The election was Tuesday and now here we are days later without results in key races, including the Senate and Governor’s contests in Nevada and Arizona. So what’s taking so long?
In Nevada, ballots can be received as late as 5 p.m. Saturday, November 12, as long as they were postmarked on or before election day. Election officials then have to check the signature on every mail-in ballot and if it doesn’t match their records, the voter has until 5pm Monday November 14th to fix it.
On top of that, election officials have to check all provisional ballots to make sure no one voted twice. They can’t complete that task until they receive a report from the Secretary of State’s office on Wednesday, November 16th.
In Arizona, it’s all about Maricopa county, where 60% of the state’s voters live. In fact the county’s board of supervisors chairman says the lion’s share of the remaining votes won’t be counted until early next week. A record 290,000 early ballots were dropped off on election day. But election workers can’t just run those through a machine and count them. The signatures have to be verified, the ballots must be scanned, and finally they are processed by a bipartisan board.
The delays in Nevada and Arizona, in addition to some races around the country that are separated by just a couple thousand votes, are also keeping us from finding out which party will win the majority in the House. Republicans are leading overall, but they still don’t have enough seats to make it official. Straight from DC, I’m Ray Bogan.