Presidential Election 2012
New York polls close at 9 p.m. EST, and projections were immediately made that the Empire State will lead for President Barack Obama for a second term.
While Nate Silver is reaping accolades for his pitch-perfect predictions of the electoral vote in every state, his model analyzed polls conducted by many competing polling firms.
The numbers are rolling in but President Barack Obama will serve a second term as the 44th president of the United States.
The traditionalists were wrong last night, predicting a close election, or possibly even a Romney win.
President Obama’s victory was inexorable, as one-by-one, each swing state was called in his favor by the major networks.
The most unpopular House of Representatives in modern times was left pretty much unchanged by voters on Tuesday with control firmly in Republican hands, according to projections.
President Barack Obama trails Mitt Romney in total electoral votes, 143 to 153, but has secured the battleground state of Michigan, reports Politico.
Up to the minute election results
A neck-and-neck White House race reached a frantic conclusion on Tuesday as voters chose between President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney in a decision that will set the course for two starkly different visions for the country.
The election's results are trickling in, and Mitt Romney now holds 33 electoral college votes to Mr. Obama's 3.
With all the predictions for tonight’s election flying around, it’s time for me to finally weigh in.
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has the opportunity to win up to half of the 50 states, that’s without the critical swing states.
While major news networks have agreed not to release any exit poll data before polls close, for fear of influencing voters who haven’t yet voted, there are plenty of predictions for tonight’s election.
Barack Obama grasps a small 1.5 percent lead on Mitt Romney in pre-election Colorado polls, but the GOP challenger surged past the president among early voters.