Anonymous wrote:you can’t count them before the polls close on Election Day. However, you can feed them into the machines. Then, after polls close, you officially report the tally- just like the in person machines. This is for Virginia and Fairfax. Since voting is controlled locally, each state will have different rules.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
thats the important question.
Are these early votes, or are they absentee votes?
Ideally, these votes can be counted before election day, especially in the battleground states.
Anonymous wrote:Any stats for Maryland are also absentee since early in-person voting hasn’t started yet.
Anonymous wrote:you can’t count them before the polls close on Election Day. However, you can feed them into the machines. Then, after polls close, you officially report the tally- just like the in person machines. This is for Virginia and Fairfax. Since voting is controlled locally, each state will have different rules.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
thats the important question.
Are these early votes, or are they absentee votes?
Ideally, these votes can be counted before election day, especially in the battleground states.
you can’t count them before the polls close on Election Day. However, you can feed them into the machines. Then, after polls close, you officially report the tally- just like the in person machines. This is for Virginia and Fairfax. Since voting is controlled locally, each state will have different rules.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
thats the important question.
Are these early votes, or are they absentee votes?
Ideally, these votes can be counted before election day, especially in the battleground states.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
thats the important question.
Are these early votes, or are they absentee votes?
Ideally, these votes can be counted before election day, especially in the battleground states.
The Georgia ones are absentee since early in person voting hasn't started yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
thats the important question.
Are these early votes, or are they absentee votes?
Ideally, these votes can be counted before election day, especially in the battleground states.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how many of the states in which early votes are being cast are places where these are votes that will be counted on election day? I'm wondering how many are mail-in ballots (as in PA, which doesn't have true early voting) vs "in-person" votes.
Anonymous wrote:5.6 million early vote ballots already cast with Democrats in the lead! By this time in 2016 only 75,000 ballots had been turned in.
Florida has had the most early voters (948,000), followed by Virginia (770,000) and the battleground states Michigan (637,000) and Wisconsin (577,000).