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How long will it take to know who won the 2024 election? What to know about results


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How long will it take to know who won the 2024 election? What to know about results

How long will it take to know who won the 2024 election? What to know about results

Election Day is on Nov. 5, less than a month away. What’s not as obvious is when the results of the presidential race will be announced — and that depends on a variety of factors. Each state handles its elections differently, ranging from weeks-long early voting to strict voter ID laws.

What we do know is that both Republicans and Democrats are ramping up for a barrage of legal challenges between now and after the general election.

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At a viewing party on Sept. 10, 2024, in Washington, D.C., people watch former President Donald Trump debate Vice President Kamala Harris in Philadelphia.

More: A flurry of lawsuits on state voting rules could influence 2024 election results

Anticipate delays in November

Since the last presidential election in 2020, many of the sweeping election laws and voting access changes made in response to the coronavirus pandemic have faced polarized legislatures and become a source of division.

Now, voters in crucial states like North Carolina face the aftermath of the devastating Hurricane Helene as early voting is less than a week away.

Other key swing states that Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are vying for, like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, aren’t permitted to start processing absentee and mail-in ballots until Election Day, which is expected to slow down the count.

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Gwinnett County Elections Supervisor Zach Manifold in his office, which is filled with elections documents dating to 2020. Some files have to be retained because of ongoing lawsuits. Manifold says cases of intimidation have made it harder for him to hire poll workers.

More: ‘Sounding the alarm’: Election officials warn postal delays could invalidate mailed ballots

Four days in 2020

The coronavirus pandemic in 2020 presented election officials and voters with a slew of new challenges.

States worked to expand access to voting while the country was reeling from the airborne virus and instituted or extended early voting and absentee ballots. This, in many ways, made it easier to vote for people who may not have had the time or means of getting to the polls beforehand, on top of the restrictions and fears during the pandemic.

Despite the often easier access to voting in 2020, counting these ballots was a different story.

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An election worker prepares absentee ballots for the upcoming general election before they are mailed to voters, at Wake County Board of Elections headquarters in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Sept. 5, 2024.

In many states, early voting ballot counting could not start until Election Day, and others could start as early as 18 days, but results could not be disclosed until polls were closed.

In the 2020 election, the high number of voters (46%) using absentee or mail-in ballots led to millions of backlogged ballots nationwide, according to the Pew Research Center. This caused delays in reporting results in several swing states and provided an opportunity for Trump and his supporters to spread election fraud conspiracies.

It took four days for all of the votes to be counted, resulting in Joe Biden‘s victory on Nov. 7.

2016: Quick and easy

The 2016 election was called in the early hours of the morning after Election Day for Trump.

The Associated Press made it official at around 2:30 a.m. ET on Nov. 9, 2016.

Take it to court: 2000 election

It took 35 days, the longest amount of time in modern history, to declare who won the 2000 presidential election, coming down to just 537 votes.

More: When was the longest election in modern US history?

The contest between Democrat Al Gore and Republican George W. Bush was marred by plenty of logistical voting issues, starting on Election Day 2000, Nov. 7. These included a faulty ballot design, “hanging chads,” allegations of miscounts, and court debates.

The case made its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court in a controversial 5-4 ruling that the Gore campaign had run out of time to propose any new recount plans due to the “safe harbor” clause in the United States Code. That meant that the case ended Dec. 12, exactly five weeks after Election Day 2000.

It still remains a contentious election to this day — determined by a difference of 537 votes.

— Sam Woodward is the Minnesota elections reporting fellow for USA TODAY focusing on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s candidacy. You can reach her *****@*****.tld.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How long do election results take? What to know for 2024



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