Voters wait in line on November 3, at the Tempe History Museum polling place, 809 E. Southern Avenue, Tempe, Arizona. Val Dudley, right, waits in line to vote on November 3, at the Tempe History Museum polling place, 809 E. Southern Avenue, Tempe, Arizona. Late Monday, Cochise County Recorder Lisa Marra tweeted that her office had received dozens of calls from people demanding to know when their ballots had been counted. Cochise County, stretching from east of Tucson down to the US-Mexico border, also voted for Trump in 2016. Because the President said if they didn’t get that info to go vote again tomorrow.
Source: The Standard November 03, 2020 15:56 UTC