NASA astronaut to cast her ballot from 200 miles above Earth
NASA astronaut Kate Rubins said on Friday that she plans to cast her next vote from space — more than 200 miles above Earth. Rubins is just outside Moscow in Star City, Russia, preparing with two cosmonauts for a mid-October launch and a six-month stay at the International Space Station.
"I think it's really important for everybody to vote," Rubins told The Associated Press. "If we can do it from space, then I believe folks can do it from the ground, too."
Most U.S. astronauts live in Houston. Texas law allows them to vote from space using a secure electronic ballot. Mission Control forwards the ballot to the space station and relays the completed ballot back to the county clerk.
Astronaut David Wolf was the first American to vote from space in 1997, the same year the law was passed.
"It's critical to participate in our democracy," Rubins said. "We consider it an honor to be able to vote from space."
Rubins also voted from space in 2016, when she completed two successful spacewalks.
Shane Kimbrough also cast his vote from the International Space Station the same year. At the time, Kimbrough told reporters before he left Earth that he is "pretty much apolitical," but that he was excited to be able to say "I voted from space."
Rubins, the first person to sequence DNA in space, plans to work on a cardiovascular experiment and conduct research using the space station's Cold Atom Lab.
While she's there, she'll celebrate the 20th anniversary of continuous human presence on the space station, and welcome the crew of the second SpaceX commercial crew mission, expected to arrive in late October.
Cydney Adams contributed to this report.