The latest on the 2022 midterm election

Arizona Bill Gates Kari Lake Split SCREENGRABS
Kari Lake slams election officials. Hear Arizona county election chief's response
03:56 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Control of Congress still hangs in the balance: Which party will control the Senate and House remains undecided as ballots from Tuesday’s midterm election continue to be counted and key races are too early to call.
  • Where things stand in Senate races: Arizona and Nevada Senate races take center stage, as Georgia’s contest heads to a Dec. 6 runoff. Republicans need to pick off two Democratic seats to win the majority.
  • Where things stand in House races: Republicans appear to be slowly inching toward the 218 seats that would deliver them a House majority, but many races are still too early to call.
  • Historic firsts: Both parties are diversifying their ranks. Here’s a look at the candidates CNN projects will make history.
  • En español: Sigue nuestra cobertura de las elecciones en español aquí.
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Arizona's Maricopa County expects to start releasing results from outstanding mail-in ballots Friday

An election worker inserts ballots into a scanning machine at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix on November 10.

Arizona’s Maricopa County expects to start releasing Friday evening the first results from its outstanding 290,000 mail-in ballots that voters dropped off on Election Day, a top official told CNN late Thursday.

Maricopa is Arizona’s most populous county and it includes the city of Phoenix.

The mail-in ballots dropped off were a record for the county, Gates said. “It’s a lot of ballots that people are trying to process, but we’re going to get through it. We’re going to do it on a timeline that’s frankly consistent with how long it takes us to get this done every two and every four years.”

Gates pushed back on criticism from Arizona’s Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who has been questioning the integrity of the elections and the length of time to get results. 

“There’s nothing out of the ordinary; it makes me wonder if Kari Lake has really been following elections in the past in Maricopa County,” he said.

On Thursday, Maricopa County staff verified nearly all of the 290,000 early ballots dropped off on Election Day. It updated an additional tranche of just over 78,000 ballots on Thursday night. 

The estimated ballots remaining, according to the county, include:

  • 17,000 Election Day ballots to be reported
  • 68,928 early ballots left to process and tabulate
  • 29,153 early ballots left to verify
  • 2,878 provisional ballots left to research out of 7,885 total

CNN Projection: Democrat Rep. Kim Schrier wins reelection in Washington state’s 8th Congressional District

Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier.

Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier wins reelection against Republican challenger Matt Larkin in Washington state’s 8th Congressional District, CNN projects, as she overcomes blistering attacks on crime and the economy.

CNN now projects Democrats have 198 seats of 218 required to control the House.

CNN projects Republicans have 211 seats.

CNN Projection: Democratic candidates will win 1st and 4th Congressional Districts in Nevada

Democrat Rep. Dina Titus, left, and Democrat Rep. Steven Horsford

Democrat Rep. Dina Titus will defeat Republican Mark Robertson in Nevada’s 1st Congressional District, according to CNN projections.

In addition, Democrat Rep. Steven Horsford will defeat Republican Sam Peters in Nevada’s 4th Congressional District, according to the projections.

Both victories are holds for the Democratic Party.

CNN now projects Democrats have 197 of 218 seats required to control the House.

CNN also projects Republicans have 211 seats.

Voters in 4 states approve efforts to wipe slavery and indentured servitude off the books

Voters in five states on Tuesday were asked whether to update their states’ constitutions to remove slavery and indentured servitude as potential punishments. In four of the five states, voters agreed to strike the punishment from the books, CNN projects, while the effort fell short in one.

Although the 13th Amendment to the US Constitution prohibited slavery in 1865, it allowed an exception “for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted,” and the proposed amendments asked voters to either explicitly rule out slavery and indentured servitude as potential punishments or remove the terms from state law altogether. 

Voters in Alabama, Oregon, Tennessee and Vermont approved ballot measures to amend their state’s constitutions accordingly. However, Louisiana voters rejected an amendment that would have changed the state’s constitution by explicitly prohibiting the punishments, CNN projects. 

You can read more about the specific ballot measures here.

Ted Cruz joins Herschel Walker for first campaign event of Senate runoff

At the first runoff campaign event, Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker was joined by Sen. Ted Cruz with both men boldly predicting a GOP win in the runoff election. 

Addressing a crowd of hundreds of supporters in Canton, Georgia, Walker said, “We are in overtime. We got a runoff. I was built for this. God prepared me for this moment right here.” 

Canton, about an hour outside the City of Atlanta, is located in Cherokee County, a deeply red part of the state. 

A source close to the campaign told CNN that hosting the event in Canton was part of Walker’s runoff campaign strategy to perform better in Republican counties where they underperformed on Election Day compared to incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who avoided a runoff. 

During his address to supporters, Walker continued to attack his rival, Sen. Raphael Warnock, and President Joe Biden, telling a crowd of supporters that the two are in lockstep. Walker went so far as to warn the crowd not to fall for Warnock’s clean-cut image, calling Warnock a “wolf in sheep’s clothing.”  

Meanwhile, Cruz went on the offensive, enthusiastically addressing the crowd saying, “I am here to tell you: On December 6th Herschel Walker is winning this race.“  

Cruz rallied the crowd with references to immigration, inflation and grievances against the media in his 15-minute speech. 

He boldly predicted the GOP would flip the Senate, claiming that there is no bigger divide between a senator and his constituents than in Georgia, referring to Warnock. 

When asked by CNN after the event if Cruz thought Walker should call on former President Donald Trump to visit Georgia to stump with Walker, Cruz said:

“Herschel has made clear he will welcome the support from President Trump who’s supporting him. He said he would welcome the support of Ron DeSantis. He will welcome the support of anyone coming to campaign.” 

CNN Projection: Republican Ryan Zinke will win in Montana’s 1st Congressional District

Ryan Zinke speaks to business community members during a meeting in Bozeman, Montana, on September 30.

Former Rep. Ryan Zinke, who left his seat for a scandal-plagued tenure as President Donald Trump’s Interior secretary, will defeat Democrat Monica Tranel to win Montana’s 1st Congressional District, CNN projects.

Zinke, a former Navy SEAL and Montana state senator who was first elected to the House in 2014 and reelected in 2016 before resigning to join Trump’s Cabinet, seized on an opening created when the 2020 census results handed the Treasure State a second congressional district.

Republicans have 211 of the 218 seats needed to control the House, according to CNN projections. The Democrats have 195.

With reporting from CNN’s Paul LeBlanc

CNN Projection: GOP Rep. Young Kim will win California's 40th Congressional District

Young Kim.

Republican Rep. Young Kim, who was one of the first Korean American women elected to Congress, will win California’s 40th Congressional District, according to CNN projections.

Her victory, over Democrat Asif Mahmood, is a hold for the Republican Party.

Democrats jockeying for position as they await Speaker Pelosi's decision on House leadership

Pelosi speaks during the COP27 U.N. Climate Summit on Thursday, November 10, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

House Democrats are eagerly awaiting word from Speaker Nancy Pelosi about whether she will continue to run the caucus she has dominated for the past two decades as they decide whether to run for the top job.

Pelosi is widely expected to announce her decision once it is clear which party will have the majority in the House and after she returns from her trip to a climate conference in Egypt.

That could come as soon as next week when the House returns to session, with members meeting Monday evening for the first time since the election and the full caucus on Tuesday. The leadership elections are scheduled for Nov. 30.

If she steps aside, as most members believe she will, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries is seen as the front-runner for the top position, though he could face a challenge from Rep. Adam Schiff and others.

But all eyes are also on the two Democrats currently below Pelosi: Steny Hoyer and Jim Clyburn. Hoyer has long coveted the top position, but with many in the caucus calling for generational change and diversity in the ranks, the 83-year-old Hoyer could have a difficult time winning the votes.

Clyburn has recently signaled he wouldn’t block Jeffries’ ascension to the top spot, but he might want to stay in leadership, which could prevent other Democrats from ascending. Rep. Katherine Clark is seen as the frontrunner for the No. 2 job, depending on what Hoyer and Clyburn do.

Arizona's Pima County reports new batch of 20,000 votes

Elections Director Constance Hargrove spoke with CNN on the progress of the count in Pima County, Arizona.

Democratic candidates in the Arizona state-wide races extended their leads Thursday evening as a new batch of about 20,300 ballots was dropped by Pima County, which includes the city of Tucson. 

Elections Director Constance Hargrove told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer and John King the county has been able to report batches of approximately 20,000 ballots per day, and anticipated another ballot drop of 20,000 on Friday.

“We will be working through the weekend and get through most of those ballots — not all of those ballots — probably by no later than Monday morning,” Hargrove said. 

Responding to candidates, including Republican gubernatorial candidate Karl Lake, questioning the length and integrity of the vote counts, Hargrove said observers of both political parties watch Pima’s count to ensure it is fair.

Democratic Senate candidate Mark Kelly won 66.2% of the vote in the latest batch, compared to Republican Blake Masters getting 31.9% of the vote. In the governor’s race, Democrat Katie Hobbs received 64.8% of the vote, while Lake got 35.2% of the vote. Tucson is considered a more Democratic part of the state.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy says Biden congratulated him, dismisses speculation he doesn't have enough votes to be speaker

McCarthy appears on Fox News.

House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said on Fox News that President Joe Biden congratulated him when they spoke on the phone Wednesday.

CNN has not yet projected if the House will remain under Democrat control or flip to the Republicans – although the GOP appears to be inching its way toward a slim majority.

On Thursday night, as he was leaving on a trip to Asia, Biden said he offered McCarthy congratulations “if” Republicans win the majority in the House, but said chances of Democrats holding the House are “still alive.” 

McCarthy said that he used the conversation with Biden to lay out priorities for a Republican House majority, including energy independence and securing the border.

“I laid this all out to the president and told him, ‘I will work with you if you are willing to work on these items,’” he said.

McCarthy also dismissed speculation that he lacks enough support from the right wing of his caucus to become speaker.

“I’m not concerned,” McCarthy said. “People can have input, we want to have a very open input process. We are going to have a smaller majority, so we’re going to find that we work together.”

On that possibility of a small majority, McCarthy quipped, “They don’t give gavels out by small, medium and large, they just give you the gavel. We’re going to be able to govern.”

He argued that even if their numbers are smaller than projected, they met their goal.

“What was our mission? To win the majority, to stop Biden’s agenda, and fire Nancy Pelosi. All of that is accomplished.”

Maricopa County debunks false claim against governor candidate circulating on right-wing social media

 Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chairman Bill Gates speaks to reporters during a press conference at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center on November 10, in Phoenix, Arizona. Ballots continue to be counted in Maricopa County two days after voters went to the polls for the midterm election in Arizona.

Election officials in Maricopa County responded to false claims circulating online that Katie Hobbs — the sitting Arizona Secretary of State, who is also running for governor this year – had accessed a secure room with ballots at the vote-counting facility in Phoenix. 

A user on the far-right social media platform Gab posted a screenshot from the livestream of the count facility that showed a woman wearing glasses walking through the room. The user wrote, “Look who was inside the ballot rooms. Katie Hobbs. Time stamped too.”

“Not every woman with glasses is Katie Hobbs,” the official Twitter account of Maricopa County tweeted in response Thursday evening. “We can confirm this was a party Observer. Please refrain from making assumptions about workers who happen to wear glasses.”

The mischaracterized screenshot appears to have spread initially on the far-right social media platform Gab. Since then it has been shared thousands of times on Twitter and multiple versions of the image have been posted to Facebook. 

Maricopa, a county dogged by unfounded election conspiracy theories since 2020, streams live footage of its count center online, in an effort to increase transparency.

 CNN reported earlier this week how Maricopa has again become a hotbed of election conspiracy theories, many promoted by former President Donald Trump

CNN Projection: Democrat Sydney Kamlager will win California's 37th Congressional District

Sydney Kamlager speaks at a Bans Off Our Bodies rally in Los Angeles on May 14.

In a race between two Democrats, Sydney Kamlager will defeat Jan Perry in California’s 37th Congressional District, according to CNN projections.

This will be a hold for the Democratic Party.

There are two other unprojected California House races in CA-15 and CA-34 between two Democrats. While CNN cannot yet project which candidate will win those seats, CNN is putting both in the Democratic column.

CNN projects Democrats now have 195 of the 218 seats needed to control the House..

Arizona elections official denounces Kari Lake’s "offensive" criticism about the pace of results

Kari Lake speaks to members of the media after voting in the midterm election in Phoenix on November 8.

Bill Gates, the GOP chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, called out Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake for baselessly claiming that election officials were “slow-rolling” the release of election results.

“I feel 100% confident we are going to win this. I hate that they’re slow-rolling and dragging their feet and delaying the inevitable,” Lake said Thursday on Charlie Kirk’s right-wing talk show. “They don’t want to put out the truth, which is that we won.”

There is no evidence that the election officials were tampering with results to make any candidate look good or bad.

At a press conference Thursday, Gates responded to Lake’s comments.

Gates said election workers in Maricopa County will continue working very long days through the weekend, including Friday which is a federal holiday, to deal with the strong vote-by-mail turnout seen in this election.

On CNN later Thursday, Gates said: “We’re going to do it on a timeline, which is frankly consistent with what it takes, how long it takes us to get this done every two and every four years. So there’s nothing out of the ordinary – it makes me wonder if Kari Lake has really been following elections in the past, in Maricopa County.”

Lake is a leading promoter of conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and voting procedures in Arizona.

After a brief hiatus, Trump is back to disparaging DeSantis

Former President Donald Trump talks to the press on the grounds of his Mar-a-Lago resort on November 8 in Palm Beach, Florida.

Former President Donald Trump is back to disparaging Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

It comes after a brief hiatus, apparently prompted by complaints from top Republicans that he went too far in criticizing the governor just days before the midterm elections.

On the heels of DeSantis’ resounding reelection victory, which has intensified speculation that he will seek the GOP presidential nod in 2024, Trump issued a blistering statement Thursday.

The former president also repeated his claim that his endorsement of DeSantis in the 2018 GOP primary for Florida governor, when the former congressman was widely considered a longshot, paved the way for DeSantis’ meteoric rise in the Republican Party.

“Ron came to me in desperate shape in 2017,” Trump said, likening his endorsement at the time to “a nuclear weapon” in the gubernatorial primary. “I also fixed his campaign, which had completely fallen apart.” 

More background: Trump’s comments come days after he first tested his “DeSanctimonious” nickname at a pre-midterm rally in Pennsylvania, drawing the ire of Republicans who wanted to avoid an early 2024 showdown between the two men, particularly as Republicans in tight midterm races were delivering their closing pitches to voters.

The blowback caused the former president to tamp down his criticism of DeSantis at subsequent rallies in Miami and Ohio. Though DeSantis was notably absent from Trump’s Florida rally with Sen. Marco Rubio last Sunday, Trump encouraged the crowd at one point to reelect their Republican governor.

DeSantis won his reelection contest against Democrat Charlie Crist by a 19-point margin Tuesday. He did not seek Trump’s endorsement and has consistently declined to weigh in on speculation about his presidential ambitions.

Liz Cheney calls election results "a clear victory for team normal" and a rejection of Trump

Liz Cheney speaks during the Anti-Defamation League's Never is Now summit in New York on Thursday.

This midterm election results were a “clear victory for team normal,” Republican Rep. Liz Cheney said Thursday while speaking at the Anti-Defamation League’s Never Is Now Summit on Antisemitism and Hate.

“I think that it was a clear victory for team normal, and we have a huge amount of work to do,” Cheney said, adding that the election showed “a real rejection of the toxicity and the hate, and vitriol and of Donald Trump.”

Cheney also spoke about crossing party lines and campaigning for Democrats this election. Cheney, who represents Wyoming, lost her primary election in August.

Cheney said that defeating anti-democratic forces will require “a level of bipartisanship that you might not have seen otherwise.”

Speaking on the rise in antisemitism hate speech and hate crimes, she said “we know from history” that it cannot be tolerated.

“I do think it was the American people generally sending a message they want to pull us back from the brink. They don’t want this nation to go, you know, over the edge to go into the abyss and we have to make sure that you know, the incentives are there to elect the kind of people who are going to make sure that they’re part of the solution,” Cheney said.

Some context: Cheney is leaving Congress at the end of her current term after losing the Republican primary for her at-large Wyoming seat in August. Her continued criticism of Trump for his role in inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol was seen as a key factor in her defeat.

Cheney said last month that she would not remain a Republican if Trump is the GOP nominee for president in 2024.

Mitch McConnell's super PAC to team up with Georgia governor in push to help Herschel Walker in runoff

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s super PAC, the Senate Leadership Fund, is teaming up with Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp to fund a get-out-the-vote operation to help push Herschel Walker in the Dec. 6 runoff, according to a spokesperson for the super PAC.

It’s a sign of how all factions of the GOP are uniting behind a race that could determine the balance of power in the Senate.

The committee is dropping $2 million to bankroll the turnout operation that Kemp build, according to the spokesperson Jack Pandol, who confirmed a Politico story that said there would be more than 100 field workers as part of the effort.

Some context: With the Georgia runoff campaign already underway, money is pouring into the state as the parties and interest groups seek to shape its outcome. 

On the other side, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee announced a $7 million field organizing investment to boost Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock. 

More results are expected from Arizona tonight. Here's where the counting stands as of now

An election worker boxes tabulated ballots inside the Maricopa County Recorders Office on November 9.

Election officials in Arizona are still counting ballots as several key races are too close to call. CNN estimates that about 675,000 votes still remain to be counted in the state.

Maricopa County, the most populous county, has about 400,000 votes left to count and Pima County also has about 160,000 ballots left.

The results from thousands of more ballots will be released between 10 and 11 p.m. ET Thursday, Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chair Bill Gates said at a news conference.

Officials there tell CNN that they expect that drop to include ballots from Saturday night, Sunday and most of Monday.

The ballots will be “more than the 62,000” that were released Wednesday night, “but not significantly more.”

Some context: Gates told CNN earlier Thursday that a large percentage of the ballots left to count include votes that were dropped off on Election Day.

In Arizona, mail-in ballots that were dropped off right before and on Tuesday don’t even start the important process of signature verification until the Wednesday after Election Day

Watch Maricopa County official give an update:

45080c1e-332d-42b3-83f3-06de08255caa.mp4
05:30 - Source: CNN

Inside McCarthy’s bid for speaker as Republicans face a potentially slim majority in the House

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy is taking initial steps to show House Republicans he won’t lead as a top-down speaker dictating his demands to the rank-and-file, a hallmark of speakers’ past but one that would lead to a revolt internally.

CNN is yet to project which party will win the House as several key races are too early to call, but Republicans appear to be moving toward a slim majority, and McCarthy has already started jockeying for support.

Today, he set up working groups to help develop a GOP agenda and investigative priorities. His allies say the moves are intended to show he will listen to his colleagues. And in his private pitches to members, he is trying to convince them that his way of leading was successful in bringing the GOP back to the majority over two election cycles.

Yet members of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus spent the day behind closed doors strategizing about how to empower their faction in what is expected to be a narrow GOP majority. They are asking for McCarthy to commit to a series of rule changes, including making it easier to call for a vote to oust a sitting speaker — an idea that McCarthy has flatly rejected. But Lauren Boebert and other members of the Freedom Caucus call that a “red line.”

McCarthy reached out to another Freedom Caucus member, Ralph Norman, who on Thursday wouldn’t commit to supporting him. Norman indicated McCarthy seemed open to meeting with them as a group.

Some members of the Freedom Caucus are threatening to put up a challenge against McCarthy in next week’s leadership elections — even if it’s a long-shot bid. Next week, the House GOP will vote on nominating McCarthy as speaker. He only needs a majority of his conference’s support to win that nomination. But he will need 218 votes of the full House to become speaker in January, and GOP defections in a narrow majority could complicate that effort.

House Freedom Caucus members say they won’t commit to McCarthy for speaker

Kevin McCarthy waves to the crowd after speaking at a House Republicans election night party on November 9.

Members of the pro-Trump House Freedom Caucus are withholding their support for House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy’s speakership bid and have begun to lay out their list of demands, which includes rule changes and stronger commitments on investigations into the Biden administration. 

Although many races are still too early to call, the Republican Party is inching toward gaining a slim majority in the House.

GOP Rep. Chip Roy told reporters he wants McCarthy to list in greater detail his plans for a wide array of investigations, while Rep. Andy Biggs complained that McCarthy seemed to backpedal on whether he’d be willing to launch impeachment proceedings into President Joe Biden or members of his cabinet.

Members of the group, who huddled all day Thursday for their new member orientation, are also pushing to make it easier for lawmakers to call for floor votes on ousting a sitting speaker. That is something that McCarthy is adamantly against and was wielded over former Speaker John Boehner before he eventually resigned. 

Rep. Lauren Boebert said it was a “red line” for her. But not everyone in the Freedom Caucus is united on whether to make that a hard line. 

Rep. Ralph Norman said McCarthy personally called and asked for his support for speaker, but Norman wouldn’t commit. He told McCarthy there’s a group of them that wants to meet, which he said McCarthy was amenable to, but so far the GOP leader hasn’t caved into their demands. 

Norman said the group hopes to formalize a lengthier list of all the rules changes they are seeking. They are also pushing to delay next week’s internal leadership elections, though there is no indication McCarthy plans to do so.

“I’m not supporting anybody until I know what the blueprint is,” Norman said. 

When asked whether McCarthy should get credit for delivering the majority, Norman responded: “The taxpayers that voted the representatives in deserve the credit.”

Arizona's Pima County expects to report new batch of around 10,000 votes around 8 p.m. ET

Pima County will report a new batch of around 10,000 votes to the Arizona Secretary of State’s office around 8 p.m. ET, county elections officials said Thursday. 

As of Thursday, about 52,692 ballots had been processed by Pima County recorder Gabriella Cázares-Kelly’s office and sent to Pima County elections director Constance Hargrove.

Cázares-Kelly said her office has another approximately 53,773 ballots awaiting processing, which will be sent to the elections office and reported to the state in the coming days. 

Responding to criticism from some campaigns that vote counting is taking too long, Cázares-Kelly said local officials were on a schedule in line with past elections and suggested counting could be done by Monday.  

“Looking at our numbers, we’re going to be finished up pretty soon,” she said. “Monday is a really good goal. We’ve been able to transfer over 52,000 ballots over to the election department; that’s kind of phenomenal.”

She added there are about 1,000 ballots that need additional information like signature verification from voters who dropped them off. The county has contacted voters with these ballots, and the public has until Nov. 16 to cure their ballots, Cázares-Kelly said. 

“We’re doing everything we can, recognizing how eager the public is to hear from our offices,” she added. 

GOP Sen. Toomey says the "epic beatdown" of Trump-backed Mastriano dragged down Oz in Pennsylvania race

Doug Mastriano speaks onstage during an election night party in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, on November 8.

Retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey was sharply critical of Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano on Thursday, blaming him for dragging down the candidacy of Mehmet Oz in the race to replace Toomey in the Senate.

The outgoing senator made the remarks in an interview with CNN’s Erin Burnett.

Toomey started by saying that he thought Oz “ran a very good campaign.”

“So the question that I think arises is, ‘Why did a good candidate, running a good race, in what should be a very good environment, not prevail in a state like Pennsylvania — which is very, very competitive?” Toomey said.

Toomey said it’s “very, very hard” for a Republican down-ballot to win with someone so unpopular at the top of the ticket. He pointed out that Oz’s loss to Democrat John Fetterman was relatively narrow when compared with Mastriano’s margin against Democratic candidate Josh Shapiro.

Toomey, who has been sharply critical of former President Donald Trump and the Republican party’s shift under his leadership, blamed the former president for involving himself in the selection of candidates across the country.

“This is a huge problem, and I think my party needs to face the fact that if fealty to Donald Trump is the primary criteria for selecting candidates, we’re probably not going to do really well,” he told Burnett.

Some background: The Trump-endorsed Mastriano came to national attention for his vehement election denialism and his presence in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021.

As the election went on, he did little to hedge his far-right positions or reach out to groups beyond his base of supporters, CNN’s Chris Cillizza wrote.

Oz, meanwhile, focused on bringing “balance” to the Senate in the final days of the race – casting himself a moderate voice who could navigate between extremes within the two parties.

Analysis: This is why it takes longer to count West Coast votes

Ballots are processed by election workers at the Clark County Election Department on November 10 in North Las Vegas.

As of Thursday evening, CNN is yet to project which party will win the House and the Senate as several key races are too early to call — some of that is because of the election processes in many West Coast states.

The two Senate races for which there is no projection are in Arizona and Nevada. There is no winner in Georgia’s Senate race, but CNN has projected it will proceed to a runoff in December.

Here’s a look at the 34 House races that still have not been projected:

  • California: 16
  • Arizona: 3
  • Nevada: 3
  • Oregon: 2
  • Washington: 2
  • Colorado: 2
  • Montana: 1
  • New Mexico: 1

Two additional outstanding House races are in Alaska and Maine, where determining the winner in a ranked-choice voting system takes longer. Plus, there’s one remaining House race in both New York and Maryland. 

The benefit of knowing who won on Election Day is arguably outweighed by allowing more people access to the vote and the cost savings of not having to staff so many polling places.

In Arizona, mail-in ballots that were dropped off right before and on Tuesday don’t even start the important process of signature verification until the Wednesday after Election Day, according to Bill Gates, the chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors.

Most states have some sort of signature verification system for their absentee and mail-in ballots, according to a tally from the National Conference of State Legislatures.

While Arizona still has a lot of in-person voting on Election Day, other states have moved to an entirely vote-by-mail system, like California. The West Coast has been taking a long time to count these votes for years, but the process is getting added scrutiny this year because those unprojected races will determine who controls the chambers of Congress.

Nevada also transitioned to an all-mail-in system in 2022. That means ballots that were postmarked by Tuesday can be received by election officials until Saturday and still be counted. It’s not actually known how many ballots will trickle in because every registered voter in Nevada was mailed a ballot.

Boebert blames top of her ticket for tougher-than-expected race: "Of course I expect to win"

Rep. Lauren Boebert and her husband campaign during an election day rally in Grand Junction, Colorado, on November 8.

Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert, who is locked in an extremely tight reelection race, suggested that a lack of voter enthusiasm for her party’s candidates for governor and Senate caused her race to be much closer than anticipated.

She noted that the Democratic governor, Jared Polis, and incumbent Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet, both skated to reelection. 

“I think Polis and Bennet definitely carried the ticket for the Democrat Party,” she told CNN. 

CNN projects Bennet beat Republican Joe O’Dea, the CEO of a construction company, by winning more than 54% of the vote while Polis defeated Republican Heidi Ganahl by gaining more than 57% of the ballots.

Boebert added, “I don’t know if there wasn’t enough enthusiasm for our top ticket candidates for governor and Senate or what happened there. But there was a lot of shifting of the votes there.”

With 98% of the vote counted, Boebert holds a 794-vote lead over Democrat Adam Frisch in Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District.

Boebert still expressed confidence she would eke out a victory. “Of course, I expect to win.”

But Republicans say she didn’t do enough to insulate herself from backlash from voters in her district. Indeed, a GOP source says she was advised to spend more of her campaign cash late in the cycle. 

Asked if she believes Republican leaders gave her enough support, Boebert said: “I am my support.”

Freedom Caucus chair says McCarthy needs to earn the votes of members if he hopes to be speaker

Rep. Scott Perry is seen after a meeting in Washington, DC, on July 13.

GOP Rep. Scott Perry, who chairs the pro-Trump House Freedom Caucus, said members are looking for a speaker who is “interested in more fairness for members and a more member-driven conference, as opposed to a leadership-driven, top-down strategy.” 

Asked by CNN if this included House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, he said, “yes, of course.”

However, he also told reporters that he tried to call McCarthy yesterday and “didn’t get an opportunity to talk with him.” 

Later Thursday night, the group will hear from Fox News Host Tucker Carlson, who is the keynote speaker at its dinner reception.

Some context: Although many races are still too early to call, the Republican Party is inching toward gaining a slim majority in the House – and McCarthy, the House GOP Leader, has been moving swiftly to lock down the votes to claim the speaker’s gavel, according to multiple GOP sources.

CNN Projection: Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison will win reelection

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison participates in a debate with Jim Schultz on October 14 in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, the progressive Democrat whose office prosecuted George Floyd’s killer, will overcome a tough challenge to win a second term, CNN projects.  

Ellison will defeat Republican Jim Schultz, who characterized him as extreme in a race that focused largely on police reform efforts in the wake of Floyd’s killing.  

Looming over the contest was the police killing of Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020.  

Ellison’s office successfully prosecuted Floyd’s killer, Derek Chauvin. But the killing and protests over racial injustice in its aftermath touched off a debate over policing that reverberated in this year’s midterm elections.  

Last year, Ellison was among the progressive supporters of a ballot measure in Minneapolis that would have replaced the city’s police department with a new Department of Public Safety — in the process, eliminating a requirement that the city have a minimum number of police officers tied to its population and shifting its oversight from the mayor and police chief to the city council.  

But in November 2021, Minneapolis voters rejected that measure, dealing a blow to police reform efforts nationwide.  

Schultz, who was endorsed by Minnesota’s largest police union, had lambasted Ellison over rising crime rates in the state and accused him of advancing anti-police ideology.  

He blamed Ellison and other Democratic leaders for their response to property damage and crime during the summer 2020 protests over Floyd’s killing.  

Ellison, meanwhile, sought to shift the race’s focus to abortion rights. He and his supporters pointed to Schultz’s former role on the board of a conservative anti-abortion group. The Democratic attorney general has also said he would fight against other states’ laws that impose criminal penalties on those who travel for abortions to states— like Minnesota —where the procedure is legal. 

Rep. Joe Neguse announces candidacy for Democratic caucus chair

Rep. Joe Neguse listens during a news conference at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, on August 31.

Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado has announced he is running for the position of Democratic Caucus Chair. Neguse currently serves as the co-chair of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee. 

The current chair of the Democratic caucus, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, is term limited in his position. 

Democrats are holding their leadership elections Nov. 30, even though the current Democratic leadership, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, and House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn has not announced publicly and definitively if they intend to run again.

CNN is yet to project which party will win the House.

Punchbowl News was first to report. 

Democratic Sen. Mark Warner upbeat about election results, says Biden coming out "stronger"

President Joe Biden gestures to the crowd as he leaves after speaking at Howard Theatre in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, said on Thursday he feels “great” about the election outcome so far, compared to how he felt last week going into the midterms. And with three key US Senate seats still undecided, he said he likes Democrats’ odds.

Asked what he would attribute the election results to, Warner said he believes a lot of it came down to democracy. 

“You can argue the Democrats’ message wasn’t perfect,” he said. “It was a lot better than the media thought it was. And the one thing that’s absolutely clear was that for a lot of the Republican messaging, which was all about relitigating a 2020 election or denying the validity of our democracy, that is not what the American people wanted to hear. So, I think that is probably bigger than any other item.”

He continued to say he thinks some of the extreme viewpoints being embraced by some candidates made voters “uncomfortable.” 

“I think that views that are so far out of the mainstream that either political party 10 years ago, eight years ago, they would have been viewed as ludicrous had an effect that one of the two political parties in had a lot of candidates that embraced from election denial to QAnon to, you know, re-litigation of the 2020 presidential election I think make folks uncomfortable,” he said.

On how the midterm election poised President Biden for reelection, Warner said Biden’s coming out “stronger.”

“He’s obviously coming out of this midterm stronger,” he said. “He seemed like, with the little bit I saw yesterday, he was having a good time with the press corp. If you can do that in these kinds of jobs, that’s a good place to be.”

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez adds Summer Lee and Greg Casar to "The Squad"

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Greg Casar wave to a crowd at a campaign rally in Austin, Texas, on February 13.

New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says the informal group of Democratic House progressives known as “The Squad” is adding two new members: Reps.-elect Summer Lee of Pennsylvania and Greg Casar of Texas.

Summer Lee speaks to reporters alongside Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey after voting in the primary election on May 17 in Pittsburgh.

She also extended an invitation to “anyone else who wants to join too.”

“The Squad” first drew attention following the 2018 election, after Ocasio-Cortez posted a photo of herself with other incoming freshman lawmakers Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, with the term as a caption.

The group expanded to include Rep. Jamaal Bowman of New York and Cori Bush of Missouri, after they were elected in 2020.

Here's where vote counting stands in Arizona's Yavapai County as key races hang in the balance  

The latest results coming out of Yavapai County, Arizona, are comprised entirely of early ballots. According to Chief Deputy Recorder Karen McKracken, these early ballots are a combination of drop boxes, vote centers on Election Night and the mail.

The county has about 9,900 early ballots remaining to process:

  • About 1,500 from the mail
  • About 3,500 that were handed over at in-person polling places
  • About 6,300 that were put into drop boxes on Election Day  

Overall, so far, Yavapai has tabulated 105,734 ballots. There are 608 provisional ballots that they are verifying right now. Officials said they hope to be done verifying tomorrow so they can begin tabulation.

They don’t know when the tabulation will be complete, as they are beginning a hand count on Saturday that will be an all-hands-on-deck effort.

Cybersecurity official: Foreign operatives could exploit uncertainty as election results are being certified

Foreign operatives could use the days and week between Election Day and when votes are certified — including the lead-up to a contentious Senate runoff in Georgia — to further amplify disinformation about voting and sow discord among Americans, a top US cybersecurity official said Thursday. 

The Georgia runoff between Republican Herschel Walker and Democrat Raphael Warnock will occur Dec. 6 after neither reached a 50% threshold needed for victory. 

There were only handful of documented cyberattacks aimed at election-related infrastructure on Election Day, but nothing that kept people from casting their vote, according to US officials. But foreign influence activity — the use of social media or other means to sway voters — is harder to measure.

US officials are particularly concerned about any foreign efforts to amplify disinformation and any violent online rhetoric in Georgia and Arizona, where vote tallies are still coming in.

Asked about foreign influence operations on Election Day, Easterly said “there was nothing that came in that caught my attention in a significant way.” 

Russian state media made an eleventh-hour push to cast baseless doubts on the integrity of US elections with multiple misleading or false articles about the midterms in the last 24 hours, according to independent research and a CNN review of Russian media. 

The propaganda blitz came after Kremlin-linked oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin said that Russia has interfered, is interfering and will continue to interfere in the US democratic process. 

Nevada's Clark County registrar says there are more than 50,000 ballots that still need to be counted

An election worker prepares ballots to be processed at the Clark County Election Department in North Las Vegas on November 9.

There are more than 50,000 ballots that need to be counted in Clark County, Nevada, which are in “various stages in the process of validation,” county registrar Joe Gloria said in a Thursday update.

Clark County is home to Las Vegas, is the most populous county in the state, and contains the bulk of the statewide electorate.

A day earlier, Gloria said county officials received more than 12,700 ballots from the USPS on Wednesday and collected roughly 56,900 mail ballots from Election Day drop boxes. 

On Thursday, election officials received another 626 ballots from the postal service, Gloria said. The county will continue to receive ballots from the postal service through Saturday, as long as they were postmarked by Nov. 8. 

Election officials will continue “curing” mail ballots through Monday. “Curing” is when election officials contact voters to fix mistakes on their ballots, like if information is missing.

On Thursday, Gloria said there were more than 7,100 that have not been “cured.”

There are also roughly 5,555 provisional ballots from in-person Election Day voting in Clark County, Gloria has said. Officials won’t be able to count those ballots until next week.

Gloria expects the majority of the county’s ballots to be reported on by Saturday, with the exception of ballots that need to be cured and provisional ballots.

“People have been processing ballots here in Clark County for about 18 days. We’re working all of the hours that we can work,” he added. “We can’t move any faster than what the law currently allows us to do.”

Clark County officials told CNN’s Gary Tuchman that they do expect a large update in vote totals tonight. They did not provide a time for the update, however. 

What is at stake in Nevada: A crucial Senate race between Republican nominee Adam Laxalt and Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto has not been called. The contest could help determine which party controls the Senate.

Arizona's Maricopa County will release more election results at 10 p.m. ET tonight

An election worker removes tabulated ballots from the machine inside the Maricopa County Recorders Office on Thursday, November 10, in Phoenix.

Maricopa County — the most populous county in Arizona — said it will release more election results at 10 p.m. ET tonight. 

County officials are holding a news conference at 6 p,m. ET, but results are not expected to be released then.

Why is the vote count taking so long? The biggest reason for the delay is the way that each state handles the ballots outside of those cast at polling places on Election Day, including both early votes and mail-in ballots.

In Arizona, there are still roughly 600,000 ballots to be counted. The majority of those, about 400,000 ballots, are in Maricopa County.

Of those ballots, about 290,000 were dropped off at vote centers on Election Day, Bill Gates, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors chairman, said on CNN Thursday. Those ballots have to be processed before they can be counted, leading to a lag time in tabulating.

In addition, Maricopa County has about 17,000 ballots that were attempted to be counted on Election Day but were not read by the tabulator because of a printer error, and those ballots still need to be counted, too.

Why Arizona is key: The race between Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly and Republican nominee Blake Masters — one of the contests that could help determine which party controls the Senate — is yet to be called in the state.

Nevada’s Clark County rejects false claim from Trump: "Obviously he’s misinformed"

As Clark County, Nevada, continued to count votes on Thursday, the county registrar rejected former President Donald Trump’s latest effort to raise suspicions about its elections — saying Trump is obviously “misinformed.”

Trump falsely claimed on his social media platform on Thursday that Clark County “has a corrupt voting system,” warning Republican Senate candidate Adam Laxalt to “be careful.”

There is simply no basis for Trump’s claim. And the claim followed Trump’s numerous false allegations about the 2020 election in Clark County, a Democratic stronghold that is home to Las Vegas.

Gloria explained that state law requires counties to receive mail-in ballots until Saturday (if they were postmarked by Election Day) and gives voters until Monday to fix issues with their signatures. He also noted that the county isn’t yet allowed to process provisional ballots.

“My staff has been working very diligently, we’ve been here from early in the morning until late at night, we’ve been fully staffed, we’re working as hard as we possibly can in order to get the ballots counted,” Gloria said. “But whether we like it or not, there’s no way that we can move any faster than we’re currently moving.”

Nevada has tight races for the US Senate, governor and other offices.

"A strong night for Democrats": Biden touts midterm results and the future of democracy

President Joe Biden, with first lady Jill Biden and second gentleman Doug Emhoff, speaks at an event hosted by the Democratic National Committee to thank campaign workers at Howard Theatre in Washington, DC, on November 10.

In remarks Thursday at a DNC event, President Joe Biden reiterated that Election Day was a “good day for America” and “a strong night for Democrats.”

“Tuesday was a good day for America, a good day for democracy. And it was a strong night for Democrats,” Biden said, speaking to a room of DNC campaign workers and volunteers in Washington, DC. He thanked them for believing in the country and for fighting to make sure there was a “free and fair election.”

CNN is yet to project which party will win the House and the Senate as several key races are too early to call.

The president noted polls predicting big losses for his party before the election, saying, “folks that didn’t happen,” touting the success of Democrats holding on to House seats and winning governorships across the country.

“It was the first national election since Jan. 6 and there were a lot of concerns about if democracy would meet the test — it did, it did, it did,” he said referring to the 2021 insurrection at the Capitol. The future of democracy itself was a common message for Biden on the campaign trail ahead of Election Day.

Vice President Kamala Harris, who was also speaking at the event, echoed the president’s message, saying “as we gather here votes are still being counted, but it is clear your work sent a message to the entire world: democracy is intact.”

She said some Democrats and some Republicans won and “that’s what happens” when millions of people vote in “free and fair elections”

The vice president said voters across our country knew what they stood for, so they knew what to fight for, pointing to states where voters approved ballot measures aimed at protecting abortion.

Harris argued that people do not need to abandon their beliefs to agree that “the government should not be telling a woman what to do with her body,” she said.

“This president understands democracy is only as strong as our willingness to fight for it,” Harris said, adding that what they saw this week is that “when we fight, we win.”

Arizona's Coconino County has less than 15,000 ballots left to be counted

Coconino County, Arizona, has about 14,896 ballots left to process and count, county recorder Patty Hansen told CNN Thursday. Coconino is in the north-central part of Arizona.

Here’s how that breaks down:

  • Early ballots left to process: 12,630
  • Provisional ballots left to process: 1,000
  • Ballots that have been processed and are ready for tabulation: 1,266

Why Arizona is key: The race between Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly an Republican nominee Blake Masters — which could help determine the balance of the Senate — is yet to be called in Arizona. It is also too early to call the gubernatorial race between Democratic nominee Katie Hobbs and Republican nominee Kari Lake.

GOP Rep. Bob Good: McCarthy "has not done anything to earn my vote"

Kevin McCarthy walks into a House Republicans party at the Westin Hotel in Washington, DC, on November 9.

Rep. Bob Good, a member of the hardline House Freedom Caucus, told reporters that House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy “has not done anything to earn my vote” for speaker.

The Virginia Republican also predicted that “there will be a challenge to (McCarthy) as a speaker candidate,” a possibility that CNN first reported was under consideration by the group.

Such a challenge would be more of a protest candidate than a serious one. It would be an attempt to show McCarthy during next week’s internal GOP leadership elections that he doesn’t have the floor votes for speaker, in hopes of forcing him to the negotiating table.

Meanwhile, Rep. Chip Roy of Texas told reporters that “no one currently has 218” votes for speaker, which is the magic number McCarthy would need to secure the speaker’s gavel on the House floor in January.

The House Freedom Caucus has been meeting all day for its new member orientation, where their strategy in the leadership fight has come up, according to a source familiar with the conversations.

McCarthy has spent the last two days working the phones and has been hearing out potential holdouts and critics, but so far not making promises or caving into their hardline demands, sources said.

Georgia secretary of state chooses his own race for mandatory statewide audit

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger speaks during a press conference in Atlanta on November 9.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger picked his own race as the focus of a required statewide audit for 2022 election results.

Raffensperger, a Republican who refused former President Donald Trump’s request to “find” votes needed to overturn his 2020 loss in the Peach State, defeated the Democratic nominee this week.

A Georgia law passed in 2019 requires the secretary of state to choose one race every two years to conduct a risk-limiting audit of the results. 

Georgia election officials estimate that 5 to 7% of ballots from the secretary of state race will be recounted for the audit. They say the results will prove “statistical confidence” that the election’s outcome is correct.  

How the audit works: Georgia’s 159 counties will be required to conduct a hand recount of a batch of results from the race.

On Nov. 16, election officials will roll a twenty-sided dice to determine which random batches of ballots will be counted and then each county election office will start their hand-counting on Nov. 17. They are expected to share the results by the following day.     

Blake Evans, the elections director with the secretary of state’s office, will spearhead the audit.

State leaders said they also chose the race to try to ease the burden on busy county election workers: The large margin of victory for Raffensperger makes the audit easier to conduct. That’s important, given the impending Senate runoff that will keep them busy.

Raffensperger’s only function in the audit is to select the race which will be examined, according to his office.

Warnock kicks off runoff campaign: "Are you ready to do this one more time?"

US Sen. Raphael Warnock speaks to supporters on Thursday.

Democratic incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock kicked off his runoff campaign against Republican Herschel Walker on Thursday in Atlanta, arguing his second runoff Senate election in as many years is about “competence and character.”

Remember: CNN projected on Wednesday that the hotly contested Senate contest in Georgia will advance to a runoff between Warnock and Walker on Dec. 6. Depending on how Senate races in Arizona and Nevada are decided, the race could be determinative in control of the currently evenly divided Senate.

Warnock looked to avoid this scenario in the final weeks of the campaign, running ads warning Georgians that all the attack ads they have seen for months would continue through Thanksgiving if the state had a runoff.

“Now, you have to admit that I did warn you all that we might be spending Thanksgiving together,” Warnock said. “And here we are. So, I am going to need you to stick with me for four more weeks. Can we do that? Because we’ve got some unfinished business.”

Warnock only glancingly acknowledged the potential national ramifications of the race – “I need you to fight like the future of Georgia and the future of America depends on it, because it does,” he said – and instead used his speech to speak directly to the Georgians who didn’t vote for him on Tuesday night.

“For those of you who made a different choice this time, whether for Herschel Walker or someone else, I want to speak directly to you: Over the next four weeks, I hope you will give me the opportunity to earn your vote,” the Democratic senator said. “Every day I have served in the Senate, I have been thinking about the people of Georgia and that is what I will do the next six years.”

Official: Arizona's Maricopa County hasn’t started counting 290,000 early ballots dropped off on election day

A voter drops off a ballot Tuesday outside the Maricopa County Recorders Office in Phoenix.

Arizona’s Maricopa County has not started counting 290,000 ballots that were dropped off at voting sites on election day — a critical batch of ballots that could help determine who wins the uncalled Senate and governor’s races in the state, Bill Gates, chairman of the Maricopa County board of supervisors, told CNN Thursday.

Maricopa County has about 400,000 ballots left to count, and 290,000 of those are early ballots that were dropped off at voting sites Tuesday, Gates told CNN’s Sara Sidner.

The 290,000 ballots that were dropped off on election day “was a record,” he said.

About 70% more people chose to vote by dropping off their early ballots on election day than they have at any point in the past, breaking the previous record, Gates said. 

Those ballots must have signature verification review before they can be counted he told CNN.

“If you drop off an early ballot, it means it has to come in on Wednesday and start the process of being signature verified,” Gates said, which is a process that takes longer than voting in person on election day and having your vote counted through the tabulator immediately.

Maricopa County had “big voter turnout” throughout the whole election, with about 230,000 people voting in person on election day, in addition to the ballots that were dropped off, Bill Gates, Chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors said. 

Kevin McCarthy moves to secure potential speakership as hard-right group weighs a long-shot challenge

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy speaks at an election night event in Washington, DC.

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy is moving swiftly to lock down the votes to claim the speaker’s gavel as a hard-right faction of his conference discusses whether to mount a long-shot challenge to complicate his bid and force concessions in the process, according to multiple GOP sources.

McCarthy privately spoke to his closest advisers and confidantes in a Wednesday morning phone call just hours after his party appeared on track to take the House but fell short of their bullish expectations of a massive GOP landslide. The California Republican tapped a group of members to be on his whip team that will help him secure the 218 votes in order to win the speakership in January, with GOP lawmakers on the call promising to “work hard to get him elected,” according to a source familiar with the matter. And several allies were seen popping in and out of McCarthy’s office on Wednesday as they started to hash out and execute their game plan.

“Yes,” McCarthy said confidently Wednesday night as he left the Capitol and was asked if he had the votes to assume the speakership.

McCarthy, who sent a letter to the conference Wednesday afternoon officially declaring his bid for the speakership and asking members for their support, spoke with some potential GOP holdouts behind closed doors throughout the day, including Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the controversial conservative who was booted from her committee assignments by Democrats – and a number of Republicans – over her past incendiary rhetoric. Greene has pushed for a spot on the powerful House Oversight Committee in a GOP majority.

Leaving McCarthy’s office, Greene would not say if she’d get what she’s been seeking.

Next week’s leadership election is just the first step in the process. McCarthy would need to win a majority of his conference’s support next week to be nominated for speaker before a January vote when he would need 218 votes of the full House to win the gavel.

Catch up: What to know as states count votes and key races hang in the balance

An election worker arrives with ballots Wednesday inside the Maricopa County Recorders Office in Phoenix.

Key races to determine control of the Senate in Arizona and Nevada have yet to be called as both states race to count hundreds of thousands of ballots that have yet to be processed.

It still may be hours – or days – before enough ballots are counted in those states to determine who won the Senate. There are also many uncalled congressional races that will determine what the House looks like when the new Congress is seated.

The unofficial results – and lingering uncertainty about who will control Congress next year – hasn’t prevented Republican apprehension about the election results, where an expected Republican wave never materialized. 

Here’s what you should know as the counting continues:

Where things stand in Arizona and Nevada — and why it’s taking so long to count ballots: The biggest reason for the delay is the way that each state handles the ballots outside of those cast at polling places on Election Day, including both early votes and mail-in ballots.

In Arizona, for instance, there are still roughly 600,000 ballots to be counted. The majority of those, about 400,000 ballots, are in Maricopa County, the state’s most populous county that includes Phoenix.

Of those ballots, about 290,000 were dropped off at vote centers on Election Day, Bill Gates, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors chairman, said on CNN Thursday. Those ballots have to be processed before they can be counted, leading to a lag time in tabulating.

In addition, the county has about 17,000 ballots that were attempted to be counted on Election Day but were not read by the tabulator because of a printer error, and those ballots still need to be counted, too.

In Nevada, state law allows mail-in ballots to be received through Saturday, as long as they were postmarked by Election Day. That means counties are still receiving ballots to be counted.

Clark County, the state’s largest that includes Las Vegas, received more than 12,000 postmarked ballots from the post office on Wednesday, Clark County registrar Joe Gloria said.

In addition, counties in Nevada have tens of thousands of mail-in ballots that were dropped off on Election Day in drop boxes located at polling places. Clark County said that its Election Day drop boxes contained nearly 57,000 mail ballots.

Trump vs. DeSantis: The lackluster performance of several candidates endorsed by former President Donald Trump has cast new doubts on his expected 2024 campaign.

At the same time, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ resounding reelection victory is fueling calls for him to capitalize on his momentum and challenge Trump for the 2024 nomination.

The Trump-DeSantis showdown has been simmering for months now, but it could burst into the open as the primary season officially gets underway.

After “red wave” washes out, McCarthy faces tougher path: Republicans are still closing in on a majority in the House, even after Democrats had a better-than-expected night Tuesday.

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy is moving swiftly to lock down votes needed to claim the speaker’s gavel in the next Congress. CNN has not yet projected a Republican takeover of the chamber.

But the ultimate size of a Republican majority could determine how difficult it will be for McCarty to become speaker, as a narrow majority could prompt the pro-Trump House Freedom Caucus to stand in the way of McCarthy’s leadership ambitions.

A source familiar with the House Freedom Caucus’ deliberations told CNN on Wednesday morning there are around two dozen current and incoming members willing to vote against McCarthy if he doesn’t offer them concessions.

CNN’s Ellie Kaufmann, Bob Ortega, Gary Tuchman, Paul Vercammen, Kristen Holmes, Gabby Orr, Manu Raju and Melanie Zanona contributed to this report.

Biden "will do whatever is helpful" for Warnock as he faces runoff in Georgia, White House says

White House communications director Kate Bedingfield told CNN that President Biden will do “whatever is helpful” to assist Georgia Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock as his midterm race is projected to head to a runoff against Republican Hershel Walker this December.  

Following Biden’s Wednesday evening call with Kevin McCarthy — the House minority leader running to be the next House Speaker should Republicans take the majority — Bedingfield reiterated the president’s efforts to work across the aisle. 

Bedingfield said that “the intent of speaking with Kevin McCarthy … (was) to continue to build a relationship should we need to work together which, you know as the President has said, he is certainly open to.” 

“He’s shown he’s been able to do it. The purpose of the conversation was to continue that open line of communication but in terms of sharing details of their private discussion, and I’ll leave their private discussion private,” she added. 

Counting is ongoing in Lauren Boebert's Colorado district. Here's how redistricting shaped the district.

Ballots are still being counted in Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert’s Colorado district, where she is in a tight race against Democrat Adam Frisch.

CNN has not made a projection in the race yet, but Frisch was ahead of Boebert by just 386 as of 12: 30 p.m. ET Thursday.

The boundaries of the 3rd Congressional District shifted after Colorado added a new district because the 2020 Census showed population growth, with the state’s independent redistricting commission creating a map that added an eighth seat in the northern suburbs of Denver. 

Encompassing the western and southern portions of the state that includes Grand Junction, the majority of residents living in Boebert’s district are White and many residents have traditionally registered as Republican. 

As of Sept. 1, nearly 31% of registered voters were Republican, nearly 24% were Democrat and 44% were unaffiliated with a political party, according to the state’s independent redistricting commissions.

Boebert won the county in the 2020 election with 51.4% of the vote, defeating Democrat Diane Mitsch Bush who had 45.2%. Under the new redrawn district, former President Donald Trump would’ve won the district by nearly 8 percentage points but would’ve won by about 5.5 percentage points under the older map.

On Wednesday night, Pueblo County Clerk and Recorder Gilbert Ortiz told CNN that Pueblo County, another county in Boebert’s district, was expected to post more votes that night and they would pick back up tomorrow morning at 11 a.m ET (9 a.m local time)

Here is what the state’s map looked like before and after redistricting:

House Democratic leadership elections announced for Nov. 30

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was in Egypt on Thursday attending the COP27 climate conference.

House Democratic leadership elections have been officially announced for Nov. 30.

Speculation over House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s future atop the House Democratic caucus has intensified in the aftermath of the midterm elections. CNN has not yet projected which party will control the House, but Republicans appear to be inching toward picking up the number of seats needed to win back the majority.

CNN reported in September that in interviews with more than two dozen House Democrats, a consensus began to emerge: If Democrats lose the majority, there would be overwhelming pressure for Pelosi to go, a prospect that Democratic sources said the powerful House speaker is keenly aware of.

Pelosi recently told CNN’s Anderson Cooper in an interview that the violent attack on her husband Paul would have an impact on her decision making over her political future, though she did not say what the decision will be.

The elections will be secret ballot using a web-based application.

McConnell mum on Trump's impact on midterm results

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell would not directly answer when asked by CNN if he blamed former President Donald Trump for the less-than-robust results for Republicans on Election Day. 

Remember: CNN has not yet projected which party will control the House or the Senate. Republicans appear to be slowly inching toward winning back the majority in the chamber, but many races are still too early to call, and the GOP fell short of what many expected to be a “red wave” of victories in Tuesday’s midterms.

As McConnell entered his US Capitol office, he also declined to answer if he was confident he will be the majority leader in the new Congress. 

In the past, McConnell has raised concerns about “candidate quality,” in reference to some of the candidates Trump backed for the Senate who struggled to gain wide support.  

Nevada’s Washoe County has about 20,000 ballots yet to be counted

Election officials sort mail-in ballots Tuesday at the Washoe County Registrar of Voters Office in Reno, Nevada.

Washoe County — Nevada’s second most populous county which encompasses Reno — still has about 20,000 ballots that it still needs to process. 

The outstanding ballots include both mail-in ballots and ballots that were dropped off on Election Day. 

Like all counties in Nevada, Washoe is likely to receive more ballots by mail today, after receiving 4,000 yesterday. Ballots that arrive by Saturday will be counted as long as they are postmarked by Election Day.

House Freedom Caucus "working" on their McCarthy strategy today

The pro-Trump House Freedom Caucus is currently meeting near Capitol Hill for their new member orientation.

Heading into the meeting, GOP Rep. Morgan Griffith of Virginia told CNN, “we’re working on it” when asked whether he’ll support House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy for speaker. Most other members declined to comment.

Their strategy in the speaker’s race – including what demands they will try to extract and where they will draw hard lines – is expected to come into sharper focus today and tomorrow.

Later Thursday night, the group will hear from Fox News Host Tucker Carlson, who is the keynote speaker at their dinner reception.

CNN Projection: Democratic Rep. Jahana Hayes will win in Connecticut's 5th District 

US Rep. Jahana Hayes speaks to supporters at her election night event in Waterbury, Connecticut.

Incumbent Democratic Rep. Jahana Hayes will win in Connecticut’s 5th District, CNN projects, and defeat Republican George Logan.  

This is a Democratic hold.

Here’s where things stand in the House:

  • Current Seats held by Democrats: 192
  • Current seats held by Republicans: 209
  • Uncalled house races: 34

Here's how Democrat John Fetterman flipped Pennsylvania

John Fetterman waves as he arrives on stage at his election night watch party in Pittsburgh.

Democrat John Fetterman’s victory over Trump-backed Republican Mehmet Oz, the cardiothoracic surgeon turned TV doctor, was the culmination of his own political journey, from big, brash small town mayor in Western Pennsylvania to the cusp of membership in one of the country’s most traditionally genteel political institutions. 

In the primary, Fetterman, without a patron or validator, delivered a resounding victory by winning all 67 counties, often by overwhelming margins what ended up being a four-candidate race. He even came away on top in Philadelphia, with nearly 37% of the vote. Fetterman also swept the collar counties around the city, which would become a key focus for him and his opponent in the fall, prevailing in each by an average of almost 25 percentage points.

But his triumph was tempered after he revealed in a statement that he had suffered a stroke. The following two months — which Fetterman spent much of at home recuperating — ended up being the most critical period of the Democrat’s campaign. Unable to do in-person events, the campaign leaned into a hyperactive social media presence, all directed at defining Oz as an out-of-state elitist by using a mix of memes, pithy tweets and, at times, the help of famous celebrities.

The success of the messaging even surprised Fetterman’s top aides. The stickiness of the attacks also struck Republicans.

The race grew more competitive after Labor Day, as more voters tuned in to the race and tens of millions of dollars from outside groups like the GOP’s Senate Leadership Fund and others led to ads blanketing the airwaves. Questions about Fetterman’s heath dominated coverage of the campaign.

In a debate with Oz, Fetterman struggled as many expected. But the Fetterman campaign moved quickly to shift the narrative, seizing on one debate line from Oz, and they announced a new ad hammering Oz over his suggestion that “local political leaders” should have a hand, along with women and doctors, in the process.

The final weeks of the campaign were a nerve-rattling, expensive whirlwind. Former President Barack Obama and President Joe Biden appeared for rallies with him across Philadelphia. Aides also pointed to a late endorsement — delivered with no warning, a few days before the presidential cavalry arrived — from Oprah Winfrey, who helped launch Oz’s TV career.

Just days later, Calvello watched silently as Fetterman took the stage on Election Night and immediately touted his campaign’s work in typically red enclaves.

First Black Maryland governor-elect reflects on how he accomplished his historic win

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01:35 - Source: CNN

Democrat Wes Moore said becoming the first Black governor of Maryland — and only the third Black person elected governor in US history — “means a great deal” to him.

“I know the history of my state. This is a state that is a place, a birthplace and home place of Frederick Douglass and Thurgood Marshall and Harriet Tubman. But it is also the birthplace of the red line. It is the birthplace of some of the most historically discriminatory policies, the most creative discriminatory policies that we’ve seen in this country,” Moore told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Wednesday.

When asked about current GOP Gov. Larry Hogan, who has been popular in a largely blue state, Moore expressed appreciation for Hogan tackling more extreme members of his party — including Moore’s Republican gubernatorial opponent Dan Cox, who has questioned the legitimacy of the 2020 election

“I appreciate the current governor for calling out these MAGA Republicans early,” he told CNN’s Dana Bash. 

Moore tied stumping throughout the state as key to his election victory.

“You go to their territories and you make your pitch. If you show up, you will see exactly what we saw here in the state of Maryland yesterday. We won, not just Democrats, not just Independents, but we took a large swath of Republicans. That is why I think we saw the numbers and the margins that we saw in the state of Maryland,” he told CNN’s Abby Philip.

GOP-led county in Arizona votes to appeal ruling that blocked its planned hand count of ballots

A Republican-led Arizona county plans to appeal a court ruling that blocked its planned hand count audit of ballots cast in this year’s consequential midterm elections.

The Cochise County Board of Supervisors voted 2-1 Wednesday to lodge the appeal. 

The decision comes as key races in Arizona – including contests for governor and a US Senate seat – remain too close to call.

And the action underscores how much distrust of electronic vote-tallying machines has taken root in parts of the country, following the 2020 presidential election and false claims that widespread fraud contributed to former President Donald Trump’s loss in the state.

Superior Court Judge Casey McGinley had blocked the county’s plan earlier this week, ruling that undertaking a broad hand count as a way to check the accuracy of those machines violates state law – which he said permits election officials to audit only a small percentage of ballots by hand.

The proponents of the hand count argued that it “would help ameliorate fears that the electronic count was incorrect,” McGinley wrote in his 12-page opinion. “However, there is no evidence before this Court that electronic tabulation is inaccurate in the first instance, or more importantly, that the audit system established by law is insufficient to detect any inaccuracy it may possess.”

It is unclear how consequential the appeal will be to the overall certification of the vote in Arizona.

A brief submitted on behalf of Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, a Democrat running for governor, argued that hand counting — if not completed quickly — could potentially delay the certification of election results.

Her brief noted the statutory deadlines that election officials face for certifying the results, which include a deadline for the county to canvass the results by 20 days after the election and a deadline for the secretary to then complete the statewide canvass by the fourth Monday after election day.

Arizona counties must certify their election results by Nov. 28. The state’s certification deadline is Dec. 5.

There are more than 80,000 registered voters in Cochise County, which lies in the southeastern corner of the state and includes the city of Bisbee.

GOP Representative-elect Lawler tells CNN he wants party to "move forward" from Trump

New York Representative-elect Michael Lawler appears on CNN on Thursday morning.

New York Republican Representative-elect Michael Lawler told CNN that he wants the Republican Party to “move forward” from former President Donald Trump.

Lawler added, “I think moving in a different direction as we move forward is a good thing, not a bad thing. But ultimately, look, the voters will decide what they want to do, and the former president will decide what he wants to do.” 

Lawler was asked if he is interested in focusing any time on investigations and potential impeachments of this administration.

“I think the top priority is to deal with inflation and the cost of living. That is what I ran on and that is what my focus will be … I don’t want to see is what we saw during the Trump administration where Democrats just went after the president and the administration incessantly,” he said. “I don’t want to go from one issue to the next without dealing with the issues that got me elected in the first place.”

What's left to count in Arizona's Maricopa County

Boxes of scanned ballots sit on a pallet Wednesday at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix.

There are about 400,000 to 410,000 ballots left to count in Maricopa County, the most populous county in Arizona, Maricopa County Board of Supervisors Chair Bill Gates told “CNN This Morning” on Thursday. 

Out of the 400,000 to 410,000 left to count, about 290,000 of those ballots were dropped off on Election Day at voting places, Gates said. 

Out of the remaining 110,000, about 90,000 ballots were received before Election Day. 

About 17,000 of the remaining 110,000 are ballots that were attempted to be counted on Election Day but were not read by the tabulator because of a printer error. These are referred to as “Box 3” ballots, Gates said.

Gates said he could not predict which votes would be counted first out of the remaining votes to be counted, but he said the ones they received earlier would likely be counted first.

“We can’t really zero in on that with specificity, but they would tend to be those we received earlier first, and then as we move on we’re getting more into those Election Day mail-in ballots that we received on Election Day,” Gates said.

Maricopa County is expected to report more results tonight. 

Ohio Gov. DeWine: Some voters said they "would not vote for me" because they "disagreed with me" on abortion

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine talks to CNN on Thursday.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, who is projected to win reelection in the midterms, said a number of voters told him they could not vote for him due to his stance on abortion.

To these voters, abortion “was a defining issue,” he added. “They simply would not vote for me because of the fact that they disagreed with me on the issue.”

However, DeWine said he also met people who voted Republican because they liked his accomplishments in office so far. 

“We also, though, had a lot of people who came up to me and said, ‘I don’t really vote for Republicans, but I like what you’ve done in regard to job training,’ or ‘I like what you’ve done in regard to mental health and I’m going to vote for you,” he said.

Sen. Klobuchar says GOP fell short in midterms due to candidate quality, Trump factor and abortion rights

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07:23 - Source: CNN

Minnesota Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Republicans underperformed in the 2022 midterms because of many reasons, including Democrats’ candidate quality, the Supreme Court’s decision on abortion and voter response to former President Donald Trump’s role in the party.

“We had some incredible candidates in the Senate and the House,” she said on “CNN This Morning.” “No. 2, when you have a situation that defies the tides of history, it’s got to be something monumental going on and in this case, it was a rejection of the orthodoxy of the Republican’s position. You have so many of their candidates, basically, wanting an abortion ban put in place.”

She also said a major priority for her and her colleagues is to pass the Electoral Count Act during the lame-duck session. 

“In Washington, we have a bunch of things on our plate, including getting the defense bill done with Ukraine right before us and the strides that [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelensky is making against [Russia President] Vladimir Putin. On our plate is the end-of-the-year budget bill to make sure we get that right. As you know, the Electoral Count Act, an effort that I’m leading with Susan Collins and Joe Manchin and others, so we don’t have Jan. 6 happen again. All of that is immediately when we get back.”

Georgia's GOP Lt. Gov Duncan says Trump "got fired" and DeSantis was praised after midterm elections

Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis celebrates onstage during his 2022 U.S. midterm elections night party in Tampa, Florida, on November 8.

Republican Georgia Lt. Gov Geoff Duncan told CNN that after Tuesday night’s election results, former President Donald Trump was fired by Republicans.  

Duncan also said that Georgia’s Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker needs to make three important phone calls to win the runoff. 

“Make three successful phone calls. One is to tell Donald Trump to stay out of Georgia for four weeks. He is toxic, he would do nothing to help the ticket. Secondly, I would pick up the phone and call Brian Kemp and ask him for his help. Apologize for not endorsing him during the primary against David Perdue. And third, I would call Ron DeSantis and ask him to come to Georgia as often as he possibly can the next four weeks. That would be a winning recipe for Herschel Walker,” Duncan told CNN.

Watch here for more:

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01:35 - Source: CNN

Money is pouring into Georgia runoff campaigns

Raphael Warnock and Herschel Walker

With the Georgia runoff campaign between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican challenger Herschel Walker already underway, money is pouring into the state as the parties and interest groups seek to shape its outcome. 

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee announced a $7 million field organizing investment to boost Warnock. 

The DSCC has made investments in field organizing programs a top priority, spending more on direct voter contact programs this cycle than in the Independent Expenditure for the first time in recent history. 

An anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America and its partner group, Women Speak Out PAC, announced it will spend at least $1 million in the race to attack Warnock’s position on abortion.

“Walker’s support for compassionate limits on abortion aligns with the people of Georgia and the overwhelming majority of Americans, in stark contrast to ‘activist pastor’ Warnock’s radical position of abortion on demand until birth, paid for by taxpayers. Our ground team will continue to visit voters at their homes to expose Warnock’s extremism and urge them to elect Walker as their champion in the U.S. Senate,” said SBA Pro-Life America President Marjorie Dannenfelser in a statement.

At COP27, Pelosi says it's "hard to speak" about how midterms would impact US climate action

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at the COP27 climate summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, on November 10.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi acknowledged Thursday that after the midterm elections, Democrats will need to partner with Republicans on taking steps to fight climate change, even as she cast doubt on the opposing party’s willingness to take action.

“It’s hard to speak in terms of the midterm elections in this subject because we have had, shall we say, a disagreement on the subject,” Pelosi said during an event at the COP27 conference being held in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.

Pelosi is leading a congressional delegation to the climate summit comprised only of Democrats. A separate group of House Republicans representing the Conservative Climate Caucus is also present.

Pelosi didn’t respond to questions about whether Democrats can retain a majority at the end of her event.

Voters in some states approved Medicaid expansion and a minimum wage increase

"I Voted" stickers are separated for voters on Tuesday morning, November 8, at the downtown Siouxland Public Library branch in Sioux Falls, S.D.

Voters in several states have approved progressive measures that could not get through a Democratic-led Congress or Republican-dominated statehouses. More low-income South Dakota residents will have access to Medicaid, and Arizona residents with medical debt will get more protections. Minimum wage workers in Nebraska will get a boost in pay.

Here’s a sampling of the ballot measures:

South Dakota will expand Medicaid in 2023

The measure passed 56% to 44%, according to South Dakota Secretary of State data, broadening Medicaid to roughly 42,500 low-income residents starting in mid-2023. It will open up coverage to adults making less than roughly $19,000 a year. Currently, childless adults are not eligible for Medicaid in South Dakota, and parents must have very low incomes to qualify – about $1,000 a month for a family of four.

Many Republican officials opposed the measure, citing its potential future costs. States are responsible for picking up 10% of the health care tab of the expansion enrollees. South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican, did not support the initiative. An expansion bill failed in a state Senate vote earlier this year.

The minimum wage will rise in Nebraska

Nebraska’s minimum wage will increase to $15 an hour by 2026, up from the current $9 an hour. The vote was 58% to 42% in favor, according to Nebraska Secretary of State data. It is expected to benefit about 150,000 workers, according to the National Employment Law Project and the Economic Policy Institute, which are both left-leaning groups. Opponents, however, said that the initiative would hurt businesses in the state and reduce employment opportunities for youth.

Medical debt measures approved in Arizona

Proposition 209 passed overwhelmingly by a 72% to 28% vote, according to Arizona Secretary of State data. It will cap the interest rate on medical debt at 3% and limit wage garnishment for medical debt to a maximum of 30% of earnings. The measure will not forgive any medical debt, McLeod said.

Opponents argued the initiative will make it harder for Arizonans to obtain credit and for businesses in the state to collect on debt, as well as increase interest rates on consumer debt.

Control of the US Senate could come down to Nevada and Arizona — states with prominent election deniers

US Sen. Mark Kelly, left, and Blake Masters

Control of the US Senate could hinge on Nevada and Arizona, two states where GOP victories could elevate some of the most prominent election deniers in the country even after other nominees who had amplified former President Donald Trump’s falsehoods about the 2020 election were rejected by voters in Tuesday’s midterm elections.

Those two western states – perpetual battlegrounds in presidential years – were still too early to call as of early Thursday morning, while a third Democratic-held seat, Georgia, will advance to a December runoff, CNN projects.

Republicans need to pick off two Democratic seats to win the majority. As ballots continue to be counted across the country, Republicans appear to be slowly inching toward the 218 seats that would deliver them a House majority, albeit one that’s much narrower than they’d hoped.

The struggle for the Senate, however, is still full of unknowns – including whether it will all come down once again to Georgia after the Peach State delivered Democrats the majority in 2021 with victories in twin runoffs. It’s Nevada and Arizona that will determine how pivotal Georgia becomes.

Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly was maintaining an edge over Republican Blake Masters as of early Thursday morning, while Nevada Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto was trailing Republican Adam Laxalt. CNN had estimated late Wednesday that about 600,000 votes remained to be counted across the Grand Canyon State and about 160,000 votes remained to be counted in Nevada.

Laxalt, Nevada’s former attorney general, was a co-chairman of Trump’s 2020 presidential campaign in the state and filed lawsuits attempting to overturn Nevada’s results in that election, which he said was “rigged.” Cortez Masto had argued that the lies and election conspiracies theories embraced by Trump and allies like Laxalt led to the attack on the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Masters, a venture capitalist and first-time candidate, released a campaign video as he was competing for the GOP nomination in which he said he believed Trump had won the 2020 election. Masters, like Laxalt, clinched Trump’s endorsement.

After winning the Arizona Senate primary, Masters briefly appeared to back away from some of that extreme rhetoric – scrubbing his website, for example, of language that included the false claim that the election was stolen. In a debate with Kelly, he also conceded that he had not seen evidence of fraud that would have changed the outcome of the election. But the Republican nominee seemed to reverse course after receiving a phone call from Trump urging him to “go stronger” on election denialism, a conversation that was captured in a Fox documentary.

Keep reading here.

More cases of alleged voter intimidation in Arizona referred to federal law enforcement

Reports of alleged intimidation or harassment of Arizona voters continued to flow into the Secretary of State’s office in the runup to Election Day, with state officials forwarding a total of 21 complaints – including one threatening government officials — to federal and state law enforcement, according to information released Wednesday.

None of the reports involve physical violence, but they do describe voters feeling uncomfortable or nervous as people surveilled drop boxes. 

In one complaint lodged this week, a voter in Surprise, Arizona, a community northwest of Phoenix, recounted dropping off a completed ballot Monday at city hall and encountering four individuals, including one wearing a “MAGA” shirt, sitting nearby.

The voter said the men had no identifying credentials.

The names of people making the complaints are redacted in the documents the secretary of state’s office has publicly released. 

One of the 21 complaints involved a threat against government officials. The Oct. 22 email, which said it was a warning to “Corrupt and Treasonous Government Officials”, mentioned the violence of the French Revolution and promised to use property tax records to find workers’ homes. The Secretary of State’s office has referred it to the FBI. 

All of the complaints forwarded to federal and state law enforcement so far involve reports of alleged intimidation before Election Day.

Earlier this month, a federal judge blocked members of a right-wing group from openly carrying guns or wearing body armor within 250 feet of drop boxes in Arizona or from speaking to or yelling at voters dropping off their ballots.

Here's what Biden said about the midterm elections

President Joe Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House on Wednesday, November 9.

In his first speech since polls closed around the country Tuesday night, President Biden called out detractors who he said doubted his “incessant optimism” about Democrats’ ability to stave off resounding Republican wins in the midterm elections – even as his presidency is now likely entering a new period of divided government.

The results, he said during a press conference at the White House Wednesday, are a sign American democracy is intact, despite coming under threat over the past several years.

“We had an election yesterday,” Biden said. “And it was a good day, I think, for democracy.”

The results were neither the “thumping” George W. Bush described during his own post-midterms press conference in 2006 nor the “shellacking’” Barack Obama said Democrats endured in 2010.

Instead, the failure of a so-called “red wave” to materialize Tuesday night had Biden appearing confident, reflecting the mood of Democrats, including those inside the White House, who are feeling enthused and vindicated following an election season where the president’s political aptitude was questioned. At the time of Biden’s remarks, CNN has not been able to project the future majorities of the House or the Senate.

Read the full story here.

Key things to know about the Georgia Senate runoff — and how it will work

If Georgia voters were hoping to avoid talking politics at Thanksgiving, the state’s tightly contested Senate race has other plans.

Neither Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock nor Republican challenger Herschel Walker surpassed the 50% threshold needed to win the race outright Tuesday evening, CNN projects, forcing a runoff election set for Dec. 6.

But what exactly does that mean? And how will the runoff election work?

Here’s what you need to know:

What is a runoff and how does it work? A runoff is an additional election used to determine the winner of a certain race when neither candidate earns the required threshold for victory – in this case, 50%.

In Georgia, runoffs are more straightforward than general elections in that the candidate with the most votes wins regardless of whether they reach 50% or not.

Georgia’s top elections official, Brad Raffensperger, said counties are already preparing for the Dec. 6 election, and voters can request absentee ballots starting Wednesday through November 28 via the state’s online portal.

Early voting must begin by November 28 in all counties, but Raffensperger said his office anticipates some counties could have early voting on Saturday, November 26 or Sunday, Nov. 27. “We are working with the counties to find out what their plans are on this front,” he said.

Notably, the logistics of the 2022 runoff will be different than in years passed. The 2021 Georgia law that cut the length of runoffs from nine weeks to four means that the deadline for a new voter to register for the runoff election has already passed.

What is at stake? Put simply, a lot.

Depending on the outcome of Senate races in Arizona and Nevada, voters in Georgia could then – for the second consecutive election cycle – have the Senate majority in their hands.

Top officials from the Democratic and Republican parties told CNN they intend to double down on their significant investments in Georgia, with an increasing assumption that control of the Senate could hinge on the outcome of the runoff.

READ MORE

Georgia Senate race will go to a runoff, CNN projects
How election officials staved off chaos at polling places Tuesday
Biden says midterm vote was a ‘good day for democracy’ and notes the ‘red wave’ didn’t happen
How the Georgia Senate runoff will work
Trump grapples with 2024 questions amid GOP midterm letdown
GOP hopes of huge Latino gains realized in Florida but less evident around the country so far
Takeaways from the 2022 midterm elections: Battle for control of the House and Senate still up in the air

READ MORE

Georgia Senate race will go to a runoff, CNN projects
How election officials staved off chaos at polling places Tuesday
Biden says midterm vote was a ‘good day for democracy’ and notes the ‘red wave’ didn’t happen
How the Georgia Senate runoff will work
Trump grapples with 2024 questions amid GOP midterm letdown
GOP hopes of huge Latino gains realized in Florida but less evident around the country so far
Takeaways from the 2022 midterm elections: Battle for control of the House and Senate still up in the air