want the state to preempt local rules and stop removal or damage of public monuments displayed 25+ years, fine officials who violate, let groups sue for fees and up to $100,000, require restoration or return after temporary moves, and withhold certain arts/history funds until costs are repaid.
Organizations that support this bill may include historic preservation groups, veterans’ organizations, heritage societies, and statewide history commissions that favor uniform protection of monuments.
Vote No on this bill if you want local governments to decide what to do with their monuments, avoid state-imposed fines and lawsuits, prevent state funding holdbacks, and keep flexibility to remove, relocate, or reinterpret controversial displays.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include civil rights and social justice groups, municipal and county associations, and public historians who favor local control or changes to controversial monuments.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want stronger protections against deed and real estate fraud, free property alerts for owners, tighter identity checks, required notary training and testing, clearer records, and safe-harbor rules that still hold bad actors accountable.
Organizations that support this bill may include consumer protection and elder advocacy groups, title insurers and settlement companies, notary professional associations favoring higher standards, and homeowner groups concerned about deed fraud.
Vote No on this bill if you want to avoid new mandates and costs on clerks and notaries, stop a new paper filing fee, limit data retention that could risk privacy, and prevent added hurdles that may slow or complicate real estate transactions.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include independent notaries and small real estate firms wary of new training and record-keeping costs, privacy advocates concerned about ID and video storage, and local governments concerned about unfunded alert-system mandates.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want renters to get 14 days, instead of 5, to catch up on unpaid rent or fix bounced payments, reducing rapid evictions while keeping swift action for serious safety threats.
Organizations that support this bill may include tenant advocacy groups, legal aid societies, homelessness prevention nonprofits, and faith-based charities focused on housing stability.
Vote No on this bill if you want to keep the shorter timeline for nonpayment evictions, giving landlords faster remedies and limiting added notice requirements.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include landlord and apartment associations, real estate industry groups, and property management companies concerned about delayed evictions and cash flow.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want insurers to be able to charge tobacco users up to 50% more, keep limits on age and geography, require public hearings and quarterly reports on big area price gaps, and potentially reduce costs for non-users starting in 2027.
Organizations that support this bill may include public health and anti-tobacco groups, some health insurers and employer coalitions, and consumer or taxpayer advocates seeking lower premiums for non-tobacco users and more pricing transparency.
Vote No on this bill if you want to prevent higher premiums for tobacco users, avoid creating financial barriers to health coverage, and reject pricing that varies by tobacco use even with added oversight.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include tobacco industry groups, civil rights and anti-poverty organizations concerned about affordability and fairness, and patient advocates worried that smokers will forgo coverage or care.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want more valid votes counted by allowing voters to cure absentee and provisional ballot errors until Monday after Election Day and requiring officials to notify voters of fixable mistakes.
Organizations that support this bill may include voting rights and civic participation groups, disability and senior advocates, student and military‑voter organizations, and good‑government groups that favor giving voters time to fix minor mistakes.
Vote No on this bill if you want to keep current deadlines and tighter rejection rules, prioritize quicker results, and avoid adding new administrative steps for election offices.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include groups focused on faster election results or stricter procedures, some partisan committees, and taxpayer watchdogs concerned about added costs, delays, or potential errors.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to ban salary history questions, require good-faith pay ranges in all job postings, protect applicants from retaliation, and let workers seek damages for violations to help close wage gaps.
Worker advocacy groups, labor unions, pay equity and women’s rights organizations, and transparency-focused nonprofits may support this bill because it promotes fair pay and requires clear salary ranges in job postings.
Vote No on this bill if you want employers to keep the option to ask about past pay, avoid mandatory pay-range disclosures, and limit new penalties and lawsuits against businesses.
State and local chambers of commerce, some employer and HR associations, recruiting firms, and small business groups may oppose this bill due to compliance costs, legal exposure, and reduced flexibility in hiring.