Vote while you float: This is how astronauts vote

NASA's Shane Kimbrough is the most recent astronaut to take advantage of the legislation that lets astronauts vote from space.

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The United States presidential election of 2016 is scheduled for Tuesday, November 8th, 2016. The astronauts aboard the International Space Station also have the ability to vote from space thanks to a bill passed by the Texas legislature in 1997.

Vote while you float: This is how astronauts vote | TweakTown.com

For astronauts, the voting process starts a year before launch, when astronauts can select which elections (local/state/federal) that they want to participate in while in space. Then, six months before the election, astronauts are provided with a standard form: the "Voter Registration and Absentee Ballot Request - Federal Post Card Application."

Voting in space was first used the same year it was implemented, in 1997. NASA's astronaut David Wolf became the first American to vote from space, casting a ballot in a 1997 local election. At the time, he was aboard the Russian Mir Space Station.

During the US presidential election of 2016, there will be only one American in space, NASA's astronaut Shane Kimbrough, who is currently aboard the ISS with two cosmonauts. Kimbrough is the most recent astronaut to take advantage of the legislation that lets astronauts vote from space.

Voting in space also comes with a convenient advantage - you don't have to wait in line to vote.

NEWS SOURCE:nasa.tumblr.com

Lana has a passion for technology and science. She spends her time looking for the latest and most interesting technology and science news. Her passion is in gadgets, wearables, and other cool and interesting applications of technology or science. She also spends her free time gaming in MMOs like World of Warcraft. She has prior experience covering technology for publications and breaking news. If she’s not doing either, you might just find her exploring the metaverse in VR. Lana wants to expand TweakTown’s coverage of mobile, wearables and gadgets while also bringing her experience with science and general tech to TweakTown. Her area of coverage is around science, technology, smartphones, wearables, and general neat gadgets. She hopes to one day be able to drive around in her self-driving car while she schedules an appointment for a SpaceX trip to the moon on her smartwatch.

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