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Official 2024 Election Results
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(View latest results from Maryland including by county:)
Official 2024 Election Results
(Eastern Shore of Virginia:)
(Other Delmarva sources:)
(Shore Daily News)
Voters both locally and statewide have chosen opponents in the November election.
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Cao and Cotter-Smasal winners in Primary Races - Shore Daily News
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2024 Election Results (maryland.gov)
So why are candidates for delegate to Democrat National Convention required to list whether they are male or female? Does it matter? Are there quotas for X number of males and X number of females? Are they required to list their race, as well? I thought we were beyond all this crap.
Unofficial 2022 Election Results (maryland.gov)
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https://shoredailynews.com/headlines/youngkin-elected-governor
Bloxom to return to the House of Delegates - Shore Daily News
In the race for state Senate, Michael James called Mathias to concede and congratulate him on his victory after learning Mathias holds 23,527 votes to Michael James' 22,896 -- a margin of 631.
In a statement to The Daily Times, James said it had been "an honor and a privilege" to participate in the election.
"Though I wish the outcome was different, I truly believe we influenced and helped shape the agenda for the Eastern Shore with our ideas, our positions and with the honest and assertive nature of our campaign," James said.
Jim Mathias was unable to be reached for comment.
With 10,465 votes, Joel Todd will not be able to overcome the 90-vote lead Oglesby holds at the final canvass. Even if Todd receives all possible 85 votes in the final canvass, he would still be 5 votes shy of a tie.
"We are thrilled by the outcome and with the way the campaign was run," Oglesby said. "I am thrilled to be looking down the road and looking forward to being a productive state's attorney."
Oglesby was able to speak to Todd after the votes were totaled and said the two have already been working together and plan to continue working together to bring Oglesby up to speed on pending cases.
In a statement provided to The Daily Times, Todd said he will work to make the transition as smooth as possible.
"It has been my honor and my pleasure to serve the citizens and visitors of Worcester County as a prosecutor since July 1, 1985," Todd said. "The role of state's attorney is at times difficult and demanding with a need, sometimes, to balance what is popular against what is ethical and what is just. During my time in office I have learned that what is popular is not always right and what is right is not always popular."
In total, Oglesby holds 10,555 votes.
The next canvass is scheduled to be held Nov. 22 when 35 absentee ballots will be counted, in addition to 14 overseas ballots, which have already been received by the Worcester County Board of Elections. However, that number is subject to change.
The board mailed out 50 ballots to overseas citizens and soldiers. If they were returned to the board by Nov. 22, they will be counted in the final canvass.
The computer program that counts votes off the memory cards in voting machines kept crashing Tuesday night, so officials had to slow down, she said this morning. Each memory card takes about two minutes to upload, and there are more than 2,000 machines in the county, so uploading one memory card at a time onto the election board's computers would take about six or seven hours after polls closed.
"It got to the point where we could only do about one card at a time," she said.
Meanwhile, in four or five precincts, judges left the memory cards in the machines.
Today, election board workers are going to those precincts, including one at the Charlestown retirement community, to retrieve the memory cards and upload those votes.
"This does happen, it has happened in the past," she said. "Every election, there's a problem. There's always a precinct or two that doesn't bring back a card."
Brown expects the votes to be tallied by this afternoon, but even then they won't be official.
Even as the election board officials set out to tally the missing votes, some candidates were checking results. Shown here at the board offices are Councilman Kenneth Oliver, a Democrat from Distrct 4, and Rebecca Dongarra, a Democrat from District 1.