Citizens cast their votes in colleges () which are simply usually the nearest
public school to where the voter declared as residence. Citizens are required by law to vote in secret, unless they have a physical impairment that does not allow them to. Those unable to travel to colleges due to medical impairments may vote at their place of residence (homes, elder homes, etc.) or wherever they are convalescing (hospitals, clinics, etc.). In both of these extraordinary cases, officials from the Puerto Rico State Commission on Elections will provide aid so that the citizens can cast their vote—either by using verbal or non-verbal communication—with members from the different political parties required to observe the process in order to ensure accuracy, fairness, transparency, order, and legitimacy. Ballots are published in both
English and
Spanish regardless of whether English is an official language or not.
General elections At the central government's level, Puerto Rican elects a
governor and a
legislature. The
island's governor is elected for a four-year term by the people. The
Legislative Assembly (
Asamblea Legislativa in Spanish) has two
chambers: the
Chamber of Representatives (
Cámara de Representantes in Spanish) and the
Senate (
Senado in Spanish) which is elected for a four-year term concurrently with the governor. For the last several decades, three political parties have been present on the ballot, the PIP, the PNP, and the PPD, which two of the three parties dominating the results of the elections. In the 2008 elections, a fourth party participated, the
Puertorriqueños por Puerto Rico (
PPR). In 2012 six parties participated, the same four as in 2008 and two new ones:
Partido del Pueblo Trabajador (PPT), and
Movimiento Union Soberanista (MUS). In 2016, 2
independent candidates ran for governor, while the MUS and the PPR did not have any candidates running.
2020 reform In 2020, a new electoral code was proposed which would expand access to
absentee ballots and transition Puerto Rico to
online voting by 2028. After receiving opposition, the online voting provisions were removed from the final bill. Governor
Wanda Vázquez Garced signed the new electoral code into law on June 21, 2020. ==Electoral system==