Connecticut voters will vote for president, fill seats for all five U.S. Representatives, one of the two U.S. Senate seats, plus seats in the General Assembly.
The results are coming in for several key Congressional races that took place across the Tri-State area, including Connecticut.
Connecticut cities and town clerks continued counting well after midnight on Tuesday. Here's where the numbers stand.
Did Connecticut’s first year of early voting cut down on polling lines on Election Day? Almost 750,000 people voted early. Connecticut Secretary of the State Stephanie Thomas called it a success, and said it did cut down on those long lines in some locations.
Here's what we know and don't know about results: Vice President Kamala Harris won Connecticut, with the Associated Press calling the presidential race just minutes after polls closed in Connecticut. As of 5 a.m., she won over Republican Donald Trump by a margin of about 10 percent in Connecticut.
Connecticut's Democratic leaders said Wednesday they were disappointed with the election of Donald Trump but would work across the aisle and uphold the values of Connecticut residents. U.S. Rep Joe Courtney,
Connecticut's tabulators, the machines you feed your ballot into, are nearly 20 years old. Beginning next summer, however, they'll get swapped out for updated ones.
Absentee voting became increasingly popular during the pandemic, and now Connecticut voters have approved a ballot measure making it easier for more people to vote by mail in future elections.
Donald Trump's election as president will have major implications for Connecticut, from deportations to transgender rights to climate funding.
Voters in Connecticut headed to the polls on Nov. 5, casting their ballot in the presidential race and several down-ballot races.
Connecticut voters are deciding whether to get rid of rules preventing the state from joining the 36 others that allow people to cast ballots by mail or through drop boxes without needing an excuse.