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I never hear the media announcing the totals from the absentee ballots. When are they counted and added to the grand total?

2006-10-03 16:23:20 · 6 answers · asked by Patty 1 in Politics & Government Elections

6 answers

They do unless they are votes from deployed military, then if it's a blue state, they get thrown out. I guess no one wants to listen to military voters who are putting their lives on the line to ensure this country stays free.

2006-10-04 16:40:17 · answer #1 · answered by Jeff F 4 · 0 1

In Tennessee absentee ballots are counted the day of the election by the absentee counting board. The counting board consist of democrats and republicans. They meet at the election commission office around 1:30 (after the mail has run so that all ballots are in) and proceed to count the ballots. The totals are added in with the election night totals.

2006-10-04 02:33:17 · answer #2 · answered by tnmtngirl 5 · 0 0

As an election worker in Ohio, i will allow you to recognize Ohio regulation calls for all valid absentee ballots to rely no matter if the might want to no longer result the election effects. a minimum of it truly is what the BOE tells election workers in the time of preparation. i have not easily study that regulation. I requested an same question 2 weeks in the past and pronounced an reliable source became required to be 'perfect answer'. Of the 4 solutions I received, one stated "No reliable source is needed" and one linked training on a thanks to get an absentee poll. the different 2 stated some thing like 'i wish so'. I withdrew the question. EDIT: I only study an answer that claimed you could't vote for subject matters on absentee ballots. I easily have voted absentee when you consider that Nov 2004 and there have been subject matters on each absentee pollI easily have had.

2016-11-26 01:42:54 · answer #3 · answered by chafton 3 · 0 0

Depends on the State constitution. Some States only count them in the event of a tie, others count them after the regular ballots are tallied.

2006-10-03 21:40:35 · answer #4 · answered by CV59StormVet 5 · 0 0

They occasionally do, but it is very difficult to know whether they are actually counted and by whom. People should be encouraged to volunteer as ballot counters, or at least take the opportunity in order to watch what happens. Republicans have in the past, controlled the process.

2006-10-03 16:35:57 · answer #5 · answered by Reba K 6 · 0 1

In my state, PA, they are opened and counted and tallied in the polling stations after the polls are closed.

2006-10-03 17:10:36 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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