 Today is National Voting Day for the 2018 midterm elections. BU students from around Massachusetts and the entire United States will cast their votes on campus at the Killett-Chin Hall polling station. I've heard from some people, oh, you complain about the country is all the time, why are you even feeding into it by voting, well, that's the one way we can change it. My vote really might not matter, but there's that little bit of hope that maybe it will. While many students find voting an easy process, others are struggling to cast their vote. I saw on these Instagram that if you were a mass resident and you're registered to vote, you could come to Miles and vote. Then I get to Miles and the security guard tells me to come here. And then I come here and they say that that's actually not a thing. So they had me register to vote up here, but I can't then vote in this election. I'll be able to vote in like an election next year. It would be so much easier and I feel like make people more likely to do it. Questions one and three on the ballot were the key drivers for student voters today. I think question three and question one were both very important because I think, you know, gender identity is an important thing to protect. And question one deals with like, I think it was how many nurses can be assigned to one patient at once. Organizations like Yes on Three have been promoting students to vote since the start of the school year. And just on election day, we're doing just like a last final push. We're asking voters as they go into the polls just to remember to vote Yes on Three. We're also tallying, making vote plans with voters out here. And we're tallying people who come out and tell us that they voted just final numbers sort of stuff. BU students from all around the country are casting votes today, either through absentee ballots or at polling stations like right here at BU's Killichand Hall. For BU News Service, I'm Adalyn Davidson.