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Tag: US Midterm Elections 2022

  • How can the AP call US midterm races just as the polls close?

    How can the AP call US midterm races just as the polls close?

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    Al Jazeera is using Associated Press data to determine midterm election race winners.

    Almost immediately after polls for the midterm elections closed across the United States on Tuesday, The Associated Press has been able to declare winners in some races.

    How is that possible before any results are released? Let’s take a look at how the AP can declare a winner before the first ballots are counted.

    First, a quick refresher on why and how the AP does this work.

    The country’s founders did not set up a national agency for counting the vote. Each state does it a little differently.

    On election night, the AP counts the nation’s votes, tallying the results of millions of ballots, as reported by local election officials, to come up with the overall total for thousands of races. It has been done like that since 1848 when the AP counted the vote that ended with the election of Zachary Taylor as president.

    How the tally is counted includes tonnes of preparation, journalists in all 50 US states and a network of roughly 4,000 stringers, or temporary freelancers.

    So, what about those race calls that land as the moment polls close — before any votes have officially been counted?

    Some are in uncontested races or those with only one candidate on the ballot. And then there are races with multiple candidates, but in which a party or candidate has a past history of consistent and convincing wins.

    In these states, the AP can use results from AP VoteCast, a survey of the US electorate aimed at determining why voters voted how they did, to confirm a candidate’s victory.

    “The results from the poll — along with our analysis of early voting and other statistics — confirm our expectation that longstanding political trends in these states will hold,” said David Scott, a senior editor who helps oversee AP’s coverage of elections.

    Still, the AP will not call the winner of a race before the last polls close in a jurisdiction, including in states where the polls do not all close at once.

    The AP does not make projections and will only declare a winner when it has determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap — even if one candidate has claimed victory and others have conceded, Scott said. He noted declarations of victory can be premature and concessions can be withdrawn.

    “It’s only when we determine that the trailing candidates no longer have a path to victory that we call a race and send the APNewsAlert declaring that a candidate has won,” Scott said. “In a small number of cases, that can happen as soon as all polls are closed.”

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  • When will we know the results of the US midterm elections?

    When will we know the results of the US midterm elections?

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    It could take up to days of waiting before it’s clear who will win Tuesday’s US midterm elections and before it’s apparent whether Republicans or President Joe Biden‘s Democrats will control Congress, experts say.

    All 435 seats in the US House of Representatives are up for grabs, as are 35 US Senate seats and 36 governorships.

    Republicans would need to pick up five seats to take a majority in the House and just one to control the Senate. Non-partisan election forecasters and polls suggest Republicans have a very strong chance of winning a House majority, with control of the Senate likely to be closer fought.

    A massive wave of Republican support could lead to declarations of victory hours after polls close.

    But with dozens of races expected to be close and key states like Pennsylvania already warning it could take days to count every ballot, experts say there’s a good chance America goes to bed on election night without knowing who won.

    “When it comes to knowing the results, we should move away from talking about Election Day and think instead about election week,” said Nathan Gonzales, who publishes the non-partisan newsletter Inside Elections.

    The earliest vote tallies will be skewed by how quickly states count mail ballots.

    Because Democrats vote by mail more often than Republicans, states that let officials get an early jump on counting mail ballots could report big Democratic leads early on that evaporate as vote counters work through piles of Republican-leaning ballots that were cast on Election Day.

    In these “blue mirage” states – which include Florida and North Carolina – election officials are allowed to remove mail ballots from their envelopes before Election Day and load them in vote counting machines, allowing for speedy counting.

    ‘Blue mirage, red mirage’

    States including Pennsylvania and Wisconsin don’t allow officials to open the envelopes until Election Day, leading to a possible “red mirage” in which Republican-leaning Election Day ballots are reported earlier, with many Democratic-leaning mail ballots counted later.

    Experts like Joe Lenski, co-founder of Edison Research, which will be tracking hundreds of races on Tuesday and supplying media organisations with results, will keep an eye on the mix of different types of ballots each state is counting throughout the night.

    “Blue mirage, red mirage, whatever. You just have to look at what types of votes are getting reported to know where you are in that state,” said Lenski.

    The first wave of vote tallies is expected on the East Coast between 7pm and 8pm ET (00:00-01:00 GMT Wednesday, November 9). An early indication of Republican success could come if the races expected to be close – like Virginia’s 7th congressional district or a US Senate seat in North Carolina – turn out to be Democratic routs.

    By around 10pm or 11pm ET, (03:00 or 04:00 GMT) when polls in the Midwest will be closed for an hour or more, it’s possible Republicans will have enough momentum for experts at US media organisations to project control of the House, said Kyle Kondik, a political analyst at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.

    If the fight for the House still looks close as vote tallies start coming in from the West Coast – where there could be more than a dozen tight House races – it could be days before control of the chamber is known, experts said.

    California typically takes weeks to count all its ballots, in part because it counts ballots postmarked by Election Day even if they arrive days afterward. Nevada and Washington states also allow late ballots if postmarked by November 8, slowing down the march to final results.

    “If the House is really on the edge, that would matter,” said Kondik.

    It may take longer, perhaps weeks longer, to know which party will control the Senate, with close contests in Pennsylvania, Arizona and Georgia likely to determine final control.

    If Georgia’s Senate race is as close as expected and no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote, a runoff election would be scheduled for December 6, possibly leaving control of the chamber in limbo until then.

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