Hyderabad:Sunita Williams and her fellow countrymen aboard the International Space Station (ISS) will be exercising their right to vote for the 2024 US Presidential elections from outside the planet. Indian-origin space veteran Williams and her Boeing Starliner partner Butch Wilmore are stuck in space untill February and will be casting their votes from the ISS alongside other American astronauts, courtesy of a plan instituted by NASA that allows on-duty astronauts to participate in this civic duty.
Voting from space
NASA enables astronauts to vote from space in a process similar to absentee voting. Since they can’t visit a polling station, astronauts complete an electronic ballot aboard the space station. This ballot is securely transmitted over 1.2 million miles, moving from the station to NASA's Mission Control Center in Texas.
To begin, astronauts submit a Federal Post Card Application to request an absentee ballot. They then fill out an electronic ballot, which is sent through NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System to an antenna in New Mexico.
Next, NASA relays the ballot to Mission Control, which then sends it to the astronaut's local county clerk, who officially casts the vote. To ensure privacy, the ballot is encrypted and only viewable by the astronaut and the clerk handling it.