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Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram users are showing off their Election Day pride. (article)
On today's show: A look at some early results from Guam and a tiny town in New Hampshire; the future of Twitter beyond the 2016 election; a campaign playlist to listen to at the polls. (episode)
Takeaway Washington Correspondent Todd Zwillich shares updates from the all-important swing state of Pennsylvania.
The future is here. Today, a coalition of news organizations is bringing the world real time election analysis based on web analytics and other data in a project known as Electionland.
The city of Miami says banks like Wells Fargo are violating the Fair Housing Act (FHA). Today, the Supreme Court will hear arguments on the case, which questions the scope of the FHA.
Dixville Notch, New Hampshire is often labeled the first-in-the-nation to vote. The town, which is made up of just 8 people, heads to the polls at midnight. Find out the results here.
Since 1980, voters in Guam have cast their ballots in an unbinding straw poll for every presidential election. For 32 years, their votes have predicted the next president.
John Schaefer, host of WNYC's Soundcheck and New Sounds, gives us a playlist for your visit to the polls and to get you through the day.
It's been an intense campaign, but we couldn't pass up one more chance to look back at the highs and lows of the 2016 election.
Gambling on political elections has been legal in the U.K. since 1961, and there's nothing they love more than placing a wager on U.S. races.
Twitter announced that people in the United States have sent one billion tweets about the 2016 election since last August. But will it still be around in four years?