As of Monday, the day before the deadline, less than 10,000 Nevada mail-in vote still needed personal identification in order for those citizens ‘ decisions to be counted.
According to the secretary of state’s office in Nevada, Clark County received 9 956 votes that needed to be resolved on Monday.
While the high-profile tribes have been decided, these votes, if cured, may make a difference among tighter events.
Those include the competition for North Las Vegas City Council’s Ward 2, where Councilwoman Ruth Garcia-Anderson was trailing business Robert” Twix” Taylor by 63 vote.
In the Nevada Legislature, Sen. Dallas Harris was behind 852 seats against Democratic Lori Rogich.
Assemblywoman Sandra Jauregui was in the lead over Republican Rafael Arroyo-Montalvo by 358 vote, while Assemblyman Max Carter held Republican Nancy Roecker at 295.
Amy Ferreira was in the lead with 534 vote for the Las Vegas Justice Court Department 8 determine place.
Officers, events reach out
Election leaders should have spoken with citizens who needed to get their names removed. Furthermore, both main parties stated that they were contacting them via phone or by visiting their homes.
Democratic and small group citizens — classified as “other” in the secretary of state’s office statistics — accounted for 5, 500 of the email votes that still need curing, compared with 2, 477 for Republicans and 2, 029 for Democrats as of Monday.
As of late Monday night, 22, 138 citizens had verified their names overall. The healing only applies to mail-in vote, in-person citizens ‘ names were verified when they checked in at electoral areas.
As of Monday, registered Democrats had cured 81.4 % of email vote received with personal issues. Republicans had cured 69.4 % and “other” voters had cured 58.4 %, according to secretary of state’s office data.
Curing ends Tuesday
Citizens have until 5 p. m. Tuesday to treat petitions. To treat a ballot, visit remedy. international or visit 702-455-6552.
Every available Nevada voting deserves to have their voting counted and heard, and unique identification is a crucial security check during the voting process, according to Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar in a statement last week.” We are a battleground state, and races may be near up and down the ballot.
With a 70.8 % turnout rate, more than 1.4 million Nevada voters cast a ballot in the General Election, according to the secretary of state. That’s almost a 7 percentage point decrease from the 2020 election.
This time around, 654, 984 Nevadans voted by mail, 543, 354 were early, in-person voters and 247, 292 voted Election Day.
President-elect Donald Trump was the first Republican to win Nevada since 2004, and Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nevada, narrowly held off a challenge from Republican Sam Brown.
Nevada’s congressional candidates also retained their seats.
On Thursday, local courts will examine their returns and send them to the Nevada Supreme Court on November 26.
For the presidential race, the Electoral College will meet on Dec. 17 and the U. S. Congress will certify the results on Jan. 6. Inauguration Day is Jan. 20.
___
© 2024 Las Vegas Review-Journal
Distributed by , Tribune Content Agency, LLC.