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New Hampshire voters head to the polls today along with the rest of the nation to cast their presidential ballot for either Vice President Kamala Harris or former President Donald Trump.

It’s been a long, unprecedented race that has seen a sitting president drop out of the race, two assassination attempts on a former president, and the first Black and South Asian woman to be nominated for president on a major party ticket.

Granite Staters will choose between former U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte and former Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig in the most competitive governor’s race in the country. They will also choose representatives for Congress in both districts with Democratic incumbent Chris Pappas challenged by Republican Russel Prescott in District 1, which includes the Seacoast.

They will also vote in state House, state Senate, and state Executive Council races to determine whether Republicans keep control of power in state government.

Follow election coverage here all day and live results from New Hampshire after the polls close.

Durham absentee votes count delayed by petition

DURHAM — The process of counting absentee ballots in Durham has been put on hold until the polls close Tuesday evening, a delay ordered following a resident petition filed with the town.

The citizen protest petition was submitted and certified by the town clerk Tuesday before 8 a.m. It was signed off by town election moderator Christopher Regan, verifying it as a valid petition and ensuring that absentee ballots won’t be counted until after the polls have closed.

The polls in Durham are open from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. Tuesday.

According to Town Administrator Todd Selig, the town has over 1,000 mail-in absentee ballots that need to be counted. His worry is that the group will dispute every absentee ballot one-by-one Tuesday night rather than be challenged in one big batch.

“If every one of the 1,000 ballots are individually protested, then we will likely be here until the early hours of the morning. My hope is that having conversations with some of the protesters, my hope is that if they protest every one, they can do it en masse at the front, they can state their reasons and the moderator can come to a decision,” Selig said Tuesday afternoon.

A minimum of 10 signatures was required for the petition to be verified. The petition was signed off with 11 citizen signatures, according to the document shared by the town.

The protesters shared their perspective with town officials and their reasoning for filing the petition.

“My general understanding is that the protesters are concerned about the process statewide of handling absentee ballots,” Selig said. “What they’ve expressed to me … is that when you come in to vote, and you get your ballots, you are required to show some ID to prove who you are. They indicated that if you file or request an absentee ballot, you don’t necessarily have to do that. Rather you request it and then you sign the paperwork certifying you are who you say you are, but there is no third party certifying who you say you are. They have a concern about the process. Durham, as I understand, is one of a few handful of towns and cities where the absentee ballots are being challenged.”

New Hampshire Public Radio reported Tuesday a similar petition is also delaying the count in Londonderry.

While the petition is legal in New Hampshire, ultimately a municipality’s election moderator makes the determination whether to allow the challenge to the ballots to move forward.

“My understanding in talking with members of their group is that they have sort of a constitutional challenge to the absentee ballot process and they’re using Durham as a test case,” Selig said.

“In terms of the absentee ballot process, these are people serving overseas in the military whose ballots are in there. These are elderly people who may have health issues and may not be able to get to the polls in person, or residents who are out of town, can’t make it and voted absentee, which is a very routine and a very established process in New Hampshire,” Selig added.

A member of the New Hampshire attorney general’s office has been on hand on Tuesday at the polls, according to Selig.

Michael Garrity, spokesperson for the attorney general’s office, said, “Durham will wait to process its absentee ballots until the polls close and they have taken steps to make sure they can process as quickly as possible once the polls do close.”

Garrity said Durham and Londonderry were the only two towns the AG’s office was aware off affected by the petitions, adding Windham was delaying its count, too, voluntarily.

Ian Lenahan

Kamala Harris supporters in Portsmouth share hopes, anxiety

PORTSMOUTH — In elections past, a consistent place for voters to congregate is in the heart of Market Square, with advocates for presidential, gubernatorial and local candidates frequently lining along the brick sidewalks downtown.

That familiar scene played out on Tuesday afternoon, albeit with a limited group of sign-holders. In front of the historic North Church, two supporters of the Kamala Harris-Tim Walz Democratic ticket spoke about their fears of a second Donald Trump presidency.

Nicole Tuchman, an Iraq war veteran, and Pip Clews, both Portsmouth residents, have been friends for nearly 30 years. Clews said she is “nauseously optimistic” Harris will pull through to become the first woman, first Black woman and first South Asian American elected president.

“The alternative is terrifying,” Clews said.

Positioned next to big block letters spelling out “Harris,” Tuchman noted she hasn’t slept well in recent days and wasn’t eating much of her Ceres Bakery takeout Tuesday due to her nerves.

“There’s nothing good I can say about him being president,” Tuchman said.

A sole Trump supporter, carrying a sign and wearing a flag themed for the Republican presidential nominee, stood on the corner of Market Square opposite the Harris supporters. He declined to comment.

Cars passing through downtown Portsmouth late afternoon honked in support of both candidates. Recent polling has indicated Harris holds a steady lead over Trump in New Hampshire.

Clews and Tuchman hope that within a few days time, similar to in 2020, Democratic voters will descend upon Market Square to celebrate the election of Harris and Walz.

“Everything will change if he becomes president,” Clews said of Trump.

Clews is a member of the Portsmouth School Board but emphasized she is advocating for the Democratic nominee as a private citizen.

Ian Lenahan

Voter challenged at polls in Durham

DURHAM — A voter was challenged Tuesday by an observer at the polls at Oyster River High School, where many University of New Hampshire students were voting.

Voter registration is a hot topic in the college town, as some students who vote are from out of state, which is legal but opposed by some. According to Todd Selig, town administrator, the town typically has about 3,000 same-day voter registrations for presidential elections, and he had been anticipating challenges.

According to town moderator Chris Regan, a voter with an out-of-state driver’s license had previously voted in the presidential primary election in January, and had the same license when voting Tuesday. Observers of the voter registration process flagged this, arguing the person should have obtained a New Hampshire license to vote.

Secretary of State David Scanlan, who visited the Durham polls Tuesday, confirmed voters who claim a New Hampshire address as their domicile, meaning they live in the state the majority of the year, are expected to have a New Hampshire driver’s license.

“It may or may not have violated motor vehicle laws, [but] it does not disqualify you to vote in the election,” said Regan.

Scanlan agreed, but noted laws are complicated and each voter registration that requires review needs to be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Dick Swett, a former New Hampshire U.S. congressman, accompanied Scanlan at the Durham polls.

Swett said he is working on a project called Defend Democracy, a mission to re-instill confidence in voters that elections are accurate and fair with New Hampshire as a model for having a high rate of voter confidence.

“Local voting officials keep our trust in New Hampshire,” Swett said.

Sarah Donovan

UNH students vote with excitement

DURHAM — Sawyer Swenson, a University of New Hampshire student, dressed as George Washington as he voted.

“George Washington was the first president, of course, and you know voting is very important. No matter who you vote for, it doesn’t matter, I mean it does matter, but you should just show up to vote in the first place,” said Swenson.

He said he voted “mostly blue.”

Matas Aleksas, a first-time voter, said he came out to vote as he recently turned 18 and had been looking forward to it.

Aleksas voted because “it represents your beliefs … and putting your voice out there.”

Ava Bernacchi, a UNH sophomore, has helped the New Hampshire Democratic Party and worked with state Rep. Loren Selig, D-Durham, for the primary election. She also worked with Katheryn Mone’s campaign for Strafford County sheriff.

“I was super excited to vote for them, especially voting for all women down the ballot as well is just super cool,” said Bernacchi.

“I woke up this morning and felt very emotional because with how important this campaign is, it feels like I’ve gotta do my duty and get out there and vote,” said Bernacchi.

Sarah Donovan

Joyce Craig greets supporters in Exeter

EXETER — Joyce Craig, the Democratic nominee for governor, dropped by the polls at Talbot Gym Tuesday to thank her supporters, noting the “positive energy” as the crowd cheered and shouted her name.

“I feel like we have motivation and momentum on our side, as we’ve been knocking doors and meeting people over the last few days,” Craig said. “We’ve heard the support and encouragement and we’re feeling really, really good.”

Craig said while campaigning voters expressed concerns about affordable housing, reproductive freedom and public school funding – and that she’s “focused on solutions” to these key issues.

Craig was joined at the polls by Democratic U.S. Sen. Maggie Hassan and Congressman Chris Pappas.

“It’s really energizing to see the crowds today in New Hampshire,” said Pappas. “People are turning out and doing their civic duty, and I think that bodes well for our democracy and our ability to come together when it’s over, to solve problems and to move our state and our country forward.”

Voter turnout had been heavy since polls opened at 7 a.m., said town moderator Kate Miller, noting that 3,942 people, nearly a third of Exeter’s registered voters, had cast their votes by 2 p.m. The number does not reflect absentee ballots and ballots that need to be hand counted, she added. In 2022, Exeter had 12,144 registered voters.

Clad in a blue shirt and holding a Kamala Harris sign, Charles Fanning said the “substantial issues” that brought him out to the polls were the uncertainty of women’s reproductive rights and gun safety.

Fanning said the result of the election will be a choice between two different futures for the country: “We’re either going to move forward with democracy where the people are an important part of what happens in our government, or we’re going to move forward with a dictatorship.”

Across the way from Fanning, Fred Bird, a U.S. Air Force veteran, said the lack of border control has become a pressing issue for the country, noting that Donald Trump would change that.

“I was in the service for nine years… and I served in West Germany for four years and I was securing their border and nobody’s securing my border,” he said. “Everybody’s welcome to come to America, every single person, but you have to knock on the front door. I wouldn’t let you come into my house unless you knock at the front door.”

One of the platforms that Vice President Kamala Harris has been running on is her initiatives on helping middle-class families. However, Bird said, people shouldn’t rely on the government to help them.

“It’s not up to the government to take care of you, it’s not America, it’s not a socialist country,” he added. “The government is not supposed to give you health care, it’s not supposed to give you housing, it’s not supposed to take care of you… You shouldn’t expect the whole nation to help everybody, everybody should help themselves and help their neighbors.”

Aqeel Hisham

Rochester, Somersworth voting wards randomly chosen for NH audit

Two wards in local communities have been randomly selected by the New Hampshire secretary of state for post-Election Day audits.

Ballot counting devices from Ward 2 in Rochester and Ward 4 in Somersworth will be reviewed. The Rochester audit will be conducted on Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Concord, while the one for Somersworth will be held Thursday at 8 a.m., according to Secretary of State David Scanlan.

The announcement states: “The moderators in each location were notified after polls opened on November 5. Just one device from each location will be audited. The audits are open to the public and media.”

Several Seacoast and Strafford County area election moderators – Rochester state Sen. Jim Gray, Portsmouth state Rep. Joan Hamblet and Durham moderator Chris Regan – have been chosen for the audits.

Ballot counting devices from Bedford, Hudson, Laconia, Manchester, Moultonborough and Walpole were also selected at random for the audits. 

A report on the audits will be published online by the secretary of state’s office on Friday.

Ian Lenahan

Kelly Ayotte, Joyce Craig both upbeat on NH governor’s race

After casting her vote at Webster Elementary School in Manchester, Democratic candidate and former Mayor of Manchester Joyce Craig said she feels “great.” She said voters know what is “on the line” and that they are “ showing up to make sure that we are addressing what needs to happen in New Hampshire.”

At McLaughlin Middle School in Manchester, Republican candidate and former US Sen. Kelly Ayotte was not taking questions from the press, but her campaign spokesman John Corbett said that they are having a “great response” wherever they go and that the enthusiasm is high.

Manchester Mayor Jay Ruais, a Republican who was out supporting Ayotte at the middle school, said that the turnout is “sky high.”

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” he said, referring to the lines. “I went to [Wards] 7, 12, 10 and 1, and they’ve all been like: this around the corner outside the block.”

The polls have shown a very close race between the candidates, with Ayotte maintaining a slight lead in polls.

“We’ve worked hard the last year and a half,” Craig said, when asked whether the tight polls give her any concern. “We’ve done our job, and now, you know, we’ll see what the voters have to say.”

Margie Cullen

Long lines have Hampton voters waiting

HAMPTON — Since 7 a.m., hundreds of people lined up around Winnacunnet High School to carry out their civic duty. The one-hour line, which wraps nearly half-a-mile around the building, is the longest one Police Chief Alex Reno said he has witnessed in his 23 years in town.

“They are waiting in line for about 40-50 minutes, but so far everything has been civil and no issues,” he added.

By 11 a.m., Town Moderator Mark Gorayeb said 2,234 votes had been cast with nearly 600 new registered voters.

Clad in a red jacket and MAGA hat while holding a “Trump” sign, Jim Bennett’s hope for this election was clear, noting he wants “a stronger economy, lower fuel prices… safer border.”

“We’re either gonna become pretty much a socialist country if Kamala Harris gets in, and if Trump gets in, we’re gonna still have our freedom and we’ll remain a republic… where everybody’s votes count under a democracy,” he said. “We need to remain a Republican where everybody is involved in the process.”

On the other side of the electioneering section, Julie Moore said her support for Vice President Kamala Harris stems from her concern for democracy as well as women’s reproductive rights.

“It’s going to be paramount,” she said, referring to the outcome of the election. “I don’t want to quote the other side, but it’s just been scary with all the tactics that have been put up for us to see and to read and look at,” referring to Project 2025.

However, if the election results were to swing to Trump, Moore doesn’t think that there will be trouble.

“It won’t be the Democrats, that isn’t who we are at the core,” she said. “We have to accept the outcome.”

Aqeel Hisham

First-time voter cheered at Portsmouth High School polls

PORTSMOUTH — Sharon Nichols bustled through three long lines of voters in the Portsmouth High School gymnasium to find a young man donning a maroon sweatshirt Tuesday. Her mission? Confirming he was a first time-voter.

After he answered in the affirmative, Nichols put her hands high in the air and yelled out, “First-time voter!” Her cheers were met with clapping and whooping from other voters.

Every election, she seeks out young people throughout the day and praises them for their civic engagement.

“I love it. I love the fact that people are affirming their privilege to vote. We’re lucky to live in a country where it’s a democracy, and everybody has the right to vote, and every vote counts,” Nichols said.

It’s the third time Nichols, a moderator for the last eight years, is leading the Ward 4 election process during a presidential election. 

Voter turnout is expected to be high in Ward 4 on Tuesday, with Nichols and her team of volunteers prepared to see 80% of registered voters cast ballots. The presidential race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump is the key reason for the anticipated high turnout and the main reason the polling place was moved to the high school, rather than at the smaller Mary C. Dondero Elementary School, where the ward’s elections are typically held.

New voter registrations spiked in the ward during the September primary, according to Nichols. 

“Typically in Ward 4, we’re lucky if we get 40% (turnout), but during the primaries, we had a lot of people register as first-time voters. A lot of young people, and we had a lot of women register during the primary,” Nichols said. “So we knew it was going to be a high turnout with first-time voters, and it’s definitely a high turnout with women. We have a lot of older voters, too.”

A steady stream of residents moved in and out of the Andrew Jarvis Drive school Tuesday morning. By 9:45 p.m., 405 ballots had been submitted, and the team was preparing to begin counting the roughly 160 mail-in ballots cast in the ward. 

This is a consequential election,” Nichols said. “It’s tighter than I’ve ever seen in terms of the numbers.”

Portsmouth is historically liberal-leaning in state and presidential elections. Tuesday morning, just two men held signs outside, both encouraging down-ballot votes for Democrats.

The polls in Portsmouth opened at 8 a.m. Tuesday and will close at 8 p.m.

Ian Lenahan

New Hampshire election results will be reported live

Live results, including winners being called, will be updated live as follows after polls close and votes are counted:

NH races to watch: Live results from president to state government

NH governor: Live results for Kelly Ayotte vs. Joyce Craig

NH U.S. House: Live results from Pappas vs. Prescott and Goodlander vs. Williams

NH state Senate: Live results in all districts

NH state House: Live results in all districts

NH Executive Council: Live results for District 1 and District 3

‘I Voted’ stickers brought to you by NH fourth-graders

PORTSMOUTH — The in-person Election Day voting experience in New Hampshire can include buying treats from bake sales, catching up with neighbors and leaving with “I Voted” stickers.

This year’s stickers look a little different.

In summer of the 2023, New Hampshire Secretary of State David Scanlan and his team started the inaugural “I Voted” student sticker contest for fourth-graders across the Granite State. Over 1,000 entries from New Hampshire fourth grade students were submitted, and three were selected as the winners.

A Milton student drew the legendary late Old Man of the Mountain backdropped by the American flag in her design. A fourth-grader from Auburn was selected for his cartoon of New Hampshire fishing, while the third winner, a Mont Vernon student, drew a moose overlooking a valley amid fall foliage. All have the phrase “I Voted.”

Scanlan’s office announced the three winners in October 2023. Each of the three students’ designs have been distributed on stickers throughout the 2024 election cycle.

Ian Lenahan

Sen. Shaheen speaks out on reproductive rights at Dover polls

DOVER — Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire, made an appearance at Woodman Park Elementary School Tuesday morning, the city’s Ward 3 for voting, with her supporters.

“I think people are concerned by reproductive rights,” Shaheen said, touting the issue Democrats have been focusing on this election cycle. Shaheen is out supporting Democrats as her term runs through 2026.

Shaheen noted she has daughters and granddaughters, and she wants to ensure they have the same reproductive rights that were protected by Roe v. Wade before it was overturned in 2022 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Shaheen said she is seeing a gap of understanding between women over 65 who knew what things were like before Roe, where legal abortions were not protected and there were deaths from “back alley” abortions, versus younger people who had not previously experienced a nation with about the guaranteed right to an abortion in every state.

“I think it’s a big issue not just for women, but for husbands and sons,” said Shaheen.

Republicans have countered New Hampshire’s law allowing abortions up until 24 weeks is appropriate.

Moderator Gary Gilmore said the turnout was the highest he’s seen in the 20 years he’s been an election worker.

As of 10 a.m., Ward 3 had seen 1,100 ballots cast, which is already a 40%-50% turnout, said Gilmore.

Sarah Donovan

Dover Ward 1 voters share views on Trump, Harris and future of nation

DOVER — Affordable housing, lowering crime, the border, social welfare and global affairs were issues voters were focused on Tuesday morning at the heavily Democratic city’s Ward 1 polls at Frances G. Hopkins at Horne Street Elementary School.

Candace Williams and Andy Holtz, both on the executive committee for the Dover Democrats, shared why they were supporting Kamala Harris.

“She’s showed not just a vision for America, but the world. That vision isn’t just for the world, but for our Democratic allies,” said Holtz.

Holtz referenced Harris’ support of Ukraine, and allies such as NATO in addition to her support of tax credits for families, the economy and small businesses.

David Huppe, who said he is retired Rochester police officer, stood outside the school with signs in support of Donald Trump for president, and Kelly Ayotte for governor.

“He’s done great on the border and he’ll do it again,” said Huppe, stating border patrol as one of his main reasons for supporting Trump.

Shannon Merrill said, “I came out because I want the next four years to better.” Merrill referenced wanting to be able to buy a home, lowering crime and the economy as to reasons why she’s voting.

“I’d like to be able to buy a house at some point,” said Sully Freer, a young voter new to Dover and New Hampshire, originally from North Carolina.

According to moderator Chris Haugen, there were about 450 ballots cast by 8:15 a.m. With 3,350 registered voters in the ward, he’s expecting about an 80% turnout.

Sarah Donovan

Manchester voters line up with city at heart of Craig vs. Ayotte NH governor’s race

The line was already out the door, down the stairs and headed out onto the sidewalk at Webster Elementary School in Manchester at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Manchester has been a focal point of the New Hampshire governor’s race, with Republican Kelly Ayotte heavily criticizing the way Democrat Joyce Craig ran the city as mayor. For her part, Craig has touted her achievements in the city.

Interest in the competitive races for governor and president, along with down-ballot races, was evident. Manchester Ward 1 Selectman Jim Townsman said that the turnout was “quite robust” and “exciting.” He said that more than 400 people cast their ballots in the first hour.

Standing in line, Ashley Marcoux said she is voting for Craig.

“I really appreciate everything that she did in the city,” said Marcoux, a registered Democrat. “I think that she’s going to be an incredible governor and protect women’s rights and also bring our economy into the future.”

Eric Brown, a registered Republican, was holding a sign for Ayotte along the stairs into the polling place.

“I’ve lived in Manchester now for over 10 years. So before Joyce Craig, during Joyce Craig when she was mayor, and now after, and I saw the decline in our city, the homelessness crisis, the drug epidemic, and I didn’t think that her solutions were working,” Brown said. “So I’m supporting Kelly, because I think, especially as a former prosecutor and attorney general, she’ll be someone that’s good to help clean up our streets and a good partnership with with our current mayor, Jay Ruais.”

Both voters said as the biggest city in the state, they understood Manchester being a central part of the race. Marcoux said that voters in Manchester are focused on economic and social issues. Brown said that it’s good to highlight the issues in the city.

Margie Cullen

Trash talk hits polls in Manchester

Camille Craffey stood outside McLaughlin Middle School in Manchester offering mini trash cans to people waiting in line to vote.

“I am a big fan of making something negative positive,” said Craffey, a realtor and veteran. “So when our current President, Joe Biden, supposedly, said that all Trump supporters are garbage, I thought, what better way to flip the script?”

She put the tiny red garbage cans in bags with an American flag, a Trump sticker, and her business card.

The “trash” talk has been circulating among both parties since comedian Tony Hinchcliffe called Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage” at a Trump rally at Madison Square Garden on Oct. 27.

In a video call with Latino activists, Biden responded to those comments, saying, “The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters — his — his demonization of Latinos is unconscionable, and it’s un-American.”

Debate has swirled about whether Biden was referring to Hinchcliffe or Trump’s supporters.

On Sunday at a rally in Derry, New Hampshire, Republican vice-presidential candidate JD Vance criticized Vice President Kamala Harris for Biden’s “garbage” rhetoric, and then referred to her as “trash.”

“In two days, we are going to take out the trash in Washington, D.C., and the trash’s name is Kamala Harris,” he said. 

Margie Cullen

Rochester voters line up early, Trump supporters speak up

ROCHESTER — At 8 a.m., there was no parking readily available at the James W. Foley Memorial Community Center and a long line of voters already had formed. People were circling the lot looking for a space. 

Deputy Mayor Don Hamann said there was already a line when he arrived at 7:30, a half hour before the polls opened. 

“I am 73 and I have never missed an election. I think this one will be really busy all day. It has been nonstop since it started,” Hamann said, adding he had no predictions on results.

Naomi LaBonte, 12, is too young to vote but said, if she could, she would vote for Trump. Her mom, Jessica, agreed. “We need to get back the America we love. We need to stop living paycheck to paycheck.”

Waiting in line, Clyde Holland said “When the turnout is this big, it means change and that is what we need.”

First-time voter Dylan White said he has been watching the politics and the speeches, deciding Trump was the best choice. No one wanted to predict the governor’s race, saying it was too close to call. Most thought Ayotte’s name recognition would give her the edge. 

Karen Dandurant

Dixville Notch, NH vote: Donald Trump and Kamala Harris tie

DIXVILLE, N.H. — The voting in Dixville Notch fell in line with the national polls on Tuesday night in a race that couldn’t be any closer. Republican candidate Donald Trump and Democratic candidate Kamala Harris split the vote 3-3 to open Election Day in the 2024 race.

The tie is the first in Dixville Notch since 2012, when Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney split the vote 5-5 among the 10 registered voters.

Voting took place at midnight in Dixville Notch on Tuesday, a unique tradition in New Hampshire that began in 1960. Six voters, including four registered Republicans and two undeclared, cast their ballots.

The results are declared first at Dixville Notch, the “first in the nation” vote for the presidential election. The press flooded into The Balsams Resort at the Tillotson House in Dixville, covering a nationally televised event on stations like CNN and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), as there were more media covering the event than there were voters casting their ballots.

Donald Trump has typically struggled in Dixville Notch but this year earned a split in the tight battleground state of New Hampshire. The split goes against a common trend at Dixville Notch. President Joe Biden won all five votes cast by Dixville Notch voters in the 2020 presidential election. Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton defeated the Republican candidate 4-2 in the 2016 presidential election.

Harris and Trump aim to carry their momentum from Dixville Notch into today’s rambunctious Election Day. As the candidates made their final arguments, the nation is one day closer to knowing the final results of this incredibly tight race.

Colin Struckman, Franklin Pierce University

Report from Dixville Notch is shared by partners in the Granite State News Collaborative. For more information, visit collaborativenh.org.

When do polls open and close?

Most polls on the Seacoast open between 7 and 8 a.m and close between 7 and 8 p.m.

You can find your polling place on the Secretary of State’s website.

Can you register to vote on Election Day?

If you are at least 18 years old, a U.S. citizen, and domiciled in a New Hampshire town or city ward, you may register to vote on Election Day at your polling location. You must fill out a voter registration form and show proof of identity, age, citizenship and having established a domicile. If you don’t have the documents with you on Election Day, you may prove those qualifications by completing an affidavit.

New Hampshire Secretary of State David Scanlan is expecting a high number of voters to register at the polls on Election Day.

What should I bring to the polls?

If you’re registering to vote for the first time at the polls, you’ll need to bring electronic or printed copies of documents that prove you meet the age, citizenship, identity, and domicile requirements. A New Hampshire driver’s license with your current address would prove many of these requirements, but you’ll still need a form of birth certificate, U.S. passport, naturalization papers, or a record confirming that you are a US citizen who was born abroad to satisfy the citizenship requirement.

However, if you don’t have proper identification, you can still vote with something called an “Affidavit Ballot.”

What can I wear to the polls?

You can wear anything you want, as long as nothing suggests support of a certain candidate or party. A MAGA hat or a Harris T-shirt, for example, would not be allowed at a polling place.

That’s because it would be considered a form of electioneering, which means to work for the success of a particular candidate, party, or issue in an election, and it is not permitted inside a polling place under New Hampshire law. 

Violators are subject to a fine of up to $1,000. More details on electioneering can be found here.

Will there be lines at my polling place?

Local election officials say there may be lines when registering to vote or voting at polling places. However, the secretary of state has directed all polling places to keep wait times under 30 minutes.

When will we see election results?

The results tallying process takes place in the polls immediately after they close. A continuous process, the moderator will publicly announce the results after they have been tallied and reconciled. Any member of the public can observe this process.

Scanlan expects polling places to announce results the night of the election or into the early hours of the following morning.

However, it’s possible the national result of the presidential election will not be announced on election night. Polls show the election between Harris and Trump to be very tight, and, in some states, counting the votes and certifying the results can take days, or even weeks.

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