الوسم: election

  • Trump or Harris? Gaza war drives many Arab and Muslim voters to Jill Stein | US Election 2024 News

    Trump or Harris? Gaza war drives many Arab and Muslim voters to Jill Stein | US Election 2024 News

    Dearborn, Michigan – On a sunny but frigid afternoon, dozens of protesters stood on a street corner in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn and chanted against Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as well as her Republican rival Donald Trump.

    “Trump and Harris, you can’t hide, no votes for genocide,” a keffiyeh-clad young woman chanted on a bullhorn. The small but spirited crowd echoed her words.

    If not Trump or Harris for the next United States president, then who?

    The Abandon Harris campaign that organised the protest has endorsed Green Party candidate Jill Stein, demonstrating the growing disconnect that many Arabs and Muslims feel with both major parties over their support for Israel.

    Stein has been gaining popularity in Arab and Muslim communities amid Israel’s brutal war on Gaza and Lebanon, public opinion polls show.

    While the Green Party candidate is extremely unlikely to win the presidency, her supporters view voting for her as a principled choice that can set a foundation for greater viability for third-party candidates in the future.

    Hassan Abdel Salam, a co-founder of the Abandon Harris campaign, said more and more voters are adopting the group’s position of ditching the two major candidates and backing Stein.

    “She best exemplifies our position against genocide,” Abdel Salam said of the Green Party candidate, who has been vocal in supporting Palestinian rights.

    The strategy

    Abandon Harris has been urging voters against supporting the vice president over her pledge to continue arming Israel amid the US ally’s offensives in Gaza and Lebanon, which have killed more than 46,000 people.

    Abdel Salam praised Stein as courageous and willing to take on both major parties despite recent attacks, especially by Democrats.

    For the Abandon Harris campaign, backing Stein is not only about principles; it is part of a broader strategy.

    “Our goal is to punish the vice president because of the genocide, to then take the blame for her defeat to send a signal to the political landscape that you should never have ignored us,” Abdel Salam told Al Jazeera.

    In addition to the endorsement of the Abandon Harris campaign, Stein has won the backing of the American Arab and Muslim Political Action Committee (AMPAC), a Dearborn-based political group.

    “After extensive dialogue with both the Harris and Trump campaigns, we found no commitment to addressing the urgent concerns of our community, particularly the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon,” the group said in a statement last month.

    “The need for a ceasefire remains paramount for Muslim and Arab American voters, yet neither campaign has offered a viable solution.”

    AMPAC added that it is backing Stein “based on her steadfast commitment to peace, justice, and a call for immediate ceasefires in conflict zones”.

    With support for Stein on the rise in Michigan’s Arab and Muslim communities, where President Joe Biden won overwhelmingly in 2020, Democrats are noticing and pushing back.

    Wissam Charafeddine
    Jill Stein supporter Wissam Charafeddine. Support for the Green Party candidate has increased in Dearborn, where Arab Americans are angry at US support for Israel [Ali Harb/Al Jazeera]

    Democrats target Stein

    The Harris campaign released an advertisement aimed at Arab Americans in southeast Michigan that took a dig at third-party candidates.

    In the commercial, Deputy Wayne County Executive Assad Turfe says Harris would help end the war in the Middle East as the camera zooms in on a cedar tree – Lebanon’s national symbol – hanging from his necklace.

    Turfe warns voters in the video that Trump would bring more chaos and suffering if elected. “We also know a vote for a third party is a vote for Trump,” he says.

    Stein’s supporters, however, categorically reject that argument.

    Palestinian comedian and activist Amer Zahr, who is running for a school board seat in Dearborn, argued that Democrats should be grateful that Stein is on the ballot and slammed the argument that a vote for Stein is a vote for Trump as “paternalistic”.

    “It assumes that if Stein wasn’t there, we’d be out there voting for you,” Zahr told Al Jazeera.

    “If it really were two parties and there were no other parties, I think most of the Arab Americans who are voting for Stein would vote for neither. And in fact, if there were really only two choices, a lot of the people who are voting for Stein right now out of anger for the Democratic Party might go for Trump.”

    Zahr, who was on a shortlist of candidates that Stein considered for her vice presidential pick, also dismissed the argument that a vote for the Green Party would be “wasted” because it is unlikely to win.

    “I mean news flash: Voters vote for people who speak to their issues,” he told Al Jazeera, praising Stein for standing up to Israel and running as an “openly anti-genocide” candidate.

    “Jill Stein, to me, is a noble vehicle to express our deep anger and the distrust and betrayal that we feel at the ballot box.”

    The Democratic National Committee (DNC) released a separate commercial last month also proclaiming that “a vote for Stein is really a vote for Trump”.

    Stein has pushed back against that claim, slamming the Democrats’ attacks as a “fear campaign and smear campaign”.

    She told Al Jazeera’s The Take podcast last week that the Democratic Party is coming after her instead of “addressing the issues like the genocide, which has lost Kamala Harris so many voters”.

    ‘I am sick of the two-party system’

    While foreign policy may not be a top priority for the average US voter, numerous Arab and Muslim Americans interviewed by Al Jazeera over the past week said Israel’s assault on Lebanon and Gaza is their number one issue.

    And so, with both major-party presidential candidates voicing uncompromising support for Israel, some voters are looking to Stein to break away from the two parties and forge a new path.

    “I am sick of the two-party system and their power play politics, where on both sides, they are unanimously agreeing on this bipartisan issue that they support Israel,” said Haneen Mahbuba, an Iraqi American voter.

    With a keffiyeh-patterned scarf that says “Gaza” in Arabic around her neck, the bespectacled 30-year-old mother raised her voice in anger as she described the violence Israel is committing in Gaza and Lebanon with US support.

    Mahbuba told Al Jazeera that she feels “empowered” by voting for Stein because she is not giving in to the “fearmongering” about the need to vote for the “lesser of two evils”. She added that it is Harris’s voters who are wasting their votes.

    “They’re giving away their vote when they vote for the Democratic Party that has continuously dismissed us, disregarded us, silenced us and seen us as less important,” Mahbuba said.

    Jill Stein
    Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein speaks during a rally in Dearborn, Michigan, on October 6 [File: Rebecca Cook/Reuters]

    ‘Indistinguishable’

    Stein ran for president in 2012, 2016 and 2020, but she failed to make a major impression on the elections.

    However, Stein’s Arab and Muslim supporters say this year, the Green Party can put a dent in the results to show the power of voters who prioritise Palestinian human rights.

    Wissam Charafeddine, an activist in the Detroit area, said backing Stein is the right choice both morally and strategically.

    “I’m the type of voter who believes that voting should be based on values and not politics. This is the core of democracy,” he said.

    Charafeddine, who has voted for Stein in the past, added that Arab Americans are fortunate to be concentrated in a swing state where their votes are amplified.

    “When we vote for Dr Jill Stein, we are not only voting [for] the right, moral platform that actually is most aligned with our values, interests, desires and priorities, but also it accounts for the Palestine vote and to the anti-genocide vote,” Charafeddine told Al Jazeera.

    Bottomline, advocates say the growing support for Stein shows that many Arab and Muslim voters have reached a tipping point with both the major parties’ support for Israel.

    “Harris and Trump simply are indistinguishable to us because they passed a certain threshold that we cannot ever buy into the logic of lesser of two evils,” Abdel Salam told Al Jazeera.

    “These are two genocidal parties, and we cannot put our hand with either of them.”

  • Georgia high court says absentee ballots must be returned by Election Day

    Georgia high court says absentee ballots must be returned by Election Day

    ATLANTA (AP) — Thousands of voters in Georgia’s third-largest county who received their absentee ballots late will not get an extension to return them, the state’s highest court decided on Monday.

    Cobb County, just north of Atlanta, didn’t mail out absentee ballots to some 3,400 voters who had requested them until late last week. Georgia law says absentee ballots must be received by the close of polls on Election Day. But a judge in a lower court ruled last week that the ballots at issue could be counted if they’re received by this Friday, three days after Election Day, as long as they were postmarked by Tuesday.

    The Georgia Supreme Court ruling means the affected Cobb County residents must vote in person on Election Day, which is Tuesday, or bring their absentee ballots to the county elections office by 7 p.m. that day.

    The high court ruling instructs county election officials to notify the affected voters by email, text message and in a public message on the county election board’s website. And it orders officials to keep separate and sealed any ballots received after the Election Day deadline but before 5 p.m. Friday.

    Board of elections Chair Tori Silas said the board will comply with the Supreme Court order, but it’s still up in the air whether ballots received after Election Day will be counted. The order only addressed a motion for a stay, so election officials will have to wait for the court’s final ruling to see whether votes received after Tuesday will be counted, she said in a statement.

    To deliver the ballots on time, election officials in Cobb County were using U.S. Postal Service express mail and UPS overnight delivery, and sending the ballots with prepaid express return envelopes. The Board of Elections said that more than 1,000 of the absentee ballots being mailed late were being sent to people outside of Georgia.

    Silas last week blamed the delay in sending out the ballots on faulty equipment and a late surge in absentee ballot requests during the week before the Oct. 25 deadline.

    The original ruling extending the deadline stemmed from a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Southern Poverty Law Center on behalf of three Cobb County voters who said they had not received absentee ballots by mail as of Friday.

  • Illinois man arrested after punching election judge at polling location | US elections 2024

    A man in Illinois punched an election judge at a polling location and was arrested on Sunday, two days before the climax of the US presidential race, according to authorities.

    The man, identified as 24-year-old Daniel Schmidt, was charged with two counts of aggravated battery to a victim over 60, two counts of aggravated battery in a public place, and five misdemeanor counts of resisting arrest and one count of disorderly conduct.

    His case follows numerous attacks on the voting process and threats of violence, the purpose of which often is to create fear and distrust around voting, according to extremist experts.

    Election officials across the US say voting is safe, and voters should not be deterred from casting their ballots in Tuesday’s presidential race.

    In Schmidt’s case, police say they responded to reports of a man causing a disturbance in the voting line at the township office of Orland Park, Illinois.

    Officers arrested Schmidt after learning that he had allegedly entered the building and attempted to cut in front of other voters in line for early voting.

    An election judge at the entrance instructed Schmidt to go to the back of the line and wait his turn. But authorities say that Schmidt refused.

    At that point, another election judge was called to assist, police said – and Schmidt was again instructed to go to the back of the line.

    According to the police, Schmidt then attempted to push past that election judge who stopped him from entering alongside several other staff members.

    Schmidt then reportedly began yelling profanities and punched the election judge in the face, knocking the official’s glasses off. At that point, several other patrons jumped in and restrained Schmidt until the officers arrived.

    Authorities added that, while being arrested, Schmidt also resisted Orland Park officers.

    Schmidt was held overnight on Sunday and transported to Bridgeview courthouse for a detention hearing on Monday morning.

    Ahead of this year’s election, election offices around the country have strengthened their security measures in anticipation of potential violence at the polls, in part in response to a rise in threats and harassment directed at election workers after the 2020 election that Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden.

    Trump is running in Tuesday’s election against Kamala Harris.

    Many offices have also trained their workers on de-escalation techniques and conducted drills for active shooters as well as other kinds of attacks.

    In the last week alone, the US has already experienced multiple attacks on the voting process, threats of violence and extremism, including bomb threats, ballots being burned and more.

  • How will US Election Day unfold? | US Election 2024 News

    How will US Election Day unfold? | US Election 2024 News

    Millions of Americans will head to polling booths on Tuesday to cast their ballots in the 2024 presidential election, in which Democratic candidate Kamala Harris and her Republican rival, Donald Trump, are locked in a tight race.

    There are 230 million eligible voters, but only about 160 million of them are registered. Nearly half of the 50 states in the United States, however, allow on-the-day registration while citizens can vote without registering in North Dakota.

    More than 70 million people have already voted through postal ballots or at early in-person polling stations.

    Voters will also elect 34 US senators (out of 100) and all 435 members for the US House of Representatives. Additionally, gubernatorial races will take place in 11 states and two territories (Puerto Rico and American Samoa).

    The US stretches across six time zones. Using US East Coast time (ET), voting will start as early as 5am (10:00 GMT) on Tuesday and go as late as 1am (06:00 GMT) on Wednesday.

    We break down when polls open and close across the states:

    5am ET (10:00 GMT)

    Polls open at different times from state to state. The earliest voting will start well before dawn in some municipalities in Vermont.

    6am ET (11:00 GMT)

    Polls open in Connecticut, New Jersey, New York and Virginia. Some polls in Indiana and Kentucky also open.

    In Maine, polls open from 6am ET to 10am ET (15:00 GMT) depending on the municipality guidelines. In New Hampshire, polls open from 6am ET to 11am ET (16:00 GMT).

    6:30am ET (11:30 GMT)

    Polls open in the battleground state of North Carolina as well as the red states of Ohio and West Virginia. States that traditionally back Republicans are called red states.

    7am ET (12:00 GMT)

    Polls open in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and South Carolina.

    Some polls in Indiana, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky and Michigan also open at this time. In Tennessee, voting starts from 7am ET to 10am ET (15:00 GMT) depending on the municipality.

    Georgia is a critical swing state. In the 2020 election, Democrat Joe Biden won by 0.2 percentage points over Trump, making it the narrowest margin of victory that year.

    From 1972 to 2016, Republican candidates would usually sweep Georgia. However, races have become tighter in the state recently due to demographic changes.

    8am ET (13:00 GMT)

    Polls open in Alabama, Arizona, Iowa, Minnesota, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Wisconsin. Some polls in Florida, Kansas, Michigan, South Dakota and Texas also open at this time.

    In North Dakota, voting starts from 8am ET to 11am ET (15:00 GMT) depending on the municipality.

    Arizona recently became a swing state when Biden defeated Trump by 0.3 percentage points four years ago. From 1952 to 2016, the Republican presidential candidate won in Arizona with one exception – Democrat Bill Clinton when he ran against Republican Robert Dole in 1996.

    8am ET (13:30 GMT)

    Arkansas starts voting.

    9am ET (14:00 GMT)

    People start casting ballots in Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. Polls also open at this time in some parts of South Dakota, Oregon and Texas and for the New Shoreham municipality in Rhode Island.

    In Idaho, polls open from 9am ET to 11am ET (16:00 GMT) depending on the municipality.

    10am ET (15:00 GMT)

    Voting starts in California and Nevada as well as some parts of Oregon. In Washington, polls open from 10am ET to noon ET (17:00 GMT) depending on the municipality.

    11am ET (16:00 GMT)

    Some polls open in Alaska, a state with two time zones. The state’s other polls open at noon ET (17:00 GMT)

    12pm ET (17:00 GMT)

    Polls open in Hawaii.

    Polls start to close at 6pm ET (23:00 GMT)

    Some polls in Indiana and Kentucky close.

    7pm ET (00:00 GMT)

    Polls close in six states: Georgia, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and the remainder of Indiana and Kentucky.

    Trump disputed the 2020 Georgia election result. He was later indicted on charges of election interference there. False claims about election fraud in the swing state in this election are already circulating.

    Indiana, Kentucky and South Carolina are leaning towards Trump while Virginia and Vermont are expected to go to Harris.

    7:30pm ET (00:30 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in Ohio, North Carolina and West Virginia.

    In 2020 in North Carolina, Trump won the battleground state by 1.3 percentage points over Biden, and in 2016, Trump won the state by 3.6 percentage points over Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    From 1980 to 2020, Republicans have won in North Carolina in every election except 2008 when Democrat Barack Obama won against John McCain by 0.3 percentage points.

    Ohio and West Virginia have historically voted Republican, and a Trump win is expected in the two states.

    8pm ET (01:00 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Washington and the District of Columbia.

    Most polls in Michigan and Texas also close at this time.

    Pennsylvania is a swing state that Biden won by 1.2 percentage points in 2020. In 2016, Trump won against Clinton by 0.7 percentage points.

    After a Democratic win in 1976, Republicans swept the state from 1980 to 1988. From 1992 to 2012, Democrats won Pennsylvania.

    8:30pm ET (01:30 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in Arkansas, marking a conclusion of voting in half of the US states.

    Arkansas is expected to go to Trump because Republicans have won comfortably in the state from 2000 to 2020.

    9pm ET (02:00 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in 15 states: Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Michigan, New Mexico, New York, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

    These include three swing states: Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin.

    From 1976 to 2020, Republicans have won in Arizona every election except 1996 and 2020. In 2020, Biden beat Trump by 0.3 percentage points. In 2016, Trump beat Clinton by 3.6 percentage points.

    From 1992 to 2020, Michigan has swung blue for Democrats every election except 2016 when Trump beat Clinton by 0.2 percentage points. In 2020, Biden beat Trump in the state by 2.8 percentage points. But US support for Israel’s war on Gaza could turn the sizeable number of Arab American voters in the state towards Trump or the Green Party’s Jill Stein.

    Wisconsin has also historically turned blue, doing so in every election from 1988 to 2020 except in 2016 when Trump defeated Clinton by 0.7 percentage points. In 2020, Biden won the state by 0.7 percentage points.

    10pm ET (03:00 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in Montana, Nevada and Utah.

    Montana and Utah are expected to go to Trump. Nevada, however, is a swing state.

    While Republicans won the state from 1976 to 1988, Democrats have won there since 2008. In 2020, Biden won by 2.4 percentage points. In 2016, Clinton beat Trump by 2.4 percentage points.

    11pm ET (04:00 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in California, Idaho, Oregon and Washington.

    California is the most populous US state, and it is expected to go to Harris, who is from California and has represented the state in the US Senate and served as its attorney general.

    From 1992 to 2020, Democrats have won comfortably in California.

    Oregon and Washington are also likely to see a Harris victory while Idaho is expected to go to Trump.

    Midnight ET (05:00 GMT on Wednesday)

    Polls close in Hawaii and parts of Alaska.

    Trump is expected to win in Alaska while Harris is expected to win in Hawaii.

    1am ET on Wednesday (06:00 GMT)

    The final polls close in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands.

  • Live Results: Alabama State House Special Election

    Live Results: Alabama State House Special Election

    The vice-presidential debate airs Tuesday at 9:00 PM Eastern Time. It is hosted by CBS News, but will also be available on many other networks.

    Tuesday also brings us the final legislative special election before the November 5 general election.

    Alabama State House District 52

    Republicans dominate the Alabama House of Representatives, holding 76 of 105 seats. There are 28 Democrats and one vacancy, which will be filled Tuesday. Members serve four year terms; the next regular elections are in 2026.

    The Birmingham area District 52 has been vacant since March, when Democrat John Rogers resigned. He had been in the State House since 1982. Rogers left after pleading guilty to federal criminal charges.

    Per the Alabama Political Reporter, “The special election features Democrat Kelvin Datcher, the deputy director of community development for Birmingham, squaring off against Republican Erskine Brown Jr., a 67-year-old retired U.S. Army veteran.”

    This is the first time a Republican is contesting the seat since 2014.

    Polls close at 8:00 PM Eastern Time.

  • US Election 2024: How does the US measure up to the rest of the world? | Infographic News

    US Election 2024: How does the US measure up to the rest of the world? | Infographic News

    How does the United States compare with other countries on socioeconomic indicators?

    These six graphics provide an overview of the economy, demographics, healthcare, education and military spending as voters get ready to cast their ballots on November 5.

    Largest economy in the world

    The US has the largest economy in the world, with a gross domestic product (GDP) of approximately $27 trillion, according to the World Bank. This positions it ahead of other major economies, including China ($17.8 trillion) and Germany ($4.5 trillion)

    The US has a GDP per capita of $65,020 – roughly four times the global average, placing it seventh in the world.

    The US Treasury has the highest gold reserves in the world, at 8,133 tonnes, valued at about $700bn. This amount is more than double that of Germany’s reserves, which stand at 3,352 tonnes, and three times as much as Italy’s 2,452 tonnes.

    While GDP reflects a country’s overall economic output, its gold reserves play a distinct role in the financial landscape by supporting monetary policy and influencing currency stability and trade.

    INTERACTIVE-5.How does the US rank in terms of economy and gold reserves_-1730722231

    An ageing population

    With a population of 335 million, the US is the third most populous country in the world, behind India (1.43 billion) and China (1.41 billion).

    However, the population growth rate has been steadily declining, and coupled with an ageing population, presents economic and social challenges, such as maintaining productivity and supporting seniors.

    The country’s fertility rate is just 1.84, indicating that the average woman is expected to have fewer than two children in her lifetime, which is below the global average of 2.4 and the replacement rate of 2.1 needed for a stable population without migration.

    The countries with the highest fertility rates are Niger (6.64), Angola (5.70) and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (5.49), while Taiwan (1.11), South Korea (1.12) and Singapore (1.17) have the lowest rates.

    The average life expectancy in the US is 81 years, which is slightly higher than the global average of 75 years, but still lower than that of most European and other developed countries.

    INTERACTIVE-1.How does the US rank in global fertility rate and life expectancy_-1730722209

    Quality of life

    The US federal minimum wage has been $7.25 per hour since 2009.

    Raising the minimum wage is a key election issue, with more than 80 percent of US voters believing the current wage is not enough for a decent quality of life, according to Data for Progress, a progressive US think tank.

    With an average work week of 37-52 hours, the annual minimum wage in the US is about $15,080. This is about double the global average of $6,293, but only about half of what minimum wage workers make in countries like Australia ($34,515), New Zealand ($33,487) and Luxembourg ($32,103).

    However, when it comes to affordability, such as buying a house, the US ranks among the highest in the world with a price-to-income ratio of 131.3. With 2015 as the base year, this means that the average price of a home in the US has outpaced income growth by more than 30 percent.

    Both US presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump say they will introduce tax policies to support first-time homebuyers.

    INTERACTIVE-4.How does the US rank in minimum wage and house affordability_-1730722226

    World’s most expensive healthcare

    The US has the most expensive healthcare costs in the world, with the country spending more than $12,000 per capita each year.

    The high costs for services, medications and insurance premiums create barriers to access, especially for the most vulnerable, leaving many people uninsured or underinsured.

    US government healthcare spending is 16.6 percent of the country’s GDP, about seven percent higher than the global average of 7.3 percent.

    Despite its relatively high healthcare spending, the US’s Health Index Score is lower than that of many other high-income countries. The Health Index Score measures how healthy people are and their access to healthcare services.

    Harris is a strong supporter of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which aims to make health services affordable to more Americans. She has pledged to expand this 14-year-old legislation, but Trump tried to repeal it many times during his 2017-2021 tenure as US president.

    INTERACTIVE-2.How does the US rank in healthcare_-1730722215

    Education rankings

    According to the Education Data Initiative, public education spending in the US falls short of global benchmarks and lags behind economic growth.

    The US spends around 6.1 percent of its GDP on education, which is higher than the global average of 4.7 percent.

    When it comes to performance in mathematics, science, and reading, the US scored a total of 1,468 points in the 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).

    This score exceeds the global average of 1,320 points, but it falls short compared to several Asian countries, including Singapore, which scored 1,679 points, China at 1,605 points and Japan at 1,599 points.

    INTERACTIVE-3.How does the US rank in education_-1730722221

    Military expenditure and power

    The US spends more on its military than the next 10 highest-spending countries combined, accounting for 39 percent of all global military expenditures.

    At nearly $900bn, as a share of GDP, US military expenditure is 3.45 percent, well above the global average of 2 percent.

    The US is ranked number one out of 145 countries by the Global Firepower Index, which measures a nation’s war capabilities across land, sea and air.

    INTERACTIVE-6.How does the US rank militarily_-1730722236

  • How precincts in Pennsylvania handle unexpected issues on Election Day

    How precincts in Pennsylvania handle unexpected issues on Election Day

    On Tuesday, millions of people in Pennsylvania will travel to their local polling place to cast a ballot.

    Election officials want everything to go smoothly, but disruptions sometimes happen.

    The most common disruptions at precincts are late openings, lack of staffing and voting machine issues, according to Jeff Greenburg, a 13-year election director veteran. He is now a senior advisor on election administration for The Committee of Seventy, a nonpartisan organization focusing on engagement and public policy advocacy.

    Anyone can report a problem with the election process. They can call their county elections office, contact the Department of State, or reach out to a voter hotline run by nonprofits.

    What if my polling place doesn’t open on time or is not fully staffed?

    Sometimes workers arrive late or facility owners forget to unlock the doors on time, Greenburg said.

    Polling places open on Tuesday at 7 a.m. and will remain open until 8 p.m. Anyone in line to vote when polls close will be allowed to cast a ballot.

    Voters can find their local polling place online.

    “County election offices will have contact information for both poll workers and facilities in the event doors are locked or poll workers don’t show up,” Greenburg said.

    If there is a shortage of workers at a polling place, workers can be shifted from other locations or recruited, Greenburg said. Pennsylvania law allows workers to fill a vacancy with someone who has come in to vote if that person is willing to help.

    What if there are voting machine issues?

    There are multiple backups in place so voters can cast a ballot if there are issues with the voting machines.

    Greenburg said counties typically have roving technicians respond if issues arise. He said they are dispatched as quickly as possible once the issue is reported.

    Typically, reports go from the precinct to the county election office. If the issue cannot be resolved or if legal action is required, the county solicitor and Board of Elections will determine if any further steps are required.

    “If there is a significant enough impact on the voting location, the BOE could petition the county courts to extend hours,” Greenburg said.

    Each county election office has a process in place to disseminate important information on Election Day. This can be through the county’s website, social media accounts or through local news outlets.

    “People should only rely on trusted sources for this information,” Greenburg said. “Whether it’s through the county’s web site or social media accounts, or through local media outlets.”

    Counties also have emergency paper ballots if machines cannot be repaired or replaced on Election Day.

    Eva Weyrich, Juniata County’s director of elections, said the county only uses paper ballots and each polling place has one machine tabulator.

    Even if something goes wrong with the tabulator, voters will still be able to fill out their ballots while a technician travels to the precinct to fix the issue.

    Weyrich said the county has never had a machine go down for the whole day.

    Juniata County prefers the hand-marked paper ballot system, according to Weyrich.

    “We can always go back and hand-count the ballots to verify that the machine was accurate,” Weyrich said.

    Forty-seven counties have voters fill in ballots by hand. The other 27 have voting machines that print paper ballots with the voter’s selections that can also be audited after an election.

    What to know about the 2024 Election

    ___

    This story is part of an explanatory series focused on Pennsylvania elections produced collaboratively by WITF, led by democracy reporter Jordan Wilkie, and The Associated Press.

    ___

    The AP receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here.

  • Harris leads Trump in Iowa poll days before Election Day

    Harris leads Trump in Iowa poll days before Election Day

    Democratic presidential nominee and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a “When We Vote We Win” campaign rally at Craig Ranch Amphitheater on October 31, 2024 in North Las Vegas, Nevada. 

    Ethan Miller | Getty Images

    Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump in Iowa by 47% to 44% among likely voters, according to a shocking new poll released Saturday night, just three days before Election Day.

    Harris’ advantage is within the poll’s 3.4 percentage point margin of error, but her lead reflects a 7-point swing by voters in her favor since September.

    The Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll’s results came as a complete surprise to political observers, as no serious analyst has predicted that the Democratic nominee will defeat Trump in the state.

    Neither candidate had campaigned in the state, which Trump has easily won in the past two presidential elections, since the presidential primaries concluded.

    “It’s hard for anybody to say they saw this coming,” pollster J. Ann Selzer, president of Selzer & Co told the Des Moines Register.

    “She has clearly leaped into a leading position.”

    Selzer & Co. conducted the survey of 808 likely voters in Iowa from Monday to Thursday. Selzer’s company is highly respected by pollsters and her findings typically carry significant weight with political strategists.

    Harris’ lead in the poll was powered by strong support from female voters, particularly older and politically independent ones.

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    “Age and gender are the two most dynamic factors that are explaining these numbers,” Selzer told the Register.   

    The poll found that 3% of respondents supported independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who ended his campaign to back Trump. Kennedy remains on Iowa’s ballot.

    The same poll in September showed Trump leading Harris, the current vice president, by 4 percentage points. Trump led President Joe Biden, the then-presumptive Democratic nominee, by 18 percentage points in June.

    Trump won the state by 8 percentage points in 2020 and 9 points in 2016.

    The Republican’s campaign issued a memo Saturday night that called the poll an “outlier.”

    The memo noted that the new Emerson College poll of likely Iowa voters, released earlier Saturday, showed Trump leading Harris by 53% to 43%.

    The Trump campaign memo said, “Des Moines Register is a clear outlier poll. Emerson College, released today, far more closely reflects the state of the actual Iowa electorate and does so with far more transparency in their methodology.”

  • Political bettors hit the jackpot as court clears election markets for comeback

    “This week is the dawn of a new era for financial markets,” said Tarek Mansour, CEO of financial exchange startup Kalshi.
  • Pennsylvania election officials weighing in on challenges to 4,300 mail ballot applications

    Pennsylvania election officials weighing in on challenges to 4,300 mail ballot applications

    HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — More than 4,000 mail ballot applications have been challenged across 14 Pennsylvania counties, leaving election officials to decide voter eligibility during hearings that will extend well past Election Day.

    State elections officials say the “mass challenges” focused on two separate groups — people who may have forwarded their mail without also changing their voter registration and nonmilitary U.S. voters living overseas. The overseas voters are only entitled to cast ballots under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act for president and congressional seats.

    The state had a 5 p.m. Friday deadline to for anyone to challenge mail-in ballot applications; any ballots from those voters whose applications were challenged must be sequestered until the county elections board officials hold a hearing to adjudicate the claims. Those hearings must be no later than Friday, three days after Election Day.

    Pennsylvania is a critical swing state that could be a deciding factor in the contest between Democratic nominee Kamala Harris and Republican nominee Donald Trump, a very close race on the eve of Election Day. If the margin is tight, the 4,300 mail ballots at issue could be enough to determine who wins the state and its 19 electoral votes.

    The effort follows a federal judge’s ruling last week to throw out a lawsuit by six Republican members of Congress seeking to make Pennsylvania election officials institute new checks confirming military and overseas voters’ eligibility and identity.

    The first county elections board hearing, conducted Friday in suburban Philadelphia’s Chester County, resulted in rejection of all of the challenges made to mail ballot applications, claims that people have moved and should have changed where they vote.

    “The scary part was that they had sent this letter with a voter registration cancelation form and claimed they got 2,300 voters to cancel voter registration” in Pennsylvania, Chester County Commissioner Josh Maxwell, a Democrat, said Monday.

    The challenges cost $10 a voter and it’s not entirely clear who filed each of them. In Chester County, they were filed by Diane Houser, a Trump supporter who said they were nonpartisan and from a grassroots network.

    Lycoming County will conduct a hearing Friday on the 72 challenges it received from Karen DiSalvo, a lawyer with PA Fair Elections, a conservative group that has fueled right-wing attacks on voting procedures. DiSalvo said she made the challenges in her capacity as an individual and not as a member of any organization.

    “The challenges submitted simply point out that the county election officials must properly process the voter registration applications that they already have for these applicants. The voters do not need to do anything –- all have received their ballot. To resolve the eligibility issues noted in the challenges, county officials should properly register the applicants,” DiSalvo wrote in an email.

    In York County, all the challenges — 354 — were denied Monday by the elections board, but chief clerk Greg Monskie said the board agreed to keep those ballots segregated during a period in which an appeal can be made.

    The Pennsylvania Department of State, which oversees elections, said that by Saturday there were some 3,700 challenges to mail ballot applications by overseas voters pending in 10 counties. There were also challenges pending in four counties to 363 voters based on supposed changes of address — plus the 212 that were rejected or withdrawn in Chester County in that category.

    What to know about the 2024 Election

    Eric Roe, Chester’s Republican commissioner, said people who had been challenged included active-duty military members, college students and people who left Pennsylvania seeking medical care.

    “That is alarming to me that someone take up such an approach to disenfranchise legitimate Pennsylvania voters,” Roe said. “And I can’t think of anything less American than that.”

    The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania says filling out a change-of-address form does not necessarily mean a voter has moved out of the state permanently — those forms can also be used to get mail forwarded.

    There are also 52 challenges being reviewed in Lawrence County, said Tim Germani, director of voter and elections services in Lawrence, and it appears most if not all relate to overseas mail ballot requests. The elections board may need to conduct a hearing by Friday, he said.

    In suburban Philadelphia’s Bucks County, where about 1,300 challenges were filed — most of them by Republican state Sen. Jarrett Coleman — officials were trying to notify voters Monday about a hearing scheduled for early Thursday. Until then, those votes will be segregated during the vote counting, said Bucks governmental spokesman Jim O’Malley.

    “We are doing our best to provide notice today to those voters and that notice will include information about how to contact the Board of Elections,” O’Malley said in a phone interview Monday.

    A message seeking comment was left for Coleman.