On Election Day in Arizona, the polls closed at 7 p.m. on Nov. 5. Two days later, only 69% of the ballots have been counted in the Grand Canyon State. Nevada is also still counting ballots, with 90% of the vote tabulated.
Although President-elect Donald Trump seems to have a path to victory in both states, key senate races still hang in the balance.
Why does Arizona take days to count and process ballots?
It comes down to the returned early ballots that need to be processed and scanned to verify voters’ signatures before those votes can be counted.
Early ballots dropped off on Election Day cannot be counted until after Election Day because of the signature verification process. This can take days, depending on the number of voters who dropped off early ballots on Election Day.
Arizona law also allows a five-day curing period for county election officials to “ensure only valid signatures are counted.”
“State law provides voters with questionable signatures five calendar days after the 2024 general election to confirm their signature,” elections officials said.
The law also lets political parties conduct a random hand count of ballots.
County officials in Arizona cannot declare election results until Nov. 11 at the earliest, according to Arizona law. The secretary of state has until Nov. 25 to canvass those results.
The Arizona Clean Elections Commission said the process is designed to protect the integrity and accuracy of the vote count.
To help speed up the process, lawmakers passed a bill in February 2024 allowing voters dropping off their early ballots on Election Day to stand in line and show their ID. This would allow their signatures to be verified immediately, bypassing the need for later verification.
However, more than 225,000 early ballots were dropped off on Election Day in Maricopa County alone.
Maricopa County election officials had estimated before Election Day it would take at least 10 days to count all ballots.
Nevada’s ballot counting process
In Nevada, state law allows mail-in ballots with no postmark or an unclear postmark to be counted until 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 8. Ballots postmarked by Election Day can be counted until 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 9.
Nevada state law also permits a signature curing process through Nov. 12.
In 2020, Nevada did not declare now-President Joe Biden the winner until four days after Election Day.