Many people will be heading to their precincts on Election Day, Nov. 5. Others may just want to mail a letter. Here is what to know about what's open, closed.
Some people are trying their best to meet the moment — with mixed results — while others have simply chosen not to let the race for president and control of Congress dominate their lives.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A series of bomb threats across multiple battleground states and baseless claims of wrongdoing by former President Donald Trump disrupted an otherwise smooth Election Day that capped a tumultuous presidential campaign.
Voters across the state of Illinois have cast their ballots to elect Democrat Kamala Harris or Republican Donald Trump as the next President of the United States. The Associated Press projects that Harris will win the state, securing 19 electoral college votes in the push for 270.
In New Hampshire, the status quo held. Republicans held onto the governor's office, with Kelly Ayotte successfully playing the anti-tax card against Joyce Craig and mining the old canard about "satanic" Massachusetts threatening to invade and befoul its pristine northern neighbors.
The day has come. Tuesday, Nov. 5 is Election Day in the U.S., and eyes are on Michigan as a swing state in the presidential race. Meanwhile, Democrats are fighting to maintain a razor-thin majority in the state House,
Strong early turnout ahead of Tuesday led to a busy Election Day at voting centers in Sonoma and Napa counties, where thousands of people cast their mail ballots or voted in person.
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