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  • Despite setbacks, election denial continues to thrive in Republican Party | US Election 2024 News

    Despite setbacks, election denial continues to thrive in Republican Party | US Election 2024 News

    Phoenix, Arizona – For nearly three decades, Buster Johnson served with little fanfare as a member of the Board of Supervisors in Mohave County, a deep-red section of western Arizona.

    Even as former President Donald Trump pushed the false claim that widespread fraud was to blame for his loss in the 2020 election, the idea that such malfeasance had taken place in Mohave seemed laughable: Trump had carried the county by more than 50 points.

    But that did little to stop the rise of election denialism in Mohave Country — and in the Republican Party at large.

    Johnson, a lifelong Republican who previously was the vice chair of the party’s state chapter, said he was perplexed by the sudden pressure to implement new measures such as hand-counting each ballot.

    That demand is common among election deniers, but experts say that technique for tallying votes is more error-prone, less efficient and more expensive.

    Acceding to the wishes of his constituents, Johnson voted in favour of a measure to switch to hand-counting, but he tried to explain to voters in the county that such steps made little sense.

    “This kind of thing never happened before 2020,” he said of the wave of new demands to overhaul the voting system.

    “We’re a strong Republican county. We’ve always voted red.”

    Johnson lost his re-election bid in the Republican primary in July to Sonny Borrelli, a state senator who had championed Trump’s false claims of widespread election “rigging” in 2020.

    Borrelli, however, won an endorsement from Trump, the current Republican presidential candidate, who credited him with being “on the front line of fighting against corrupt elections since day one”.

    Poor record

    Following Trump’s defeat in 2020, many Republican officials and candidates across the country — especially in swing states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Nevada — embraced his false allegations of rampant election fraud.

    In several cases, election deniers ran for statewide positions that would give them substantial influence over the electoral process.

    Some also voiced support for Trump’s alleged efforts to nullify the will of the voters through schemes to derail the election certification process.

    Trump and his allies are accused of having recruited state officials to submit false Electoral College certificates after the 2020 race, and he faces a federal criminal indictment in Washington, DC, as a result.

    However, for Republican candidates up and down the ballot, putting election denial front and centre in a campaign was a useful way to secure an endorsement from the former president.

    Voters have also been receptive to election denialism. In October, a poll from the Marist Institute for Public Opinion found that a majority of voters, 58 percent, were concerned about the possibility of fraud at the ballot box.

    That number was even higher among Republicans alone. An estimated 88 percent expressed worry over election fraud.

    Patrice, a voter in Tucson who recently moved to Arizona from the East Coast, said he understood the need to implement new measures to ensure election security. He asked to withhold his last name, in order to speak freely about his election-related doubts.

    “If you doubt something, don’t you want to check into it and question it?” said Patrice. “There are things happening, and they do deserve to be questioned.”

    A sign at an early voting station
    A sign points the way to an early voting station in Tucson, Arizona, on October 28 [Brian Osgood/Al Jazeera]

    But adopting Trump’s narrative about stolen elections has backfired for some Republican candidates seeking public office.

    During the midterm elections in 2022, many high-level supporters of election denial who had won Trump’s endorsement lost their races in the general election.

    That included gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake and secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem, who fell short against Democratic rivals.

    Doubling down

    Some political observers assumed that, after the setbacks of 2022, Republican officials might move away from election denial for fear of alienating moderate voters.

    Instead, many Republicans, including Trump, have continued to push false claims about US elections and cast doubt on previous results.

    “They should do paper ballots, same-day voting, voter ID and be done,” Trump said as he cast his vote on Tuesday, casting doubt on widely used electronic voting.

    A few days earlier, on November 2 in Salem, Virginia, he falsely accused Democrats of undermining the vote, sowing further uncertainty into the electoral process.

    “I’d love to win the popular vote with them cheating. Let them cheat,” he said.

    Some of his allies have since adopted his strategy of questioning election results that do not fall in their favour. Lake, who is now running to represent Arizona in the Senate, never conceded her loss in the 2022 elections.

    “It’s definitely a trend that concerns me,” Kim, a voter at an early-voting station in the city of Tucson, told Al Jazeera. She asked to use only her first name in order to speak freely.

    “I feel like the process is legit, and it works. I’m a teacher also, so it sort of feels like the sore-loser mentality, where you say, ‘It didn’t go my way, so the system must be wrong.’ Instead of figuring out what you need to do better, it’s someone else’s fault.”

    She added: “It’s ridiculous.”

    Experts warn that spreading unsubstantiated claims of election fraud can undermine faith in the overall democratic process and serve as a pretext for limiting access to voting in the name of election security.

    “The anti-democracy movement has spent the past four years strategizing how to undermine our election system,” Joanna Lydgate, CEO of States United Democracy Center, which tracks election denial across the US, told Al Jazeera in a statement.

    “Election deniers are trying to throw sand in the gears of every step in our election process, so they can claim things went wrong and throw out election results that they don’t like. But ultimately, our elections are free, fair, and secure.”

  • Republicans flip the US Senate, ending three years of Democrat control | US Election 2024 News

    Republicans flip the US Senate, ending three years of Democrat control | US Election 2024 News

    The Republican Party has reclaimed control of the United States Senate, ending two years of Democratic leadership.

    Tuesday’s general election saw a third of the upper chamber in Congress — or 34 seats — hit the ballot, of which approximately nine were competitive.

    The Democrats were vulnerable to losing their grip on the chamber, given their narrow majority. A coalition of four independent senators and 47 Democrats gave the party its 51-person majority, out of a total of 100 possible seats.

    The party needed to defend every seat possible to retain control.

    But on Tuesday, two key defeats decisively put the power over the Senate back in Republican hands.

    Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown lost his bid for re-election in the midwestern state of Ohio. Meanwhile, in West Virginia, Republicans picked up a seat formerly held by retiring independent Senator Joe Manchin.

    The Republican Party also successfully defended a vulnerable seat in Texas, held by Senator Ted Cruz. Tuesday was Cruz’s second time beating back a Democratic contender angling to take his seat.

    Meanwhile, in Nebraska, another Republican incumbent Deb Fischer fended off an upstart challenge from independent candidate Dan Osborn, who made the race a nailbiter in its final weeks.

    The shift in control over the Senate could pave the way for Republicans to hold both chambers in Congress, which would give the party power over the legislative agenda for at least the next two years.

    It also grants Republicans significant sway over nominations for the Supreme Court, the presidential cabinet, ambassadorships and other federal positions that the president nominates.

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump remarked on the chamber’s flip in his election night remarks from West Palm Beach, Florida, in the early hours of Wednesday.

    “We have taken back control of the Senate. Wow,” Trump said. “I mean, the number of victories in the Senate was absolutely incredible.”

    “Nobody expected that. Nobody. So I just wanted to thank you very much for that. You have some great senators and some great new senators.”

    What happened?

    Tuesday’s race to maintain the Senate was always an uphill battle for Democrats.

    Under the US Constitution, the Senate has a staggered process for shaking up its ranks: Only a third of the chamber is up for re-election at any given point.

    Senators serve a six-year term — much longer than the two years awarded to their counterparts in the House of Representatives. That makes each seat all the more precious.

    In 2021, two run-off elections in Georgia gave Democrats their first lead in the chamber since 2011.

    Then, in 2022, the midterm elections resulted in a surprise yet again. While Republicans were expected to grab the lead in the Senate, they fell short when a predicted “red wave” failed to materialise.

    Fast forward to 2024, and the Democrats were on the defensive. Seven of the nine toss-up races for the Senate were held by Democrats. By contrast, only two Republicans — Cruz and Fischer — were considered vulnerable.

    In short, the Democrats had more to lose.

    West Virginia, the first to fall

    West Virginia has long been a Republican stronghold, which made the retiring Senator Manchin something of a unicorn.

    Since 2000, the Appalachian state has consistently voted Republican in presidential races by healthy margins.

    But Manchin — a moderate Democrat before switching to his present independent status — had been a unifying figure in the state.

    The announcement in November 2023 that he would retire opened up a tantalising fight for Republicans.

    Governor Jim Justice, a Democrat turned Republican, quickly threw his hat into the ring. He won the governor’s mansion in West Virginia in 2016, the same year Republican Donald Trump took the White House, leading a wave of “outsider” candidates.

    On Tuesday night, Justice — known for campaigning with a pudgy bulldog named Baby Dog — handily defeated Glenn Elliott, the Democratic mayor of the city of Wheeling.

    A mighty tumble in Ohio

    The defeat of three-term Democratic Senator Brown in Ohio was much more unexpected.

    Ohio had, until recent years, been perceived as a swing state in the industrial Rust Belt region of the US. But as the state leaned rightwards, Democratic leaders like Brown faced increasing threats to their positions.

    By 2024, Brown was the only Democrat left holding a statewide position in Ohio.

    On Tuesday, he tried to win a fourth term over Republican car dealer Bernie Moreno, a Colombian immigrant who gained Trump’s endorsement.

    Brown played up his progressive bona fides and hammered Moreno over abortion policy. He also framed himself as a politician willing to stand up to power, no matter the party.

    “I’ve stood up to presidents in both parties,” he told local media on the campaign trail.

    Moreno, meanwhile, bashed Brown as a “radical Democrat” who was lax on immigration.

    In his Election Night victory speech, Moreno played up his patriotism — and echoed Trump’s call for “America First” policies.

    “Today starts a new wave. We talked about wanting a red wave. I think what we have tonight is a red, white and blue wave in this country,” Moreno said.

    “Because what we need in the United States of America is leaders in Washington, DC, that actually put the interests of American citizens above all else. We’re tired of being treated like second-class citizens in our own country.”

    Al Jazeera correspondent Kristen Saloomey underscored how big of a loss Ohio was for Democrats in the Senate.

    “Ohio is the big flip here. This is the one that really hurt the Democrats,” she said on Election Night. “It was a really expensive race.”

    Nebraska, less of a surprise

    Located in the central prairies of the US, Nebraska has a reputation for electing Republican leaders. While it splits its Electoral College votes among its districts, not since 1964 has a majority of its Electoral College votes gone to a Democrat for president.

    That Republican incumbent Fischer won re-election on Tuesday was expected. What was less anticipated was the close race she faced in the final weeks of her campaign.

    A former school board member, Fischer had already served two terms in the Senate when she announced her re-election bid. But the entry of Osborn, a navy veteran and union leader, into the race upended her cruise to victory.

    Osborn rejected an offered endorsement from the Democratic Party during his campaign and pledged to remain staunchly independent in his politics if elected.

    He even declined to say whether he would caucus with the Republicans or Democrats if he reached the Senate.

    That made him a cipher in the race — one that disillusioned Republicans could rally behind. He surged in the polls, trailing Fischer by mere percentage points in the waning weeks of the race.

    But Fischer sought to portray Osborn as the “same old Democrat BS” and “just a different DC puppet”, as one campaign advertisement put it. She also accused him of being soft on immigration, a common rallying cry for Republicans this election cycle.

    “Nebraska wasn’t really surprising,” Saloomey said of the race, though she acknowledged Osborn “made it close”.

    Cruz survives in Texas

    Texas has long been stubbornly Republican, and just as stubborn in holding onto his Senate seat is right-wing firebrand Ted Cruz.

    First elected to the Senate in 2012, Cruz became the first Latino from Texas in Congress’s upper chamber. He was also a prominent member of the far-right Tea Party movement.

    Democrats have failed to win a statewide vote in Texas since 1994. But that does not mean the party has not tried — and Cruz has often been in its crosshairs.

    During his first re-election bid in 2018, Cruz faced a well-funded charismatic Democratic challenger in former US Representative Beto O’Rourke. Despite a backlash against the far right in the midst of Trump’s first term in office, Cruz squeaked out a victory over O’Rourke.

    In 2024, Cruz was in the hunt for a third term, and once again, Democrats sought to rattle him.

    This time, they put forward US Representative Colin Allred, a civil rights lawyer and former American football player for the Tennessee Titans. Once again, they fell short.

    “God be the glory,” Cruz said in his victory speech on Tuesday. “Tonight is an incredible night, a huge victory here in Texas.”

    He also thanked “all the Democrats across Texas who crossed over and supported my campaign”.

    “To all of those who didn’t support me, you have my word that I will fight for you, for your jobs, for your safety and for your constitutional rights.”

  • ​Election night on Fox News: hosts laud Trump as ‘phoenix from the ashes’ | US elections 2024

    By 11pm on election night, Fox News was declaring Donald Trump “a phoenix from the ashes”.

    “[He’s] the biggest political phoenix from the ashes that we’ve seen in the history of politics,” said anchor Bret Baier.

    As counts in some swing states were starting to show Trump in the lead, and Trump’s chance of winning seemed to increase, some of Fox’s biggest stars were writing the first draft of his comeback victory.

    “This is the most incredible political comeback that we’ve seen since 1968,” said commentator Ben Domenech. It will be “not just the greatest political comeback of all time,” added Laura Ingraham. “It will be the greatest comeback in history.”

    Fox News is still firmly in the center of the conservative media universe, despite growing competition from the likes of NewsMax, the One American News (OAN) network, and myriad conservative podcasts. The US broadcaster remains the most-watched cable news network in the country, consistently beating CNN and MSNBC in the ratings.

    Though none of the crucial seven battleground states had been called by the network by 11pm on election night, Fox’s roundtable appeared to be getting ready for a Trump victory, speculating on what it would say about the future of politics and American media.

    Sean Hannity, who did not make any election night appearances in 2020, said on Tuesday night: “After all they have thrown at this man, after all they have done to this man, with all the media that wouldn’t even vet [Harris] and her radical positions, what would this say about legacy media? It’s dead.”

    Jesse Watters told viewers that a Trump win would be a “mandate” to run the country. A Trump victory would be a “complete rejection of everything [the media] has been telling us about Donald Trump”, he added.

    Multiple Fox commentators noted that Trump appeared to be doing well with Black and Hispanic voters, noting the “diverse coalition” that Trump’s campaign has pulled together this election. Commentator Dana Perino called it the most “racially diverse political coalition that we’ve seen in generations”.

    Things were looking quite different on election night in 2020. Just before 11.30pm, Fox News called Arizona in favor of Joe Biden. The call was pivotal. Arizona had voted for Trump in 2016, a slide to Biden would suggest Donald Trump’s grasp had loosened since the 2016 election.

    The early call infuriated Trump, who had come to see Fox News as a friendly extension of his communications team, frequently calling into the network during his presidency and appearing for exclusive interviews.

    Ever since then, the network, owned by media scion Rupert Murdoch, has had to navigate a sometimes tense relationship with Trump. The former president has given the network its highest ratings. On election night in 2020, the network got 14.1 million viewers between 8pm and 11pm – 5 million more than CNN during the same time block, and more than double the viewership of other news networks.

    But the cozy relationship has also gotten the network in trouble. Fox News paid voting machine maker Dominion $787.5m in a settlement over misinformation in the 2020 election. It still has a $2.7bn lawsuit from Smartmatic in the courts.

    Going into the 2024 presidential election, the network has been walking a tightrope. It hosted a town hall with Trump in January, the first time the former president had appeared on the network in almost two years. He has called into the network more and participated in another town hall hosted by the network in October. Murdoch, who in 2020 said that “Trump will be becoming irrelevant”, showed up to the Republican national convention in Milwaukee in July.

    But Trump and Fox News have put some distance between each other since 2016. In the days leading up to the election, Trump told reporters that he was annoyed that the network kept playing clips from Oprah’s speech supporting Harris.

    “You know who else should be ashamed of themselves is Fox,” Trump said. “Everybody thinks Fox is so pro-Trump. They’re not pro-Trump at all.”

    But on Tuesday night, even with most swing states too close to call, Fox brought some of the network’s most Trump-friendly commentators on air to raise the prospect of a Trump resurrection – and discuss its possible implications.

    “It would be up to the Democrats and the media,” Watters said. “What’s their posture toward the greatest comeback victory that we’ve ever seen?”

    Read more of the Guardian’s 2024 US election coverage

  • Re-election for Tlaib and Omar – first Muslim women to serve in US Congress | US Election 2024 News

    Re-election for Tlaib and Omar – first Muslim women to serve in US Congress | US Election 2024 News

    Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar have won re-election and continue their political careers after being the first two Muslim women to serve in the US Congress.

    The Democratic Party’s Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar – the first two Muslim women to serve in the United States Congress – have won re-election to the US House of Representatives.

    Tlaib, who is also the first woman of Palestinian descent in the US Congress, was re-elected on Tuesday for a fourth term as a representative for Michigan with support from the large Arab-American community in Dearborn.

    Omar, a former refugee and Somali American, retook her seat for a third term in Minnesota, where she represents the strongly Democratic 5th District, which includes Minneapolis and a number of suburbs.

    A leading critic of US military support to Israel in its war on Gaza, Tlaib ran uncontested in her primary and defeated Republican James Hooper to represent the solidly Democratic district in Dearborn and Detroit.

    Omar is also a sharp critic of Israel’s war on Gaza.

    In a post on social media, Omar thanked her supporters for all their hard work in her election campaign.

    “Our hard work was worth it. We knocked on 117,716 doors. We made 108,226 calls. And we sent 147,323 texts. This is a victory for ALL of us who believe that a better future is possible. I can’t wait to make you all proud over the next two years,” she said.

     

    Tlaib and Omar are both members of the informal group of lawmakers known as “The Squad”, which is made up of progressive members of Congress including Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, among others.

    Other “Squad” members Jamaal Bowman of New York and Cori Bush of Missouri both lost their party primaries against opponents who had won substantial support from the pro-Israel fundraising group American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

    The group has invested more than $100m in US political races this year in a bid to silence pro-Palestine voices in Congress.

  • Excited and unnerved: New Yorkers flood the polls on US Election Day | US Election 2024 News

    Excited and unnerved: New Yorkers flood the polls on US Election Day | US Election 2024 News

    New York City, US – As the sun rose over the five boroughs of New York City on Tuesday morning, a certain unspoken unease permeated the crisp autumn air.

    New Yorkers — both supporters of former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris — flooded polling places early on November 5 as voters in the United States began to duke it out at the ballot box.

    For some, it was a chance to dismantle the status quo. For many, it was the election of a lifetime.

    New York City is a Democratic stronghold. In 2020, it voted overwhelmingly against Trump, helping to deliver current President Joe Biden a critical election victory.

    But each of the five boroughs has its own personality, and the pockets of voters that make up New York City paint a much more complicated picture of this year’s presidential race.

    In the blue-collar neighbourhood of Ridgewood, part of the westernmost borough of Queens, 36-year-old hairstylist Adrianne Kuss expressed anxiety about the election’s eventual outcome.

    “I feel nervous,” Kuss told Al Jazeera moments after casting her vote for Harris on Tuesday morning. “Nobody should be on the fence… Too many things are at stake.”

    Ridgewood, Queens
    Voters leave a polling site on Tuesday in Queens, where Trump signs and banners dot lawns and windows [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera]

    Sporting pink hair with matching pink sunglasses, cargo pants and boots, Kuss added that the prospect of another Trump presidency frightened her.

    The Republican candidate has pledged to be a dictator “for day one” if re-elected on Tuesday. Kuss also pointed out that Trump has made numerous anti-transgender and anti-immigrant comments.

    “As a German American, I got this thing about fascism,” Kuss explained.

    “I’m concerned about his racism, about his misogyny. But also, he is old and senile and out of touch. He’s not someone who represents New Yorkers. I mean, honestly, he’s this silver-spoon idiot.”

    She pointed to the events of January 6, 2021, as fuelling her fears. On that day, a mob of Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol to disrupt the certification of the 2020 election after Trump repeatedly called the results a fraud.

    “I don’t want this cultish mob rearing its ugly head again,” Kuss explained. “That was absolutely terrifying. In 2020, when the insurrection happened, people’s lives were literally at risk. I don’t want to see that again.”

    Alice Kokasch
    Alice Kokasch, 83, a retired teacher, heads into the Seneca School in Ridgewood, Queens, on Tuesday morning to cast her vote for former President Donald Trump [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera] (Al Jazeera)

    Queens, however, is Trump’s home borough: He was born and raised in the area, and his family’s real estate business was anchored there.

    Traditionally, the borough turns out a higher proportion of voters — specifically white voters — for the former president and real estate billionaire than other pockets of the city.

    In 2020, for instance, Trump carried over 26 percent of the vote in Queens, a higher number than in Brooklyn, Manhattan or the Bronx but lower than in Staten Island.

    The Republican continues to have sway in areas of Queens like Ridgewood, a working-class, blue-collar neighbourhood where many Polish, German and Albanian voters live.

    Retired Queens teacher Alice Kokasch, 83, is one of Trump’s supporters. Kokasch, who voted for the Republican leader in 2016 and 2020, said she had no qualms about sending Trump back to the Oval Office — despite his 34 felony convictions last May.

    “He didn’t do anything that bad,” Kokasch told Al Jazeera outside Public School 88, where she taught and went to school. It had been transformed into a polling site for Tuesday’s race.

    Kokasch said that, whatever Trump’s personal failings, they were no dealbreaker. “He’s not perfect, but who is, right?”

    Brian, a 28-year-old Latino immigrant in Queens, also voted for Trump. Likewise, he was unfazed by Trump’s scandals and criminal history: Last year, the Republican leader became the first US president ever to face criminal charges.

    “Honestly, it doesn’t bother me,” Brian, who also declined to give his name out of fear of retribution, told Al Jazeera.

    “Nobody’s perfect, and I just look more towards what can he do for his country rather than his prior felony cases. I do acknowledge that that did happen. And, of course, that’s not a good look on anybody. But, you know, nobody’s perfect.”

    For Brian, a customer service worker, Trump’s economic record was a mighty pull at the ballot box.

    “I believe he’s the right candidate for us,” Brian said. “While he was in power, I felt like the economy was on the right track.”

    Still, Brian acknowledged that Trump may not accept the election results if Harris inches ahead of him in the tight presidential race.

    “Most likely not,” Brian said with a chuckle. “I know he won’t accept.”

    Election 2024 NYC
    More than one million New Yorkers cast their ballot during the early voting phase of the US election [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera]

    Another voter in Queens, David, a 30-year-old construction worker with a mild European accent, also voted for Trump on Tuesday alongside his father. He declined to give his last name out of fear his political leanings could affect the family business.

    Like many Trump supporters, he cited the high inflation under outgoing President Joe Biden as a motivation for his vote.

    “The economy’s going to sh**,” David said. “Everything is up. Inflation is at an all-time high. I think it’s time to drain the swamp. What more can I say?”

    With wars ongoing in Ukraine, Gaza and Lebanon, he also expressed fears that the US could be dragged into a new conflict under further Democratic leadership.

    “Countless wars…,” David said, trailing off. “They want our troops to go out there and kill while they’re dining somewhere in Washington, DC, eating steak dinners.”

    For him, a Harris win was inconceivable — and he echoed the unfounded election fraud claims that Trump has spread ahead of Tuesday’s election, seeking to undermine a potential Democratic victory.

    “There’s a lot of spooky stuff going on,” David told Al Jazeera, citing a conspiracy theory that thousands of ballots had been hijacked off an 18-wheeler in Pennsylvania. “I’m not accepting the results.”

    Williamsburg, Brooklyn polling site
    New Yorkers funnel into Public School 17 in north Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Tuesday morning to cast their ballot for the next president [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera]

    South of Queens, in the more left-leaning borough of Brooklyn, public sentiment was slightly different.

    In Williamsburg, Brooklyn, a woman walking her dog and toting a yoga mat hugged a friend as the pair lined up to enter a polling station on North 5th Street.

    Nearby, Brooklyn artist James Kennedy, 46, who wore a tie-dye hat with a blue Kamala pin, posed for a selfie. He told Al Jazeera he was feeling the weight of the moment.

    “[I feel] pretty nervous,” Kennedy said. “I don’t know, man. It’s tough. I just wish we could all just get along again, you know? But I don’t know if it’s going to happen, but we’ll see. I just hope positivity wins over negativity.”

    James Kennedy,
    Brooklyn artist James Kennedy, 46, said he voted for Vice President Kamala Harris because of her stance on women’s reproductive rights [Dorian Geiger/Al Jazeera]

    The divisive presidential cycles of the last decade had left him feeling depleted, he explained. Nevertheless, Kennedy, a longtime registered Democrat, said his choice was clear: He would vote for Harris. There was no way he could support Trump’s behaviour and policies.

    “The way this man acts, it’s just unpresidential,” the artist said of Trump.

    Kennedy, particularly, had been troubled by the undoing of Roe v Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that had previously protected the right to abortion access.

    Trump has boasted on the campaign trail that it was the judges he appointed to the court that made Roe’s demise possible. In 2022, after Roe was overturned, many states took the opportunity to implement restrictions on abortion rights — if not ban the procedure entirely.

    Kennedy fears further draconian laws could be imposed if Republicans seize the White House again.

    “I think that’s just really what’s so important right now,” he added. “But I just think it’s ridiculous that we even have to have [that conversation].”

    Harlem polling site
    Harlem polling sites drew scores of African American voters on Tuesday, eager to cast votes for Vice President Kamala Harris [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera]

    Across the water, in the island borough of Manhattan, polling sites in the Harlem neighbourhood drew scores of primarily African American voters.

    Many were eager to cast votes for Vice President Harris, who would be the first Black woman elected to the White House if successful in Tuesday’s race.

    One polling site at EM Moore Public Housing drew 98-year-old lifelong Harlem resident Eula Dalton, who walked arm-in-arm with her daughter, Rose Dalton, to the polls.

    “It was beautiful,” Eula Dalton said of this year’s voting process.

    Both mother and daughter likened the moment to Barack Obama’s stunning 2008 presidential win. Obama became the first non-white person ever to lead the country.

    Eula and Rose Dalton
    Eula Dalton, 98, said casting her vote for Kamala Harris alongside her daughter, Rose Dalton, 67, was a “beautiful” moment she likened to Barack Obama’s historic 2008 win [Dorian Geiger/ Al Jazeera]

    Rose, a court reporter, travelled from Connecticut to ensure her mother, who struggles with early onset dementia, could exercise her right to vote.

    “I knew I wanted to bring her,” Rose said, explaining that it was difficult for Eula to vote without assistance. “She’s been inactive since Obama, I believe, because, you know, back then, she was probably 16 years younger. She was more aware.”

    But the Election Day energy in Harlem was “awesome”, Rose said, calling it a monumental moment in American politics. She predicted Harris would win in a “landslide”.

    “Boy, let’s wait till tonight,” she said. “We know it’s historic. It’s very historic.”

  • Russia rejects links to bomb scares at polling places in key US states | US Election 2024 News

    Russia rejects links to bomb scares at polling places in key US states | US Election 2024 News

    Moscow has described as “malicious slander” reports that fake bomb threats directed at polling locations in four battleground states in the United States election – Georgia, Michigan, Arizona and Wisconsin – originated from Russian email domains and were part of an interference operation.

    Several polling sites targeted by the scares in Georgia were briefly evacuated on Tuesday.

    “None of the threats have been determined to be credible thus far,” the US’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said in a statement, noting that many of the hoax bomb warnings “appear to originate from Russian email domains”.

    An FBI official said that Georgia received more than two dozen threats, most of which occurred in Fulton County, which encompasses much of Atlanta, a Democratic Party stronghold.

    Threats against 32 of the 177 polling stations in Fulton County, Georgia, led to five locations being briefly evacuated. The locations re-opened after about 30 minutes, officials said, and the county was seeking a court order to extend the location’s voting hours past the state-wide 7pm (00:00 GMT) deadline for closing.

    About an hour before polls were to close, officials in DeKalb County, Georgia, said they received bomb threats against five polling places.

    Officials in the overwhelmingly Democratic suburb said voting had been suspended at the locations until police confirmed there were no bombs. A court order would be sought to extend voting, which is routine in Georgia when a polling place is disrupted, officials said.

    Bomb threats were also sent to two polling locations in Wisconsin’s state capital Madison, but did not disrupt voting, the head of the Wisconsin Elections Commission, Ann Jacobs said.

    A spokesperson for Jocelyn Benson, Michigan’s Democratic secretary of state, said there had been reports of bomb threats at several polling locations, but none was credible. Benson’s office had been notified that the threats may be tied to Russia, the spokesperson said.

    Adrian Fontes, a Democrat and Arizona’s secretary of state, the chief election official in the swing state, said four fake bomb threats had also been delivered to polling sites in Navajo County, Arizona.

    Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger laid the blame directly on Russia.

    “They’re up to mischief, it seems. They don’t want us to have a smooth, fair and accurate election, and if they can get us to fight among ourselves, they can count that as a victory,” Raffensperger told reporters.

    The Russian Embassy in Washington, DC said insinuations about Russian interference in the election were “malicious slander”.

    “We would like to emphasise that Russia has not interfered and does not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries, including the United States. As President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly stressed, we respect the will of the American people,” the embassy said.

    US intelligence officials have accused Russia of interfering in previous US presidential elections, especially through cyber-operations in the 2016 race which the current Republican presidential candidate, Donald Trump, won against Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

    The US later indicted 12 Russian military intelligence officers for their alleged roles in interfering in the 2016 election.

    A senior US cyber official said her agency had not seen any significant incidents on this Election Day.

    Cait Conley, of the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, told reporters there had been little evidence of significant disruption to election infrastructure.

    “At this point, we are not currently tracking any national level significant incidents impacting security of our election infrastructure,” said Conley, whose agency is responsible for protecting critical American infrastructure, including election infrastructure.

  • In Harris’s home of California, voters weigh economy, reproductive rights | US Election 2024 News

    In Harris’s home of California, voters weigh economy, reproductive rights | US Election 2024 News

    San Francisco, California – Under a gold-leaf dome in downtown San Francisco, the usual procession of wedding parties tiptoed out of City Hall with freshly minted marriage licences.

    But there was a rival line stretching down the steps for a different reason: Californians had arrived in droves to participate in the pivotal 2024 United States election.

    This year’s presidential race was rich with symbolism for the San Francisco Bay Area. One of the two major candidates, Democrat and Vice President Kamala Harris, considers the Bay Area home.

    She was born in nearby Oakland. Raised in neighbouring Berkeley. And in San Francisco, she built a reputation as a prosecutor that saw her rocket up the political ladder.

    First, she was elected the city’s district attorney, serving in City Hall from 2002 to 2011, steps away from the law school where she received her degree.

    Later, she became the state’s attorney general and then its senator in the US Congress.

    California is known as a Democratic stronghold, part of the “blue wall” of states that consistently vote for the party.

    And as the most populous state in the country, California boasts a whopping 54 Electoral College votes. Al Jazeera spoke to voters outside City Hall on Tuesday to understand what was motivating their votes this election cycle.

    A supporter of London Breed, holding signs for her reelection campaign
    Anjali Rimi campaigned on election day to support incumbent Mayor London Breed [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]

    Anjali Rimi, social service worker

    Standing in the shadow of City Hall’s towering 94-metre (307-foot) dome, Anjali Rimi was hoping to encourage other voters to re-elect Democratic Mayor London Breed to a second term in office.

    But the wider general election likewise weighed heavily on Rimi’s mind.

    “At all levels — federal, state and the city of San Francisco — what’s at stake is democracy,” Rimi told Al Jazeera.

    “What’s at stake is the lives of immigrants. What’s at stake is the lives of minority-religion people, like myself, or many of my Muslim, Sikh, non-white, non-male, non-Christian folks who need to be protected in this country.

    “What’s at stake is the fundamental rights of every human being in this world that sometimes we tend to not see right here in the United States of America. And hence, this election is historic on so many fronts.”

    Rimi’s words echoed critics’ concerns about Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate and former president known for nativist rhetoric.

    When asked why certain voters in the US do not see those fundamental rights, Rimi was unequivocal.

    “You have to give and attribute a lot of that to white supremacy. It may not look white always, but privilege and those that have a position continue to want to conquer and lead and brutalise this world, Rimi said.

    “Hence, we don’t see the struggles of those that are at the margins — the many of us who have come to this country to make it our home and are just trying to live a happy and peaceful life with our families but still have a connection back to our homelands.”

    She added that she hoped to “protect Black and woman leadership” this election cycle.

    A woman points to her shirt in front of San Francisco City Hall. It reads: We are not going back
    Melanie Mathewson wears a T-shirt that reads, ‘We are not going back’ [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]

    Melanie Mathewson, 26, political consultant

    The decision to end the Supreme Court precedent Roe v Wade in 2022 was a prominent theme in this year’s presidential race.

    On one hand, former President Trump campaigned on how his decisions while in office helped pave the way for the repeal of federal protections for abortion care.

    “For 54 years, they were trying to get Roe v Wade terminated. And I did it,” he said in January.

    By contrast, Harris has campaigned on restoring access to reproductive healthcare. “When Congress passes a bill to restore reproductive freedom nationwide, as president of the United States, I will proudly sign it into law,” she told a campaign rally earlier this year.

    That debate helped inspire Melanie Mathewson’s vote in the general election.

    “What’s driving me on a federal level is women’s rights,” she said. “I would love to have children one day, and I want to make sure, no matter where I live or where they choose to live, they have access to whatever healthcare that they need for their bodies.”

    She also gave a nod to the anti-transgender, anti-immigrant and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric that has become a frequent topic in the Trump campaign.

    “Whether I have children who are transgender or I have children who are gay, I want them to feel comfortable and protected no matter where they live in this country, not just in California,” Mathewson said.

    “I’m also very concerned about my Black and Brown friends and my friends who have immigrant parents who are not citizens, who are just trying to make their way.”

    Christian nationalism, she added, was helping to shape many of Trump’s policies.

    “With the possibility of Christian nationalism becoming the way that we rule our country if Trump wins, I’m afraid that there is not going to be freedom of religion, freedom over our bodies,” she said.

    Two voters hold picket signs in front of San Francisco City Hall
    Matt Fitzgerald and Maddie Dunn advocated for small businesses on Election Day [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]

    Maddie Dunn, 23, and Matt Fitzgerald, 28, campaigners

    The shuttered storefronts that line downtown San Francisco were top of mind for Maddie Dunn and Matt Fitzgerald, who hoped Election Day would bring good news for small businesses.

    They hoped that ballot initiatives in San Francisco would result in lower taxes and permitting fees for local companies.

    The city’s population plummeted by nearly 65,000 residents during the COVID-19 pandemic, and businesses took a punch as a result.

    “San Francisco’s had the slowest COVID recovery in North America,” Fitzgerald said. “We’ve got a lot of problems here in our downtown, with empty office spaces, closing small businesses and things like that.”

    Dunn explained that her father was a small business owner, and the downturn left her worried.

    “This is an issue that you can really see day to day: How well is your corner store doing? Or your coffee shop? And in San Francisco, the answer is that businesses are recovering, but they’re still struggling from decreased foot traffic, really slow margins,” she said.

    Both she and Fitzgerald, however, indicated that they would throw their support behind Harris, who has promised to boost start-ups, despite scepticism from the right.

    “She understands how important small businesses are to our communities. And with her economic plan, when it comes down to it, she has the approval of experts,” Dunn said.

    Fitzgerald, for his part, warned that Trump represented a threat to US democracy, pointing to his actions on January 6, 2021, when his supporters stormed the US Capitol.

    “I think the candidates could not be more different,” he said. “I mean, you have one candidate, our former president, who literally tried to overthrow our democracy on January 6th, and you have a candidate who is pro-democracy, who is pro-women’s rights and is pro-LGBTQ rights.”

    This election, he added, will be “a huge fork in the road”.

    A woman holds up copies of the Pissed Off Voter Guide in front of San Francisco City Hall
    Jennifer Fieber held up copies of the ‘Pissed Off Voter Guide’ on Election Day [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]

    Jennifer Fieber, 51, member of San Francisco Tenants Union

    For decades, the San Francisco Bay Area has been in the grips of a housing crisis.

    Housing prices are unaffordable for many residents. Rental costs have ticked up. And a January 2024 report from the city government estimated that homelessness affects at least 8,323 residents — a likely undercount. More than 20,000 sought assistance for homelessness over the course of a year.

    Jennifer Fieber, a member of the San Francisco Tenants Union, pointed to the crisis as the main motivation for her vote. She indicated that she would be supporting progressive candidate Aaron Peskin in his race for mayor.

    “Tenants are 64 percent of the city,” Fieber said. “I think if you stabilise their housing, it has a profound effect on the working class and the ability of people to live in the city. So we need candidates that are gonna protect tenants.”

    She explained that high housing prices were forcing essential workers like nurses and teachers out of the city.

    When asked which candidates had put forward platforms to address the issue, Fieber responded: “Actually, I think that they have been ignoring it to their detriment.”

    That includes on the national scale, she added. “I support the Democrats, but they don’t really have a housing policy.”

    A voter holds up a sign in San Francisco that says, "Yes on K"
    Joshua Kelly hopes to ensure a local highway remains closed as the effects of climate change become more apparent [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]

    Joshua Kelly, 45, stay-at-home dad

    For homemaker and stay-at-home dad Joshua Kelly, the roadway that lines San Francisco’s Pacific Coast was a motivation to get out the vote.

    That four-lane road, known as the Great Highway, was closed during the COVID-19 pandemic, to allow for outdoor recreation. Residents like Kelly hope it remains closed, particularly as the highway faces the ravages of climate change.

    “Our plan [is] to turn a coastal highway that’s falling into the ocean into a park and promenade for the whole city,” Kelly said.

    He argued that the stakes are bigger than just the fate of a road.

    “What kind of a city do we want to be? Do we want to be a city that acknowledges and embraces climate change and plans for it?” Kelly asked. “Or do we want to be a city that prioritises polluting, climate-change-causing car travel and the convenience of that above everything else?”

    He credited outgoing President Joe Biden with taking some steps to address the climate crisis.

    “Joe Biden was able to, through the Inflation Reduction Act, create one of the biggest pieces of climate legislation. And we’re seeing a lot of renewable energy come out of that,” Kelly explained.

    But he warned that continued activism would be necessary to keep the issue at the forefront of national policy, no matter the outcome on Tuesday.

    “I think we’re part of a coalition that’s going to put pressure on Kamala Harris to do that if she is elected as well. And if Trump gets in, he’s going to push fossil fuels. He’s going to end subsidies for renewable energy. He’s going to send us backwards.”

    Kelly also feared the violence Trump might spark if he refuses to accept a defeat at Harris’s hands.

    “I am concerned about the potential for violence,” Kelly said. “If the election becomes sort of contested, there is a good chance that the House of Representatives and the Supreme Court would conspire to give the election to Trump, despite him losing the votes in the Electoral College.”

    A voter puts a mail-in ballot in a drop box in San Francisco
    Voters cast their ballots outside San Francisco’s City Hall on November 5 [Allison Griner/Al Jazeera]
  • US voters cast ballots with security tight as election campaign nears end | US Election 2024 News

    US voters cast ballots with security tight as election campaign nears end | US Election 2024 News

    Millions of Americans have lined up at polling stations across the United States to choose between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris in a historic presidential race that remains too close to call.

    Voting was under way on Tuesday with no major disruptions, as both candidates spent Election Day urging their supporters to cast their ballots, stressing that the stakes could not be higher.

    “Today we vote for a brighter future,” Harris wrote in a post on X, linking to a national directory of polling sites.

    Harris spent part of the day calling radio stations in an effort to encourage her supporters to vote. “We’ve got to get it done. Today is voting day, and people need to get out and be active,” CNN quoted Harris as telling one radio station in Georgia.

    Trump, on his X account, told voters: “I need you to deliver your vote no matter how long it takes”, slamming his opponents as “radical communist Democrats”.

    He addressed the media after casting his ballot in Palm Beach, Florida, saying he felt “very confident” about his election odds.

    “It looks like Republicans have shown up in force,” Trump said. “We’ll see how it turns out.”

    He added: “I hear we’re doing very well.”

    A race churned by unprecedented events – two assassination attempts against Trump, President Joe Biden’s surprise withdrawal and Harris’s rapid rise – remained neck and neck, even after billions of dollars in spending and months of frenetic campaigning.

    More than 80 million Americans had already taken advantage of early voting options before Tuesday, either via mail or in person, and lines at several polling stations on Tuesday were short and orderly.

    Some glitches of vote-counting technology were reported in Cambria County, Pennsylvania, and a local court granted a request by election officials to extend voting hours by two hours on Tuesday night.

    Several states have taken extra security measures to protect voting places.

    In Georgia, election workers have been equipped with panic buttons to alert officials to possible security threats and violence.

    In Maricopa County, Arizona, the heated scene of voter fraud allegations in the 2020 election, the voter tabulation centre now looks like a fortress behind fencing, concrete barriers and security cameras and with drones and police snipers.

    But there were few incidents reported on Tuesday. Two polling locations in Fulton County, Georgia were briefly evacuated after false bomb threats.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said it was “aware of bomb threats to polling locations in several states”.

    Many appear to originate from “Russian email domains”, it said in a post on X, adding that none of the threats have been determined to be credible.

    Stephanie Jackson Ali, policy director at the New Georgia Project, told Al Jazeera that threats made against polling places in Georgia are not a danger.

    “The [Georgia] secretary of state’s office believes that they are from a Russian influencing troll farm, basically, so not anything that’s credible or local”, she said.

    These threats were against polling places in heavily Black-populated areas, she said, including Democratic-voting Fulton County, where Atlanta is located.

    “This signifies that the power of the Black vote in Georgia is substantial, the power of the rising electorate is substantial.”

    The “rising electorate” she said, includes Black voters, new voters, LGBTQ voters and Latino voters, who live in Atlanta in higher percentages than they do in the rest of the mostly conservative rural areas of the state.

    Voting place in Nevada, November 5
    People check in to vote at Reno High School, Reno, Nevada, November 5 [Godofredo A Vasquez/AP]

    ‘The American dream’

    In Dearborn, Michigan, Nakita Hogue, 50, was joined by her 18-year-old college student daughter, Niemah Hogue, to vote for Harris. Niemah said she takes birth control to help regulate her period, while her mother recalled needing surgery after she had a miscarriage in her 20s, and both feared efforts by Republican lawmakers to restrict women’s healthcare.

    “For my daughter, who is going out into the world and making her own way, I want her to have that choice,” Nakita Hogue said. “She should be able to make her own decisions.”

    At a library in Phoenix, Arizona, Felicia Navajo, 34, and her husband Jesse Miranda, 52, arrived with one of their three young children to vote for Trump.

    Miranda, a union plumber, immigrated to the US from Mexico when he was four years old, and said he believed Trump would do a better job of fighting inflation and controlling immigration.

    “I want to see good people come to this town, people that are willing to work, people who are willing to just live the American dream,” Miranda said.

    US elections
    A man arrives to cast his ballot in the 2024 US presidential election on Election Day at the Greater Immanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ in Detroit, Michigan [Emily Elconin/Reuters]

    Trump’s campaign has suggested he may declare victory on election night even while millions of ballots have yet to be counted, as he did four years ago.

    The former president has repeatedly said any defeat could only stem from widespread fraud, echoing his false claims from 2020. The winner may not be known for days if the margins in battleground states are as slim as expected.

    No matter who wins, history will be made.

    Harris, 60, the first female vice president, would become the first woman, Black woman and South Asian American to win the presidency. Trump, 78, the only president to be impeached twice and the first former president to be criminally convicted, would also become the first president to win non-consecutive terms in more than a century.

    Opinion polls show the candidates running neck and neck in each of the seven swing states likely to determine the winner: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

    Reuters/Ipsos polling shows Harris leading among women by 12 percentage points and Trump winning among men by seven percentage points.

     

     

  • After months of buildup, news outlets finally have the chance to report on election results

    After months of buildup, news outlets finally have the chance to report on election results

    The final answer may or may not come on Tuesday, but news organizations that have spent months reporting on the presidential campaign between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump finally have the opportunity to report on actual results.

    Broadcast, cable news networks, digital news outlets’ sites and one streaming service — Amazon — all set aside Tuesday night to deliver the news from their own operations.

    Actual results will be a relief to news organizations that had weeks — and an excruciatingly long day of voting — to talk about an election campaign that polls have repeatedly shown to be remarkably tight. The first hint of what voters were thinking came shortly after 5 p.m. Eastern, when networks reported that exit polls showed voters were unhappy with the way the country was going.

    It’s still not clear whether that dissatisfaction will be blamed on Harris, the current vice president, or former President Trump, who was voted out of office in 2020, CNN’s Dana Bash said.

    Trying to draw meaning from anecdotal evidence

    Otherwise, networks were left showing pictures of polling places on Tuesday and trying to extract wisdom from anecdotal evidence.

    “Dixville Notch is a metaphor for the entire race,” CNN’s Alyssa Farah Griffin said, making efforts to draw meaning from the tiny New Hampshire community that reported its 3-3 vote for Harris and Trump in the early morning hours on Tuesday.

    MSNBC assigned reporter Jacob Soboroff to talk to voters waiting in line outside a polling place near Temple University in Philadelphia, where actor Paul Rudd was handing out water bottles. Soboroff was called on by one young voter to take a picture with herself and Rudd.

    On Fox News Channel, Harris surrogate Pete Buttigieg appeared for a contentious interview with “Fox & Friends” host Brian Kilmeade.

    “Is this an interview or a debate?” Buttigieg said at one point. “Can I at least finish the sentence?”

    Former NBC News anchor Brian Williams began a one-night appearance on Amazon to deliver results, and he already had one unexpected guest in the California studio where he was operating. Puck reporter Tara Palmeri was supposed to report from Trump headquarters in West Palm Beach, but was denied credentials to attend by the former president’s team.

    Trump campaign manager Chris LaCivita, in revealing the banishment, described her as a “gossip columnist” in a post on the social media site X. Palmeri told Williams that she had accurately reported some anxiety within the Trump camp about who was voting early.

    Amazon said Palmeri was replaced at Trump’s Florida headquarters by New York Post reporter Lydia Moynihan.

    Neither Axios or Politico would immediately confirm reports that some of their reporters were similarly banned, and the Trump campaign did not immediately return a call for comment.

    New York Times strike affects an election night fixture

    One notable election night media fixture — the Needle on The New York Times’ website — was endangered by a strike by technical workers at the newspaper.

    The newspaper said early Tuesday that it was unclear whether it would be able to include the feature on its website during election night coverage since it relies on computer systems maintained by engineers at the company, including some who went on strike early Monday.

    The Needle, as its name suggests, is a graphic that uses voting results and other calculations to point toward the likelihood of either presidential candidate winning.

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

    News outlets globally count on the AP for accurate U.S. election results. Since 1848, the AP has been calling races up and down the ballot. Support us. Donate to the AP.

    First introduced in 2016, it became nightmare-inducing for supporters of Democrat Hillary Clinton, who the Times determined had an 85% percent chance of winning the election. Readers watched as the Needle moved from forecasting a “likely” Clinton victory at the beginning of election night, to “toss-up” by 10 p.m. Eastern to “leaning Trump” at midnight. Trump won the election.

    The Times said that “we will only publish a live version of the Needle if we are confident” that the computer systems it relies upon for data are stable.

    Some 650 members of the Times’ Tech Guild went on strike early Monday.

    ___

    David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder.

  • ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    Just hours after the polls closed in the 2020 United States presidential election, as millions of votes were still being counted, Donald Trump delivered an extraordinary address.

    “We were getting ready to win this election – frankly, we did win this election,” the then-president told reporters in the early morning hours after Election Day, alleging that “a major fraud” was being committed.

    “We want all voting to stop. We don’t want them to find any ballots at 4 o’clock in the morning and add them to the list,” he said.

    Trump’s premature — and false — claim of victory over his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who ultimately won the 2020 election, capped weeks of untrue voter fraud allegations made by the Republican incumbent.

    Four years later, as the 2024 race between Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris remains too close to call, experts again are stressing that it could take days to count the votes — and that is not a sign of malfeasance.

    “Just like in 2020, it’s entirely normal for vote counting to take several days,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the voting rights project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

    That’s especially true “in closely contested states where things are going to be scrutinised and you’re going to have to count a lot of votes before you’re going to have a sense of who’s going to win those states”.

    “It’s going to take time, and that’s due to built-in verification steps in the counting process to ensure accuracy,” she told Al Jazeera.

    Different procedures

    Vote counting takes time in the US for a variety of reasons, including how elections are administered and how ballots are processed.

    Each US state runs elections its own way, and as a result, each state’s vote count takes a different amount of time, explained Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a professor of law at Stetson University College of Law in Florida.

    For example, the battleground states of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin do not allow mail-in ballots to be processed before Election Day, meaning their respective counts will likely take longer.

    “Others get a head start by starting the counting process earlier during the early voting period,” Torres-Spelliscy told Al Jazeera in an email.

    “And states have vastly different population sizes. Wyoming has a tiny population while California has more people living in it than Canada. The bigger the population of voters, the longer it takes to count their ballots, which can number in the millions.”

    Meanwhile, states also must sort through what are known as provisional ballots. These are ballots cast by people whose voter registration status must first be verified before their vote is counted, thereby taking a little bit longer.

    Ultimately, that it can take hours — or even days — after Election Day to count votes is not a sign of any illegal act, Torres-Spelliscy said. “Just because it takes a populous state a few days to count millions of votes is not evidence of fraud.”

    Misperceptions, misinformation

    Still, misinformation can quickly spread in the time it takes to tabulate the votes — and between when the polls close and when a projected winner is announced.

    While states can take weeks to release their official vote tallies, US media organisations make projections based on their own methodologies as well as preliminary results.

    This “election call” — a news outlet announcing a projected presidential winner — can happen on election night. But in closer contests, such as the 2020 race between Trump and Biden, it can take a few days.

    Most polling leading up to Election Day this year showed Harris and Trump locked in a race that is too close to call and will likely come down to how the candidates fare in seven critical battleground states: Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin and Nevada.

    The potential for misinformation in this period is especially high in a polarised nation where Trump has now spent years claiming that the 2020 election was stolen from him and the electoral system overall is rife with fraud.

    Those beliefs are held by many Americans: According to a September 2023 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute, 66 percent of Republican voters said they believed the “Big Lie” that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.

    A phenomenon known as the “Blue Shift” can also add to false perceptions that something nefarious is going on, as it did in 2020.

    The term refers to a moment in US elections when the results begin to shift in favour of Democrats as more mail-in ballots get counted throughout the day. Generally, more Democratic voters have voted by mail than Republicans, but it remains to be seen if that will again be the case this year.

    In 2020, Trump “used that change in the numbers over the course of the day … to create this idea that something was wrong”, Lakin at the ACLU said.

    “But it was the normal processing of ballots; it was just a feature of the way people were opting to vote in that particular year.”

    ‘Yelling fraud and irregularity’

    Despite myriad experts debunking Trump’s fraud claims, the former president has continued to make false allegations throughout the 2024 race.

    On the campaign trail, the former president repeatedly warned of voter fraud, including the prospect that noncitizens were voting as part of a Democratic plot to skew the results in Harris’s favour — a claim experts have slammed as untrue.

    His team has filed a number of lawsuits related to alleged irregularities on voter rolls, the lists of people who are eligible to cast ballots.

    And Trump also embraced the slogan “too big to rig” to urge his supporters to vote in numbers large enough to “guarantee we win by more than the margin of fraud”.

    “He’s already sort of announced that he’s the winner before the ballots have even been counted. This is the same claim that he made in 2020: If he’s not the winner of the official count, it can only be because of fraud,” said James Gardner, a professor at the University of Buffalo School of Law in New York state.

    “He has already laid the groundwork for yelling fraud and irregularity just because he might not win. If that’s your starting point, the fact that it takes a while to count the ballots is only one of a million different things that you can say.”

    According to Gardner, “the root of the problem is that the Republican Party under Trump is not willing to play by the rules of democracy.

    “It believes that it deserves to be in power regardless of electoral outcomes. So as a result, it does not adhere to any of the ethics of democratic fair play. Democracy is based on fair rules of fair competition, and the Trump Republican Party is not committed to those.”

    Potential for violence

    Torres-Spelliscy noted that even if Trump does say he won before all the votes are counted, that type of pronouncement “makes no difference legally”.

    “What matters is who states and DC certify and which candidate wins 270 Electoral College votes,” she explained.

    Still, if Trump prematurely declares victory over Harris and is ultimately found to have lost after the votes are counted, that would add to the distrust, anger and feelings of injustice that already permeate among many of the former president’s supporters.

    “What’s going to happen this time — what’s already happening — is that there’s going to be all kinds of outlandish claims made through the media, and that will at the very least inflame Trump’s supporters,” Gardner said. “And who knows what they’ll do.”

    Amid Trump’s false fraud claims after the 2020 vote, a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol in Washington, DC, to try to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s election victory.

    The January 6, 2021, insurrection continues to reverberate across the country, Lakin said, as the false claims of a stolen election “created this huge divide in this country and ultimately led to violence”.

    “That would be unfortunate if that were to happen again,” she said. “It would be a travesty for democracy if we can’t figure out how to return to a peaceful transfer of power.”