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ELECTION 2025 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Make Voting a University Holiday

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Oct. 27 — On Nov. 4, students will be bubbling in carefully selected responses to a different kind of answer sheet — their ballots. Yet, on the most important day of the year for our campus to engage in democracy, Cornellians will balance their civic duties with sitting for prelims, attending lectures and submitting essays. Last year, at least 86 schools, including Fordham University and George Washington University, cancelled classes for the presidential election. Meanwhile, Cornell chugged on like any other day, despite sitting in one of the most competitive Congressional districts in the country and holding only one on-campus polling location. Students told The Sun last year that juggling voting in the presidential election with a full schedule of academic commitments was a nearly impossible balancing act. “I know some people with prelims tonight, and there certainly would’ve been more student voters if they canceled classes,” one student said. Sending out annual emails reminding students to vote is not enough. To uphold democracy and free speech, Election Day must be held as a University holiday on both presidential and non-presidential election years. Fellow New York State and Ivy League school Columbia University will additionally give students

off this upcoming Election Day, amid a fiery NYC mayoral election. Yet even students at Cornell Tech on Roosevelt Island in Manhattan must attend classes on Nov. 4. A university’s decision to conduct classes can be the deciding factor for students opting into voting. Holding classes on Election Day is effectively voter suppression. Beyond voting, a day off would allow students to engage in educational events, volunteer at the polls and aid others in getting to the polls, empowering them to go beyond the campus bubble and uplift the local community. This is exemplified at Stanford, which will hold its fifth Democracy Day next month, including over 40 events focused on civic engagement and learning. The statistics speak for themselves. 45 percent of students said that the most helpful action for a university to get them to vote would be cancelling classes on Election Day, according to an Inside Higher Ed/ Generation Lab survey conducted in September 2024. Likewise, the 2016 Survey of the Performance of American Elections found that of people ages 18-29 with college experience who registered but failed to vote in 2016, 47 percent noted they were too busy or had a conflict on Election Day. New York State is one of five states to officially establish Election Day as a holiday and mandate employers to give employees paid time off. Cornell should align with the state’s emphasis on civic engagement and pioneer the charge to make Election Day a national holiday by starting at the collegiate level. Moreover, the fight for instituting Election Day as a University holiday is not new.

In 2022, the non-partisan student organization Cornell Votes campaigned to give students the day off for Election Day. In 2023, the Student Assembly adopted a resolution urging the University to make Election Day a holiday. It is time for the Cornell administration to finally listen to its students. President Michael Kotlikoff was officially inaugurated on Friday. He pledged to further Cornell’s work as “a university committed to open inquiry, and the values of our democracy” and as “a contributor to our country’s strength and well-being.” What demonstrates democracy and strengthens a nation more than removing barriers to voting? President Kotlikoff, the principles of free speech you so frequently speak of are a difficult balancing act to pursue. Yet making Election Day a University holiday is completely nonpartisan and remarkably simple. Put actions behind your words. Your legacy will tell the tale. For now, professors — provide flexibility for students to vote during class times on Nov. 4. Students — make your voices heard. Find voting guidelines and deadlines through Cornell Votes’ resources and The Sun’s election guide. Whether voting in Ithaca or in your hometown, local races and ballot initiatives determine educational policies, infrastructure, public safety and economic development. Democracy is worth the inconvenience. Your ballot is the most important assignment you will submit this semester. And next midterm season, Cornell must not fail its student body on democracy.

How to Cast Your Vote By GABRIEL MUÑOZ Sun City Editor

Oct. 23 — Early voting behan on Oct. 25 for the New York state municipal elections. Having multiple common council and county legislature seats up for grabs, The Sun prepared a voting guide with all the information needed to vote in the New York state municipal elections on Tuesday, Nov. 4.

Early Voting

New York offers early voting from Oct. 25 to Nov. 2. Anyone who is registered as a Tompkins County voter and wishes to vote early can do so at Ithaca Town Hall at 215 N. Tioga St. or Crash Fire Rescue at 72 Brown Rd. Opening hours for each day of early voting can be found on Tompkins County’s early voting webpage.

Early Mail Voting

Any registered voter can apply for a mail-in ballot. The Board of Elections

has to receive any early mail ballot request at least 10 days before election day. An early mail ballot is Ballots can be requested by a physical form mailed to the Board of Elections or through an online portal. Early mail ballots can also be submitted in person at a polling site in the county. Requests for early mail ballots submitted in person must be received by the day before the election.

Absentee Voting

Voters are eligible for an absentee ballot if they are unable to physically vote in the county on Election Day for reasons including being absent from the county during Election Day, being unable to go to the polling station because of an illness or serving as the primary caregiver of an ill individual. The absentee ballot has to be postmarked to the Board of Elections office 10 days before election day or brought to the Board of Elections office or polling site by 5 p.m. on Nov. 3.

Voting on Election Day

An interactive map of all polling places in Ithaca is available at the Tompkins County Board of Elections. The state’s Board of Elections also has a voter look-up website where registered voters can check their polling place. Robert Purcell Community Center will be the only polling place on campus for this election. Election Day is on Tuesday, Nov. 4, and polling locations will be open from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Voters who are in line but have not voted by 9 p.m. will still be allowed to vote so long as they JESUS GARCIA / SUN GRAPHICS STAFF remain in line. Civic duty | The Sun prepared a voting New York workers can take time off guide ahead of the local elections. on Election Day to vote under Section 3-110 of the New York State Election Those who require assistance to vote Law. Anyone with fewer than four con- or need instruction on how to operate secutive non-working hours during the the voting machine may ask a poll voting time may take up to two paid worker for guidance. hours off work and as many unpaid hours as needed, so long as they give at Gabriel Muñoz can be reached at gmuleast two days’ notice to their employer. noz@cornellsun.com.

Page E1 | The Cornell Daily Sun | Wendesday, October 29, 2025

ELECTION SUPPLEMENT

WENDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2025 n ITHACA, NEW YORK

Races to Follow

Local Initiatives

Ithacan’s Concerns

Common Council

Local Groups

Voters’ opinions

The Sun provides a brief summary of the positions of the candidates for the Ithaca Common Council. | Page 4

Read about the local groups driving the get out to vote efforts in the city and among students. | Page 2

Local voters share hopes and grievances about the issues affecting them heading into the election. | Page 3

16 Pages – Free Main Issue Inside! Read about recent protests on campus and city news


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