Trump wins red states Kentucky and Indiana; Harris picks up blue Vermont
The Associated Press has called its first states, and there are thus far no surprises.
Kamala Harris became the latest Democrat to win Vermont, a party stronghold. Donald Trump has won Indiana and Kentucky, both red states.
The AP has not yet called swing state Georgia, or Virginia and South Carolina.
Key events
Progressive Bernie Sanders re-elected to Senate
Independent Bernie Sanders, an icon among progressives, has won a fourth term representing Vermont in the US Senate, the Associated Press reports.
Republican congressman Jim Banks will be Indiana’s next senator, replacing Mike Braun, who the AP says was just elected as the state’s governor.
Here’s what Sanders posted on X on Sunday.
Trump wins red states Kentucky and Indiana; Harris picks up blue Vermont
The Associated Press has called its first states, and there are thus far no surprises.
Kamala Harris became the latest Democrat to win Vermont, a party stronghold. Donald Trump has won Indiana and Kentucky, both red states.
The AP has not yet called swing state Georgia, or Virginia and South Carolina.
Polls close in battleground Georgia, five other states
Voting just wrapped up in six states, including Georgia, one of the swing states expected to determine the winner of the presidential election.
In addition to the Peach State, polls closed at 7pm in red state South Carolina, blue state Vermont and Virginia, which is expected to vote Democratic but where there are several contested races for seats in the House of Representatives.
Polls that had remained open in Kentucky and Indiana, both red states, have also closed.
Georgia tends to count ballots quickly, so we may know the winner there before the night is through. Joe Biden won the state in 2020 and Democrats won both of its Senate seats, despite the state’s historically Republican tilt.
Sam Levine
Ana Mendoza, a 19-year-old political science major at Lehigh University, got in line to vote around 11am at her polling place. She didn’t cast her vote until six-and-a-half hours later.
She was one of many students who waited hours in line at a polling precinct that only had two working voting machines this morning, and two volunteers checking people in, according to school newspaper the Brown and White. The county has sent three additional voting machines to the site, according to the Allentown Morning Call.
“I’m in Pennsylvania and it’s a swing state so I know that every single vote matters,” she said.
Mendoza, who was voting in her first presidential election and cast her ballot for Kamala Harris, said she and those who were waiting were pretty tired by the end, but there were groups giving food and water out.
Philadelphia district attorney says Trump’s ‘cheating’ claim ‘unfounded’
Philadelphia’s Democratic district attorney Larry Krasner had this to say about Donald Trump’s claim that “cheating” was happening in elections held in the city:
Alice Herman
A human error during Milwaukee’s absentee vote count could lead to a late night for election workers in the largest city in the state, and delayed results.
According to Vote Beat, an election observer noticed panels open on multiple tabulators which should have been closed and locked – revealing the machines’ on/off switches. Although election officials said it did not appear that anyone had touched the panels or tampered with the machines, the commission has moved to recount the 30,000 votes that those tabulators already processed.
The recount could mean a long night for Milwaukee election officials and lead to a possible late night boost for Kamala Harris, who will probably command a majority of the Milwaukee vote, which tends to be a Democratic party stronghold.
In 2020, Trump and his allies seized on late-night absentee votes as evidence of wrongdoing – a patently false claim that nonetheless contributed to a wave of misinformation.
Alice Herman
MJ, an 18-year-old from Milwaukee, voted for the first time today – splitting her ballot between Donald Trump, at the top of the ticket, and Democratic candidates all the way down.
“I’m mainly worried about economics,” said MJ, who cited immigration as her second top concern. She said she’s frustrated about the possibility of non-US citizens voting in this election – a claim that Trump and his allies have been promoting for months, despite the fact that empirical evidence suggests non-citizens, who face steep penalties for voting illegally, including felony charges and possible deportation, rarely cast a ballot in federal elections.
Evidently, those claims have stuck – including influencing MJ’s decision to vote Trump, despite preferring Democratic party candidates in general.
“I’m gonna vote all Democrat [otherwise],” said MJ. She said abortion rights are a major concern for her, and said she was “on the fence” about Trump for that reason.
Rachel Leingang
According to CNN, Philadelphia police don’t know what Trump is talking about in his post alleging “cheating” in the city, and are not aware of any issues that would call for their response.
There was a semi-viral video spreading on the rightwing internet today. James O’Keefe, the guy who makes undercover videos that are often misleading or outright false, posted a video on X claiming that an election worker in Philadelphia told voters they could cast a ballot if they were not citizens. Accounts like Libs of TikTok spread the video to their followers.
Those who remember the 2020 election will recall that it took a few days before we knew for sure that Joe Biden had beaten Donald Trump.
But the result of previous elections was known much sooner, as the below chart shows:
The year 2000 was when a very close race between Democrat Al Gore and Republican George W Bush came down to the state of Florida and a supreme court case that was decided in Bush’s favor, sending him to the White House.
George Chidi
Reporting from Fulton county, Georgia:
“We’re stuck in a position where we have to affirm this challenge,” said Aaron Johnson, the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections board’s vice-chair.
“A lot of people are getting caught up now.” Johnson said he knew this would happen. “We didn’t make the rule. The general assembly made the rule. Whether I agree with it or not, we have to follow the rule.”
“I’ve been voting with this address for years,” said Chante Knox, whose voter registration was challenged. She was homeless when she first registered. She’s a Republican and a Donald Trump voter, and has been skeptical of the county’s election administration, but this issue is separate from those concerns, she said.
“I’m still a Fulton County resident. I still want my vote to count,” she said. “I want a non-provisional vote for the president.”
Jack Samuels from the Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights and the ACLU, said Swanson’s denial was the product of inadequate notice.
“Many of the persons being challenged have not received notice,” he said. “They did not know that they needed to oppose the challenge before today. Like all of us, they have work, family, child and senior care obligations that do not generally permit people to drop everything and drive as far as 40 miles across the county to appear. A hearing on insufficient notice deprives them of the right to vote in violation of their due process rights and equal protection and should not be occurring.”
Samuels demanded the right for Swanson to cast a provisional ballot, laying the groundwork for a legal appeal. “This hearing is not practical” for voters, he said.
George Chidi
Reporting from Fulton county, Georgia:
“I’ve been trying to vote since eight in the morning,” said John Whitfield, an entertainer who goes by DC Young Fly, animatedly contesting his removal from the voting rolls in Fulton County before the elections board.
He stood. He paced the room. His indignation radiated. He – and dozens of others – packed the hearing room in south Fulton on election day, thoroughly pissed off.
“I’m just trying to exercise my right to vote. This is critical,” he said aloud as the hearing proceeded. “If my ancestors didn’t fight for me to vote, I wouldn’t give a damn.”
The Georgia legislature changed election laws after the 2020 election, to bar voters from registering at commercial addresses like UPS stores.
One by one, bewildered people who showed up to vote this morning to find that they were de-registered under this law protested their removal at the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections, hoping to vote today.
Sheree Swanson, an actor from Sandy Springs, was challenged because she initially used a UPS store address as the address on her voter registration, the same address as a trucking company she owns, she said. Her vehicle insurance company required her driver’s license to have the same address as the address for her vehicle registration, she said. Swanson tried to change her addresses to match her home address last week, she said. That was too late.
“Her status is challenged because she listed her business as her residence,” said Katheryn Glenn, the board’s registration officer. “Don’t swear or affirm if you don’t live there.”
The board, by a 3-0 vote, denied her appeal.
How do we know who won? A guide to calling this election
Now that the first polls have closed, it’s a good time to talk about who the Guardian uses to determine the outcome of today’s vote.
The Guardian relies on the Associated Press to determine the outcomes of elections across the United States. The New York-based global news agency has a presence in every US state and a long and authoritative history of determining the winners of elections at the presidential, congressional and state level. Here is more information about their process.
Voting finishes in parts of Kentucky and Indiana as first US polls close
The first polls have closed in the US, with voting wrapping up in most Indiana counties and in Kentucky’s eastern half.
Voting will finish in the rest of the two red states at 7pm, at which point it will also conclude in a handful of other states – including swing state Georgia.
First polls soon to close in US election
We’re minutes away from the first polls closing anywhere in the United States.
Most counties in Indiana and several in eastern Kentucky will wrap up voting at 6pm ET. Both generally vote Republican and not considered swing states this year. Voting in the remaining counties will finish at 7pm.
Alice Herman
Reporting from Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
Serina Jones, 30, pulled over her minivan in West Milwaukee and flagged down a canvasser walking down the street in a reflective jacket.
“Are you all doing voter stuff?” she asked.
Jones, who is a mother of three, had not registered to vote yet but was determined to cast a ballot – and had plans to get her husband to the polls, too.
After plugging in her address and making a plan to vote, she told me she has “mixed feelings” about the election.
“I’m fired up,” said Jones, who is voting for Kamala Harris and said she worried about the consequences of a second Donald Trump presidency for her three children’s education and livelihood.
“But I have a lot riding on this,” she said. “I’m trying to make sure we got a future for our babies.”
Republican Philadelphia official says ‘no truth’ to Trump’s claim of election fraud
Seth Bluestein, a Republican Philadelphia city commissioner, called Donald Trump’s claim of “cheating” in the city “disinformation”, and said the vote so far has been “safe and secure”.
Bluestein is one of three officials on the board tasked with overseeing voting in Philadelphia. Here’s what he had to say:
Harris campaign sees high Puerto Rican turnout in Pennsylvania
Philadelphia neighborhoods where many Puerto Ricans live have seen high voter turnout, the Harris campaign says, after a speaker at a Donald Trump rally last month referred to the US territory as “a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean”.
It could be a positive sign for the vice-president’s chances of winning Pennsylvania, perhaps the most vital of the three “Blue Wall” swing states along the Great Lakes. Victories in the Keystone state along with Michigan and Wisconsin would probably provide enough electoral votes to make Harris the next president.
The campaign also sees high turnout by students at universities nationwide, including in Pennsylvania. In battleground state North Carolina, fewer rural Republicans appear to have voted, but many people have cast ballots in the Democratic-leaning city of Durham.
Joan E Greve
Democrats are counting on young voters to turn out at the polls today to help deliver wins for not just Kamala Harris but congressional candidates and ballot measures across the country.
“Young people will decide this election. From local ballot initiatives to federal races, we know this critical bloc is showing up for their futures and making their voices heard,” said Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez, president of the youth voting group NextGen America.
According to NextGen’s data, the group registered more than 130,000 young voters this election cycle, while more than 171,000 young voters signed pledges to vote.
“We are proud of our work this cycle on-the-ground and online to educate, mobilize, and empower young voters, contributing to a culture of civic engagement that will extend beyond this election,” Ramirez said.
“Young people are showing up, turning out, and using their collective power to elect leaders that represent our values – today and into the future.”