Washington: What to expect on election night

Ballot counting totals can be slow in vote-by mail state

The Associated Press

What to expect on election night in Washington state?

A long wait.

If control of the U.S. House comes down to congressional races there, it could take days — or weeks — for the nation to know the outcome.

Washington’s vote-by-mail system leads to some of the highest voter turnout in the nation, but it’s not a system that leads to fast results.

Two of the state’s 10 U.S. House seats have garnered national attention heading into November: the 8th district, where Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier faces Republican Matt Larkin; and the 3rd district, which became an open contest after the Republican incumbent, Jaime Herrera Beutler, was ousted by a candidate backed by former President Donald Trump.

The top race in Washington, however, is between Democratic U.S. Sen. Patty Murray of Seattle, who is seeking a sixth term, against Republican Tiffany Smiley of Spokane, a first-time candidate.

In another key race, voters will decide whether to elect their first Democratic secretary of state in six decades or, instead, send a longtime county auditor to be the state’s first nonpartisan chief elections officer.

Republicans were shut out of the state’s “top two” primary in August, which sent current Democratic Secretary of State Steve Hobbs and nonpartisan Pierce County Auditor Julie Anderson to the general election. Republican Rep. Brad Klippert won’t appear on the ballot but is mounting a write-in campaign backed by the state GOP.

All 98 seats in the state House are up for election, as are 25 of the 49 in the Senate, with several expected to be competitive.

Here’s a look at what to expect on election night, when polls close at 8 p.m. Pacific Time:

How Washington votes

Washington is true blue when it comes to most offices — Joe Biden easily won the 2020 presidential election here, and Democrats control the Legislature and hold all statewide elected offices.

But Republicans run competitive campaigns across the state and hold sway in certain areas. The GOP occupies congressional seats east of the Cascades, and rural areas west of the mountains also lean conservative, adding competition to the two key congressional races there.

The Puget Sound area, especially King County, is where most of the population is, and where Democrats dominate. For statewide Republican candidates to stay competitive, they have to limit their loss margins there.

Washington is a vote-by-mail state and each registered voter is automatically sent a ballot. Once voters return their ballots, either by mail or in a drop box, they can confirm via a state-run website that they have been received by the county auditor’s office, and where it is in the process.

Because a ballot only needs to be postmarked by Election Day, or dropped in a drop box by 8 p.m. election night, about half of the vote is outstanding at the end of the night, making it impossible to quickly determine the winner of close races.

Washington’s 39 counties all post their initial results after 8 p.m. Many counties do daily updates after that, but because of the number of steps involved in ballot verification — including sorting, signature verification and assessment of ballots for extraneous marks — the updates can feel painfully slow for candidates locked in close races and the media organizations covering them.

Decision notes

AP will tabulate and declare winners in 113 contested elections in Washington, including one U.S. Senate seat, secretary of state and 10 U.S. House races. AP will tally total write-in votes in the secretary of state’s race.

The AP does not make projections and will only declare a winner when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidate to close the gap.

Each county will post one report on election night and again after subsequent counts of the mailed ballots as they come in.

Because of printing constraints, the Peninsula Daily News will report initial results in Clallam and Jefferson counties only online Tuesday with full reaction stories in print on Thursday and subsequent updates.

Other questions

Q: How long does counting usually take?

A: Counting is slow in Washington. In 2020, 18.3 percent of the total vote was not yet counted on election night. Totals didn’t reach 100 percent until 10 days after the election.

Because ballots only have to be postmarked by Election Day, it can take weeks to decide close races. Counties can keep counting up until Nov. 29, the day they certify results.

Q: What are the pitfalls for early returns?

A: People who are in the lead on election night may ultimately lose once all the ballots are counted. Also, because ballots are still arriving at election offices days after Election Day, it’s difficult to know how many ballots are truly outstanding.

Q: What happens after Tuesday?

A: Washington law provides for mandatory recounts if the gap between candidates is less than half of 1 percent and closer than 2,000 votes. In statewide races, a manual recount is mandatory if the margin is less than 1,000 votes and less then 0.25 percent of total votes cast for the top two. In other offices, manual recount is mandatory when the margin is less than 150 votes or less than or equal to 0.25 percent of votes cast for the top two candidates.

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The Associated Press has more information at https://apnews.com/hub/explaining-the-elections.

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