Politics & Government
Will MN Residents Know Midterm Election Results Before Going To Bed?
In Minnesota, as you might recall, the results of the 2020 election weren't known until after midnight.
MINNESOTA — Welcome to Election Day 2022 in Minnesota. The question on many of our minds right now is, "how long do I have to stay up to see the results?"
Well, remember Election Day 2020, when the presidential race wasn’t called until four days later?
Minnesota residents may want to settle in for a longer wait than what they’re accustomed to due to a number of razor-thin races and other factors in the high-stakes 2022 midterm elections.
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It was two weeks before the final race in the 2020 election was called, according to an analysis by The New York Times. It’s important to keep in mind that results in the highly decentralized U.S. elections are unofficial until they can be canvassed and certified. They inevitably change as more ballots are counted.
Different states have different rules on the time allotted to count mail ballots. Some states give local officials several weeks before Election Day to process ballots, including checking signatures and verifying identification information. Others delay counting until polls close, which means results may not be known until Wednesday or later.
Find out what's happening in Minneapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Most states require mail-in ballots to be received on or before Election Day, but 19 allow a grace period as long as they’re postmarked on Election Day. In California, for example, such ballots can be received up to seven days later.
In Minnesota, results in the 2020 election weren’t known until shortly after midnight, The Times reported.
Minnesota has just one competitive congressional race on the ballot this year. However, there are a number of extremely tight statewide races, including the attorney general and state auditor.
Polls close at 8 p.m. in Minnesota. Accepted ballots that were cast early — either by mail or in person — won't be counted until after the polls close.
In order for a mailed-in ballot to be accepted in Minnesota this year, it has to be received by Election Day.
This is different than the rule in 2020 when any mailed-in ballot that was postmarked by Election Day was accepted and counted when it eventually arrived.
For its analysis, The Times asked election officials in every state and Washington, D.C., what they expect to happen this year, and whether any rules had changed in two years that could affect how votes are counted and reported.
It’s also important to note that not knowing the results of the election before bedtime says nothing about the fairness of the election or the accuracy of the results. There are other reasons for possible delays on Election Night.
While 2020 was an extraordinary year with an unprecedented crush of legal challenges, 2022 could bring more of the same, further delaying an official call on races. Republican Party officials have already filed lawsuits to disqualify thousands of mail ballots in swing states Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, The Washington Post reported.
The volume of ballots to be processed also slowed things down in 2020, when nearly more than 158.4 million people, or 62.8 percent of eligible voters, cast ballots in the highest voter turnout in decades.
In the last midterm election in 2018, about 52 percent of voting-age U.S. voting age turned out, according to an analysis by the Pew Research Center based on Census Bureau estimates of the 2020 voting-age population.
Some political analysts predict heavy turnout in the 2022 midterms. Pew Research Center said a recent survey showed 72 percent of registered voters say they’re “extremely” or “very” motivated to vote this year, and 65 percent say it “really matters” which party wins control of Congress — a level roughly on par with the run-up to the 2018 vote.
However, state voting law changes since 2020 could have a big effect on turnout. Some states have rolled back early voting, absentee or mail-in voting, and other rule changes that made voting easier in at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Others have adopted new rules that made voting more difficult or inconvenient, and others have expanded ballot access.
The Associated Press contributed reporting.
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