Amid pandemic, the long decline of in-person voting on Election Day is likely to accelerate this year
Votes cast on Election Day have grown steadily less significant over the past several election cycles as a share of total votes cast.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Votes cast on Election Day have grown steadily less significant over the past several election cycles as a share of total votes cast.
Americans voted in record numbers in last year’s presidential election, casting nearly 158.4 million ballots.
Here’s a look back at some of the closest races of elections past and an assessment of just how common such races are.
Looking back at presidential elections since 1828, the winner’s electoral vote share has, on average, been 1.36 times his popular vote share.
In the 2016 general election, voters submitted nearly 33.5 million mail ballots, but more than 400,000 (1.2% of the total) weren’t counted.
We developed this explainer to help people understand how, and why, the complex U.S. electoral process is even more so this time around.
Mail-in ballots accounted for just over half of this year’s primary votes cast in the 37 states (plus D.C.) for which data is available.
No lame-duck session in the nearly 5 decades for which data is available has been as legislatively productive as that of the 116th Congress.
Here are five important things to know before the first presidential debate kicks off next month in Cleveland.
So far, 28 representatives have announced they’re retiring; four other Republicans and three Democrats are running for other offices instead.
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