Okay… so if I understand John King right, the data in many of these counties are from early voting rather than precinct reporting? Is that correct?
(Made larger to catch people’s eyes… the thread’s moving so fast my question was lost.)
Okay… so if I understand John King right, the data in many of these counties are from early voting rather than precinct reporting? Is that correct?
(Made larger to catch people’s eyes… the thread’s moving so fast my question was lost.)
NBC has Kellyanne Conway on right now, and she apparently has no idea what a “political ground game” is.
%W%#@%@#&#%&. :smack::mad:
I’m hearing many reports of Clinton outperforming Obama’s 2012 numbers in many states. I am feeling more hopeful.
Fairfax County is (I think) the biggest county in the state. Over 400,000 votes in 2012, and Obama won it by 20%. Right now, under 30,000 in.
No worries.
Yeah, but, reiterating a previous question, what the heck is going on in Virginia? Why is Trump so far ahead?
No, I don’t think that’s correct. The data is from the county Supervisor of Elections (or whatever their actual title is) and is coming as fast as they count the votes and release the information.
Because the rural areas count faster than the urban areas, many of which may still have lines.
Does he have an intern or somebody to show him where to find the Senate chambers?
Panhandle results coming in for FL, and Trump has pulled essentially even.
Trump now ahead in Florida.
Texas is blue at the moment.
Yes, that’s going to be true in lots of places.
Florida tied at 86% mark.
Ah, ok. I don’t have the ability to see individual county’s current vote total or % reporting on Google, I don’t think.
ETA: Holy shit, Texas is blue at the moment!
FUCK!
Clinton is leading Texas. Also, black is white, and night is day!
Have temporarily switched from news to a BBT rerun to calm down a little.
Look, I did my part in Virginia!
I think NYT is reporting % of precincts reporting, and CNN is reporting estimated % of total votes reporting. Note that % of precincts does not include any early votes that have come in, which account for a significant proportion of votes in some places.