New Hampshire hamlet early voting ends in a tie on Election Day
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have each received three votes in this tiny New Hampshire community, which has traditionally opened its polls at midnight, well before the rest of the country.
Voters in Dixville Notch, a small US hamlet, kicked off Election Day in the early hours of Tuesday with a tied vote, reflecting the razor-thin margins seen in national polls for the presidential race.
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump each received three votes in this tiny New Hampshire community, which has traditionally opened its polls at midnight, well before the rest of the country.
The Democratic vice president and the Republican former president are locked in a highly competitive and tense race, with most opinion polls showing them neck and neck.
As the vote began, an accordion rendition of the US national anthem was played for the crowd of journalists gathered for the occasion.
Under New Hampshire law, towns with fewer than 100 residents can open their polling stations at midnight and close them once all registered voters have cast their ballots.
In 2020, Dixville Notch made headlines when all its residents voted unanimously for Joe Biden—only the second time a presidential candidate had swept the town since it began its midnight voting tradition in 1960.
While most polling stations along the East Coast will open around 6:00 or 7:00 am on Tuesday, Dixville Notch voters also made waves earlier this year. In January’s New Hampshire primary, the town handed a unanimous victory to Republican candidate Nikki Haley, though she later exited the race due to Trump's significant lead.
Notably, three voters in Dixville Notch chose not to support Trump in the general election, despite his dominance in the primary.
Voting in turmoil: Americans brace for polls amid unrest fears
Election Day has arrived in the United States, with tens of millions of voters preparing to head to the polls on Tuesday for one of the closest and most significant contests in modern US history, The Guardian reported.
Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump appear to be locked in a razor-thin race, with national opinion polls showing little change in recent weeks.
The situation is similar in seven critical swing states—Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, and North Carolina. Recent polling has failed to reveal a clear pattern or advantage for either candidate in these electoral battlegrounds, although most experts agree that the winner of Pennsylvania is likely to gain a significant edge.
“If we win Pennsylvania, we win the whole ball of wax,” Trump, 78, declared at a rally in Reading during a frantic final day of campaigning in the state. Later, in Pittsburgh, he framed the election as a choice between “a golden age of America” if he returns to the White House or “four more years of misery, failure and disaster” under Harris.
Harris, 60, spent all of Monday in Pennsylvania, wrapping up her campaign in Philadelphia alongside singer Lady Gaga and TV personality Oprah Winfrey, who warned about the threat Trump poses to democracy. “We don’t get to sit this one out,” Winfrey stated. “If we don’t show up tomorrow, it is entirely possible that we will not have the opportunity to ever cast a ballot again.”
Swing states hold the key to election victory in electoral college showdown
The swing states will ultimately decide the election, as the US political system determines outcomes not by the national popular vote but through an electoral college that allocates electors based roughly on each state's population size. A candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win, and battleground states are those where polls suggest outcomes could go either way.
More than 78 million early ballots have been cast, but the final results may not be known quickly. With such tight polling, full results from crucial swing states are unlikely to be available on Tuesday night and may not even come in on Wednesday, leaving the US and the world anxiously awaiting the identity of the next president.
A turning point for America
The election marks the conclusion of an extraordinary and, in many respects, unprecedented campaign that has significantly polarized American society and heightened anxiety among many citizens, with warnings of potential civil unrest, particularly if Harris wins and Trump contests the results.
Throughout her campaign, Harris has consistently highlighted the autocratic threat posed by Trump. In her final major event, she held a rally attended by 75,000 supporters at the Ellipse in Washington, the same location where Trump encouraged his followers to storm the Capitol on January 6, 2021.
“On day one, if elected, Donald Trump would walk into that office with an enemies list. When elected, I will walk in with a to-do list full of priorities on what I will get done for the American people,” Harris told the crowd.
Her campaign has aimed to signify a turning point away from the Trump era and the dangers of his potential return to the White House. She has recognized that labeling Trump a fascist accurately reflects his political beliefs and the goals of his movement, while also asserting that she embodies a choice that will address the needs of all facets of America’s deeply divided political landscape.
Trump's grievance-fueled campaign sparks fears of violence and division
Trump, on the other hand, has conducted a campaign driven by a profound sense of grievance, stemming from his personal legal challenges and the perception among many of his supporters that America is suffering under Democratic rule.
This feeling of victimhood has been amplified by falsehoods and conspiracy theories that portray Biden and Harris as extreme leftists responsible for destroying the American economy through high inflation and a fixation on identity politics.
Additionally, Trump has made immigration and border security central to his campaign, depicting America as overrun with crime attributed to illegal immigration, often resorting to outright racism and fearmongering. He has described undocumented immigrants as “animals” with “bad genes” who are “poisoning the blood of our country.”
The stark divisions between the two campaigns and the rhetoric used by candidates—particularly Trump and his allies—have raised significant concerns about potential violence or unrest on Election Day and during the vote-counting process. In the lead-up to the election, ballot drop boxes designated for early voting were vandalized in several states.
Trump himself has faced two assassination attempts during the campaign. At a rally in Pennsylvania, a bullet grazed his ear, and at a golf course in Florida, a gunman was poised to ambush him but was thwarted by a vigilant Secret Service agent before he could fire. Neither assailant appeared to have a coherent political motivation or clear alignment with either side.