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No, Nevada did not stop counting ballots
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The Nevada Elections office tweeted early in the morning of Nov. 4 that it would post its next updated results on Nov. 5. But counting of ballots continued in the counties.
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By state law, Nevada counts ballots postmarked Nov. 3 but received up until seven days later. Voters have until Nov. 12 to "cure" their mail ballots if they forgot to sign them or have signature mismatches.
Social media posts have twisted an announcement by Nevada election officials to falsely conclude that they stopped counting ballots the day after Election Day because the presidential contest was in a dead heat.
"What is up with Nevada?! First they take forever to even start counting, and now that it’s even, Nevada decides to stop counting and is now not going to count anything until TOMORROW! What?!" said a Nov. 4 Facebook post by Trapt, a band that posted many pro-Trump messages or messages critical of Democrats on social media.
This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
The Facebook post falsely characterized the status of counting ballots in Nevada as of Nov. 4 when the margin between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden was too close to call.
The Facebook post included a screengrab of a headline from Breitbart: "Nevada: No more election results expected until Thursday."
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In that story, Breitbart cited a tweet by the Elections Division of the Nevada Secretary of State posted 2:45 a.m. PST Nov. 4.
"That’s it for election results updates until 9:00 am on Nov. 5," the tweet stated.
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By that point, all in-person ballots had been counted as well as mail ballots received through Nov. 2. However, election officials still had to count mail ballots received on Election Day as well as those received over the next several days and provisional ballots.
"Ballots outstanding is difficult to estimate in Nevada because every voter was sent a mail ballot. Obviously, not all will vote," the state elections office tweeted.
While the state elections office announced it would not post another update until Nov. 5, the counting of ballots still continued, said Jennifer Russell, a spokesperson for the Republican Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske. Russell told PolitiFact the afternoon of Nov. 4 that it was possible that the state would post an update on that day.
The responsibility for processing ballots lies with the counties, so we went in search of a county elections official to explain the status of their count.
Washoe County, home to Reno and evenly split between Democrats and Republicans, has about 300,000 voters, the second highest in the state. Washoe elections officials stopped counting around 12:30 a.m. Pacific Standard Time Nov. 4. By that point, elections workers had completed counting all of the in person ballots as well as mail ballots received through Nov. 2, said county spokesperson Bethany Drysdale.
Election workers resumed work at 8 a.m. PST Nov. 4 with processing the mail-in ballots and dropbox ballots from Election Day, which adds up to about 9,000 ballots. The county expects to post results after that process is completed, expected at 10 a.m. Thursday
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"Processing means sorting, scanning, verifying signatures, and eventually counting. They can't tally the ballots until they've gone through all the prep steps," Drysdale said.
It was never the intention of the state to announce the final result on election night, Russell said. State law says that election officials have until Nov. 10 to receive mail ballots postmarked by Nov. 3. Voters have until Nov. 12 to "cure" their ballots if they forgot to sign them or if there was a signature mismatch. Nevada will certify results on Nov. 16.
Trump lost Nevada in 2016. This fall he lobbed misleading attacks on mail in voting in the battleground state.
RELATED: Trump’s misleading claim about ballot signatures in Nevada
A Facebook post on Nov. 4 said "Now that it’s even, Nevada decides to stop counting and is now not going to count anything until TOMORROW! What?!"
The post is wrong. First, elections officials didn’t stop counting ballots, and they didn’t make decisions based on the closeness of the presidential race.
Early in the morning of Nov. 4, the state elections office tweeted that it would next announce results on the morning of Nov. 5. But a spokesperson for the Secretary of State and in Washoe County told us that the counting of ballots continued on Nov. 4.
We rate this statement False.
This fact check is available at IFCN’s 2020 US Elections FactChat #Chatbot on WhatsApp. Click here, for more.
Our Sources
Facebook post, Nov. 4, 2020
Breitbart, Nevada: No more election results expected until Thursday, Nov. 4, 2020
Nevada Independent editor Jon Ralston, Tweet, Nov. 4, 2020
Nevada Secretary of State, Tweet, Nov. 4, 2020
Nevada Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, Voter registration statistics, September 2020
Nevada State Assembly, AB4, Signed into law Aug. 3, 2020
Washoe County, Nevada, Registrar of voters, 2020
Clark County, Results, Posted 3:34 a.m. Nov. 4, 2020
Nevada Independent, Biden narrowly leads Trump, but major Nevada races too close to call after Election Day Nov. 4, 2020
Slate, In a Time of Crisis, a Panicked Nation Comes Together to Watch Nu-Metal Band Trapt Melt Down on Twitter, March 18, 2020
PolitiFact, Trump’s misleading claim about ballot signatures in Nevada, Oct. 28, 2020
PolitiFact, Trump’s falsehoods about mail voting in Nevada, fact-checked, Aug. 17, 2020
Telephone interview, Jennifer Russell, spokesperson for Nevada Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, Nov. 4, 2020
Telephone interview, Bethany Drysdale, spokesperson for Washoe County, Nov. 4, 2020
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No, Nevada did not stop counting ballots
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