You generally cannot see how a specific person voted in a secret ballot election.
Secret voting is designed to keep each voter’s choice private.
Election officials do not release individual ballots tied to named voters.
In some places, you may be able to see aggregate results by precinct, district, or polling place.
If a voter chooses to disclose their own vote, that is the only reliable way to know.
Public records may show whether someone voted, but not who they voted for.
Campaign donations, public endorsements, and political activity may suggest preferences, but they do not prove a vote.
Any service or person claiming to reveal someone’s ballot choice is likely unreliable or illegal.
