Los Angeles Times

When will we know who won the race?

It takes some time for ballots to land and be counted. Here’s how the process works.

- By David Lauter and Julia Wick

More than 680,000 votes have been counted in the race for mayor of Los Angeles between Rep. Karen Bass and Rick Caruso. While Bass has the lead, there’s no final call on who won the race.

What’s going on, why does it take so long, and how come we don’t yet know who won?

What does it mean when news organizati­ons “call” a race?

Officially, nothing. Regardless of what we say, election workers keep on counting ballots until every one has been tallied, and candidates don’t become elected officials until the returns are certified.

Once it’s no longer mathematic­ally possible for the trailing candidate to overtake the leader, however, there’s no reason to keep people in suspense awaiting the final, official count.

At that point, news organizati­ons will call a race.

Don’t news organizati­ons sometimes call races before the outcome is a mathematic­al certainty?

Yes, if there’s an exit poll of the race, and the vote count and the exit poll are telling the same story about how the race is going, news organizati­ons can sometimes call a race once the outcome seems all but irreversib­le.

Is there an exit poll in the L.A. mayor’s race?

No.

So what does the math look like?

As of Monday’s count, which is the most recent, Bass had 354,948 votes, or 52.15%, and Caruso had 325,677, or 47.85%. That’s a lead for her of 29,271 votes.

How many votes are left to count?

No one knows.

Huh? How can that be?

Under California law, elections officials must accept ballots that are postmarked by election day if they are received up until one week after the election. That means there could be more ballots in the mail that the Los Angeles County registrar hasn’t received yet. There’s no way to know how many may still be received by the close of business on Tuesday. It’s probably not a huge number — generally, most ballots arrive within a few days — but no one knows for sure.

How many uncounted ballots does the registrar currently have?

That’s also unknown. The registrar doesn’t separate out ballots by city until they are counted, so all that officials know for sure is how many ballots are uncounted countywide.

Monday’s count included about 75,000 new ballots. As of Monday, the registrar-recorder’s office estimated that number at 655,300. Of those, the vast majority are vote-by-mail ballots. About 15,000 are unprocesse­d conditiona­l voter registrati­on ballots, and several hundred are provisiona­l ballots.

“We are working as quickly as we can around the clock, so if we can get more in there, know that’s the goal,” Mike Sanchez, the county registrar-recorder spokespers­on, said Monday. Another count update is scheduled for Tuesday.

What’s the trend in the count so far?

On Wednesday morning after election day, Caruso was ahead, 50.3% to 49.6% (212,430 votes to 209,621 votes). By midnight on Thursday night, an additional 123,136 votes had been counted, and Caruso’s lead had shrunk slightly to 50.2% to 49.7% (273,941 votes to 271,246 votes). On Friday, the registrar’s office released the tally of an additional 29,993 votes, and Bass took the lead, 50.38% to 49.62% (289,782 to 285,398). Then on Saturday, the registrar released the count of 29,337 more votes, which widened Bass’ lead to where it currently stands.

Is it normal for the leader to shift that way?

Yes, a very similar shift took place in the June primary, in which Bass went from 5 percentage points behind Caruso on election night to 7 points ahead once all the votes were counted.

Why does that happen?

In Los Angeles, the voters who wait until close to the last minute to put their ballots into the mail or drop boxes tend to be young people, and they tend to be liberal. Conservati­ve voters have shown a strong preference for voting in person on election day. So Caruso, the more conservati­ve candidate, did very well with election day voters, but Bass has gained strength as more late-arriving ballots have been counted.

Is that true everywhere?

No. In Riverside County, for example, the vote count in the very close contest for the 41st Congressio­nal District has shifted toward the Republican incumbent, Rep. Ken Calvert, as more late-arriving ballots have been tallied.

Are these sorts of long counts a new thing?

No, not really. Back in 2010, for example, when Kamala Harris, then the district attorney in San Francisco, ran against L.A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley for the post of state attorney general, the race wasn’t called until Nov. 25.

Why does it take so long to count the mail-in ballots?

Election workers have to look at each ballot envelope and verify that the signature matches the one on file before the ballot can be opened and fed into a counting machine. Ballots that arrive before election day can be processed ahead of time, but late-arriving ballots have to be processed as they arrive.

Is that unique to California?

No. Lots of states are still counting ballots. In New Hampshire, no one knows yet which party will control the state Legislatur­e. Same goes for Pennsylvan­ia’s state House. And there are undecided congressio­nal races still in New York, Oregon and Arizona. Many other states also have undecided races, but they don’t get much attention because they don’t affect the overall partisan balance.

But California does seem to take longer, doesn’t it?

Yes. The fact that the state allows a week for ballots to arrive lengthens the counting period. Some states set a much earlier deadline, but California wants to ensure that every vote is counted. In addition, a large majority of the state’s voters cast ballots by mail or drop box; that also makes the count slower.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? ELECTION workers scan ballots Friday in Downey. Officials say they’ve been working around the clock.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ELECTION workers scan ballots Friday in Downey. Officials say they’ve been working around the clock.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States