How long will it take to know who won in U.S. midterm elections?
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[November 07, 2022]
By Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Here's some advice
for anyone following Tuesday's U.S. midterm elections: Be ready for a
long night and maybe days of waiting before it's clear whether
Republicans or President Joe Biden's Democrats will control Congress.
All 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives are up for grabs, as
are 35 U.S. Senate seats and 36 governorships.
Republicans would need to pick up five seats to take a majority in the
House and just one to control the Senate. Nonpartisan election
forecasters and polls suggest Republicans have a very strong chance of
winning a House majority, with control of the Senate likely to be closer
fought.
A massive wave of Republican support could lead to declarations of
victory hours after polls close.
But with dozens of races expected to be close and key states like
Pennsylvania already warning it could take days to count every ballot,
experts say there's a good chance America goes to bed on election night
without knowing who won.
"When it comes to knowing the results, we should move away from talking
about Election Day and think instead about election week," said Nathan
Gonzales, who publishes the nonpartisan newsletter Inside Elections.
BLUE MIRAGE, RED MIRAGE
The earliest vote tallies will be skewed by how quickly states count
mail ballots.
Because Democrats vote by mail more often than Republicans, states that
let officials get an early jump on counting mail ballots could report
big Democratic leads early on that evaporate as vote counters work
through piles of Republican-leaning ballots that were cast on election
day.
In these "blue mirage" states - which include Florida and North Carolina
- election officials are allowed to remove mail ballots from their
envelopes before Election Day and load them in vote counting machines,
allowing for speedy counting.
States including Pennsylvania and Wisconsin don't allow officials to
open the envelopes until Election Day, leading to a possible "red
mirage" in which Republican-leaning Election Day ballots are reported
earlier, with many Democratic-leaning mail ballots counted later.
Experts like Joe Lenski, co-founder of Edison Research, which will be
tracking hundreds of races on Tuesday and supplying Reuters and other
media organizations with results, will keep an eye on the mix of
different types of ballots each state is counting throughout the night.
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"On Demand" absentee or mail-in ballots
are time stamped after being filled out in Doylestown, Pennsylvania,
U.S. October 31, 2022. REUTERS/Hannah Beier/File Photo
"Blue mirage, red mirage, whatever. You just have to look at what
types of votes are getting reported to know where you are in that
state," said Lenski.
SO WHEN DO WE KNOW WHICH PARTY WON?
The first wave of vote tallies are expected on the East Coast
between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. ET (0000-0100 GMT Wednesday, Nov. 9). An
early indication of Republican success could come if the races
expected to be close - like Virginia's 7th congressional district or
a U.S. Senate seat in North Carolina - turn out to be Democratic
routs.
By around 10 p.m. or 11 p.m. ET, when polls in the Midwest will be
closed for an hour or more, it's possible Republicans will have
enough momentum for experts at U.S. media organizations to project
control of the House, said Kyle Kondik, a political analyst at the
University of Virginia's Center for Politics.
If the fight for the House still looks close as vote tallies start
coming in from the West Coast - where there could be more than a
dozen tight House races - it could be days before control of the
chamber is known, experts said.
California typically takes weeks to count all its ballots, in part
because it counts ballots postmarked by Election Day even if they
arrive days afterward. Nevada and Washington state also allow late
ballots if postmarked by Nov. 8, slowing down the march to final
results.
"If the House is really on the edge, that would matter," said Kondik.
It may take longer, perhaps weeks longer, to know which party will
control the Senate, with close contests in Pennsylvania, Arizona and
Georgia likely to determine final control.
If Georgia's Senate race is as close as expected and no candidate
receives more than 50% of the vote, a run-off election would be
scheduled for Dec. 6, possibly leaving control of the chamber in
limbo until then.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia
Osterman)
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