Us election results

  1. 2020 United States elections
  2. 2020 United States presidential election
  3. Candidates enter race for Ecuador's crowded early elections
  4. States introduced nearly 200 bills in 2023 to 'subvert' elections, report finds


Download: Us election results
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Source: Election results and race calls are from The Associated Press. Produced by Michael Andre, Neil Berg, Matthew Bloch, Irineo Cabreros, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Lindsey Rogers Cook, Annie Daniel, Saurabh Datar, Tiff Fehr, Andrew Fischer, Martín González Gómez, Will Houp, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. Lee, Ilana Marcus, Charlie Smart and Isaac White. Editing by Wilson Andrews, William P. Davis, Amy Hughes, Ben Koski and Allison McCartney.

2020 United States elections

Democratic hold Republican hold Republican gain New Progressive hold Nonpartisan No election The 2020 United States elections were held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Biden became his party's nominee after defeating numerous challengers in the Regularly-scheduled elections were held in 86 of the 99 After Biden won the election, Trump and other Republicans refused to concede, making baseless and disproven claims of widespread voter fraud, Federal elections Presidential election Main article: 2020 U.S. presidential election • • • • • • • Polling • • • News media endorsements • • • • • • • • Attempts to overturn • • • Lawsuits • • • • • • reactions • • • Democratic Party • • • • • • • • Polling • • • • • • • Republican Party • • • • • • • • Third parties • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ← 2016 2020 2024→ • v • t • e The U.S. presidential election of 2020 was the 59th quadrennial Biden won the election with 306 electoral votes and 51.3% of the national popular vote, compared to Trump's 232 electoral votes and 46.9% of the popular vote. Biden won every state that 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Incumbent Trump won re-nomination by his party after facing token opposition in the Biden is the oldest individual to win a US presidential election, Main article: ↓ 33 12 2 23 30 33 Democrats not up 12 Democrats up 23 Republicans up 30 Republicans not up Control of Senate seats by class after the 2020 elections Democratic Independent Republican Next elections 1 21 2 10 2 13 0 20 3 14 0 2...

2020 United States presidential election

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Candidates enter race for Ecuador's crowded early elections

QUITO, June 14 (Reuters) - Eight candidates have registered to run in Ecuador's presidential elections in August, the electoral court said on Wednesday, kicking off a campaign to fill the spot to be left early by current President Guillermo Lasso. Ecuadoreans will hit the polls on Aug. 20 to vote for their new president as well as all members of the 137-seat Congress. Lasso, in May, Those elected in August will hold office until May 2025, when regularly scheduled elections will take place. Lasso and his party will not participate in the elections. Former President Rafael Correa's Citizen Revolution movement entered politician Luisa Gonzalez, who has said that if she wins the presidency, she will call a Constituent Assembly to rewrite the Constitution. Conservative Social Christian Party (PSC), which joined in impeachment proceedings against Lasso, backed 40-year-old Jan Topic, a soldier-turned-businessman who says his military experience lends itself to fighting crime and drug gangs. Indigenous leader Yaku Perez will represent a political coalition in his second run for the presidency. In 2021, Perez surprised with turn-out on his plan to fight oil and mining activities in the country. Former Vice President Otto Sonnenholzner, who resigned in 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic ravaged Ecuadorean cities, will also run.

States introduced nearly 200 bills in 2023 to 'subvert' elections, report finds

That number is on pace with those from sessions in the past two years, which the groups also tracked. Fifteen of the bills introduced this year have so far been enacted. NBC News obtained the report ahead of its public release Thursday morning. Its findings suggest that the election denial movement is alive and well in statehouses across the U.S. — even though an overwhelming number of election deniers (candidates who have echoed former President The analysis defined election subversion as the result of any bill that proposed one of five actions: usurping control over election results, requiring partisan or unprofessional election audits or reviews of results, seizing power over election responsibilities, creating unworkable burdens in election administration or imposing disproportionate criminal or other penalties. “Legislators are trying to make it harder for trusted election officials to do their jobs, and easier for partisan politicians to overturn the will of the voters. While many may think this threat abated after the midterms, it most certainly did not,” Maya Ingram, a senior policy development counsel at the States United Democracy Center, said in a statement to NBC News. “In fact, legislators are coming up with new ways to interfere with elections.” The authors of the analysis wrote that many of the bills are designed “to inject confusion and delays into the election process, which increases the likelihood of attempted subversion and can give rise to disinformati...