West Dallas Early Voting 2025: 395 voters down, thousands to go
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Whoever Whoever wins the May 3 city council and school board elections will know exactly who voted — and who didn’t.
But they won’t know whether or not you voted for them.
A lot of voter information is public, such as who is registered, who votes, and when and where they vote. Anyone can view the mail-in ballots and early votes already cast in the current Dallas City Council and Dallas ISD school board elections.
What they can’t know just by looking at voter lists is how you vote.
Here’s why this is important: Every candidate, campaign worker and anyone else invested in these local elections is tracking the turnout. They are looking at the names and addresses of who is registered to vote, who the active voters are based on prior elections, and whether you’ve already voted.
Once the results are final and the new elected officials are sworn in, they will know whether or not you voted. And because local elections have low voter turnout (historically, less than 10% of registered Dallas voters decide who wins), just a few votes can determine who wins a race.
So casting a vote in an election — especially in a local election — is a power play. You’re telling your future council member, school board trustee and anyone else spending money or block walking to support a campaign that you are someone to be reckoned with because you take the time to help choose the person to make decisions that impact you and your neighbors.

So far in West Dallas, 395 people have cast ballots during early voting, out of 17,274 registered voters. Nearly 17,000 people who could decide who will represent them at City Hall and in Dallas ISD have so far opted not to weigh in.
West Dallas is choosing between nine candidates to elect a new District 6 city councilmember to represent neighbors at City Hall, and a portion of West Dallas is choosing between three candidates to elect a new District 5 trustee to represent students, parents and taxpayers on the Dallas ISD school board.
So what do you need to know in order to vote?
Do you need to verify your voter registration? Find an early voting location near your workplace? Look at your sample ballot? Compare the candidates ? You can find all of these resources and more in our Dallas Voter Guide, dallasfreepress.com/vote.
Is there anything else you need to know? Are you ready to vote? Let us know by answering these three quick questions!
See you at the polls, West Dallas!
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Keri Mitchell has spent 20+ years as a community journalist, including 15 years dedicated to community and civic journalism at Dallas’ Advocate magazines. She launched Dallas Free Press in early 2020 with the belief that all neighborhoods deserve reporting and storytelling that values their community and holds leaders accountable.
Mitchell says she is energized by “knowing our work is making an impact — listening to people, telling their stories with strong narratives paired with compelling data that leads to change. I also love spending time in our neighborhoods and with our neighbors, learning from them and working to determine how journalism can be part of the solution to their challenges.”
Mitchell is proud to be the winner of multiple awards during her journalism career including: Finalist in Magazine Feature Reporting (2018) and Finalist in Magazine Investigative Reporting (2017) from Hugh Aynesworth Excellence in Journalism, Best Feature Story (2011) from Texas Community Newspaper Association and Best Magazine Feature (2011) from Dallas Bar Association Philbin Awards.
Areas of Expertise:
local government, education, civic issues, investigative and enterprise reporting
Location Expertise:
Dallas, Texas
Official Title:
Founder + executive director
Email Address:
keri@dallasfreepress.com



