EXPLAINER: Despite the angst, voting problems not widespread
WASHINGTON — In Spalding County, Georgia, machine problems led to a two-hour extension for voting. Wait times stretched beyond an hour at four voting centres in Baltimore. And this, unique to 2020: Sanitizer on voters’ hands caused a ballot scanner to jam at a polling place in Des Moines, Iowa.
Minor problems like these happen during every election. But Tuesday’s voting appeared largely free of any major glitches — despite being held during a deadly pandemic that has killed more than 230,000 Americans and infected more than 9 million.
The FBI was investigating reports of efforts to discourage people from voting using automated calls in a few states. Such reports are common in every election.
But there were no signs Tuesday of large-scale voter intimidation efforts or clashes at the polls, as some had feared, given the intensity on either side of the hotly contested race between Republican President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden.