Politics



In Ryan’s Hometown, the Calm That Follows Defeat

JANESVILLE, Wis. — The motorcades and Secret Service agents are gone now, and the overcast sky here on Wednesday seemed to channel the town’s collective gray mood. Its native son, Representative Paul D. Ryan, had fallen short of the prize.

The blinds were drawn at the Mitt Romney “victory center” here, where volunteers cleaned up soda cans, leftover lawn signs and a life-size cardboard cut-out of the would-be vice-president. Main Street, bustling just 24 hours ago with television trucks and campaign vans when Mr. Ryan blew into town to vote, was nearly silent.

With Election Day come and gone, Joni Bozart, who owns a consignment shop here, said she would miss the excitement. “You didn’t know what was going on day to day here,” she said. “It’s certainly nothing I could be tired of.”

At that, a worker from Mr. Ryan’s campaign office walked in to drop off a box of leftover tea bags. The office would no longer be needing them, he explained: “We got to be out of there by Thursday.” Read more…


Labor Unions Claim Credit for Obama’s Victory

The nation’s labor unions have not been shy about claiming substantial credit for President Obama’s re-election.

In a news conference Wednesday, Richard Trumka, the A.F.L.-C.I.O.’s president, said that without the huge push by the nation’s labor unions, Mr. Obama never would have won Ohio, Wisconsin and Nevada — and their combined 34 electoral votes.

“We did deliver those states,” Mr. Trumka said. “Without organized labor, none of those states would have been in the president’s column.” Read more…


Boehner Strikes Conciliatory Tone on ‘Fiscal Cliff’

The House speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, striking a conciliatory tone a day after the Republican Party’s electoral drubbing, said on Wednesday that he was ready to accept a budget deal that raises federal revenue as long as it is linked to an overhaul of entitlements and a reform of the tax code that closes loopholes, curtails or eliminates deductions and lowers income tax rates.

Mr. Boehner’s gesture was the most explicit offer he has made to avert the “fiscal cliff” in January, when billions of dollars in tax increases and automatic spending cuts go into force. And it came hours after Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, offered his own olive branch, saying “it’s better to dance than to fight.”

“Mr. President, this is your moment,” Mr. Boehner told reporters in the Capitol. “We’re ready to lead, not as Democrats or Republicans, but as Americans.” Read more…


TimesCast Politics: Attention Shifts to Washington

Associated Press

  • 0:25  Electoral Paths

    Adam Nagourney looks at the electoral paths forward for the Republican party.

  • 4:54  Possible Changes in the White House

    Peter Baker looks at the possible changes to President Obama’s cabinet.

  • 9:11  The Fiscal Cliff

    Jackie Calmes looks ahead at one of the immediate challenges facing President Obama.


App Snapshot: ‘What Do We Do Now?’

The Election 2012 App

“What do we do now?” Robert Redford’s character famously asked after winning his election in “The Candidate.” For President Obama and Congress, the answer to that is long and complicated. In the Election 2012 app, we’ve curated a list of forward-looking articles about the challenges ahead, both philosophical and practical:


Governing
Question for the Victor: How Far Do You Push?
The next battle for President Obama is to decide what he wants to accomplish in a second term and how to go about it. (The New York Times)


Lame-Duck Session
Though some lawmakers are on the way out, little happened during the election to change the dynamic as Congress confronts the so-called fiscal cliff.


At Watch Parties, Congressional Leaders Take In Election Results

With the White House and the Senate up for grabs on election night, Congressional leaders from both parties staked out corners of Capitol Hill to take in the results.

At the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, near the White House, Republicans were met with disappointment when the results began to show that they would not win 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue and the Senate from Democrats as they had hoped.

Guests mingled to country music and ate sliders, falafel and chicken-on-a-stick while the results came in on a large screen tuned in to Fox News. But they began leaving as the Senate moved further out of reach. By the time cable news networks began calling the presidential election for President Obama, only a few hundred guests remained.

Reince Priebus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, was expected to speak but did not. Earlier, Mr. Priebus had celebrated having “a party that’s functional and operational again” and promised to reappear minutes later.

“All I can say is, Wow,” said Collin Raye, a country singer, who performed after the presidential race was called. Read more…


Slide Show: Backstage at Obama’s Election Night Event

News media arrived in Chicago at the McCormick Place Lakeside Center where President Obama’s election night event will be held Tuesday.


The Caucus Click: Costumes and Characters

Damon Winter/The New York Times

A host of costumes and characters punctuated the crowds at campaign events throughout the year. Go to Slide Show »


The Caucus Click: Cellphone Nation

People used cellphones and cameras to snap pictures of President Obama during a campaign event in St. Petersburg College in Florida.Doug Mills/The New York TimesPeople used cellphones and cameras to snap pictures of President Obama during a campaign event at St. Petersburg College in Florida.

The presence of cellphones has become ubiquitous during the campaign, whether for taking photographs or shoring up support. Go to Slide Show »


Live Coverage of Election Day

President Obama was elected to a second term. Times reporters around the country shared scenes from polling places, analysis, voters’ portraits and more. Read more…


The Caucus Click: Stars and Stripes From the Campaign Trail

Damon Winter/The New York Times

The versatility of the American flag as seen at campaign events. Go to Slide Show »


The Early Word: Finally

Today’s Times

  • Consider yourself an armchair pundit? Jeff Zeleny and Jim Rutenberg have composed a guide on what to look for as election night unfolds.
  • The ads may stop running and the rallies will cease, but Ohio’s choice for president may not be known until December, John M. Broder reports. The all-important swing state has a labyrinthine recount procedure that ensures weeks of delay and the likelihood that campaign lawyers will be busy for quite some time.

Read more…


In New Hampshire, Romney’s Last Pre-Election Rally

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Even Mitt Romney looked a little surprised to see a crowd of 13,000 and several thousand more waiting in the below-freezing temperatures to get into the Verizon Wireless Arena here Monday night.

At his final rally before Election Day, Mr. Romney took the stage after 11 p.m. after a brief performance by Kid Rock. The crowd shouted “U-S-A” and waved “Romney-Ryan” and “Women for Mitt” signs. Mr. Romney, the Republican candidate, took it all in.

“These last months of our campaign have seen the gathering of strength of real movement across the country. It’s evident in the size of these crowds like this tonight — my goodness,” he said, to applause. “And I understand that there are a few thousand people outdoors who couldn’t get in, too.”
Read more…


Election Day Coverage at a Glance

Ralph Raymond, a poll worker, held a curtain open for a voter at the Exeter Talbot Gym in Exeter, N.H.Cheryl Senter for The New York TimesRalph Raymond, a poll worker, held a curtain open for a voter at the Exeter Talbot Gym in Exeter, N.H.

The New York Times will provide live, comprehensive coverage of Election Day on the Web and mobile devices and in print. The highlights include:

TimesCast Politics At 7 and 10 p.m. Eastern time, a live video broadcast from the Times newsroom will take readers behind the scenes with interviews and analysis from Times journalists and live results from the presidential, Senate and House campaigns.

Live Blog Times reporters, editors and photographers will provide real-time updates, analysis and results from battleground states and important Congressional races.

• FiveThirtyEight Live updates and analysis from Nate Silver.

• Election Guide Continuously updating interactive maps for the presidential, House and Senate races. County by county results from the presidential race, as well as continuously updated results from every House, Senate and governor’s race. State by state pages will follow major ballot initiatives and will outline the political landscape in each.

• Interactive Graphics What to watch for on Election Day, including exit polls and the possible paths to victory for each presidential candidate.

Voter Portraits A collection of photographs and voices.

Photo Slide Shows Times photographers chronicle the candidates’ last day on the campaign trail and provide a view of Election Day around the country.

Election 2012 App The latest news from The Times and other top sources, plus opinion, polls, campaign data and live video.

Social Media For on-the-ground reporting, follow the Times political team on Facebook at and on Twitter at @thecaucus. Find more Times journalists on Twitter.

Full Digital Access The Times will provide free unlimited access to election coverage on nytimes.com and its mobile apps, starting at 6 p.m. ET.


Early Scenes From States Up for Grabs

Campaign visits by the four presidential and vice-presidential candidates since the Republican National Convention, at the end of August.Lisa Waananen/The New York Times Campaign visits by the four presidential and vice-presidential candidates since the Republican National Convention, at the end of August.

View a larger map.

New York Times correspondents around the nation surveyed the activity in swing states a day before the election, and what they found was a frenzied push to the very end to coax voters to the polls. Many had already cast their ballots, but the bulk of the votes are expected Tuesday. And for some, Election Day will be even more significant, the start of a new life: from the Romney volunteer who moved with his wife from Texas to help the campaign’s cause in Ohio, to the political junkie who makes his living selling memorabilia in battleground states during election years

FLORIDA

MIAMI — “Mamita, tenemos una conga outside!” someone shouted. “We have a conga outside!”

It was voting Miami style. On a final, unexpected day of voting in Miami-Dade County, Obama supporters swayed in a conga line, with an actual conga drum at the front, all in the hopes of keeping voters waiting in yet another five-hour line excited. As the sun pounded voters, they gulped water, ate pizza, unfolded chairs and opened umbrellas, courtesy of the Obama campaign.

It was obvious why. Most voters waiting here sported Obama stickers. Some voters grumbled about the persistently long lines around the county. After a federal lawsuit was filed by Florida Democrats, six counties agreed to let voters fill out and drop off absentee ballots in person on Monday and Tuesday.

“I’ve been calling places for the last couple of days, but the wait time had been too long,” said Gabriela Reyes, 19, a student who works part time. “It’s time-consuming. It has made it really hard for people to come out and vote.”

Nearby, Tania Mancia, 47, looked at her watch. She had one hour left before work beckoned. “There is always tomorrow,” she said with a sigh.

— LIZETTE ALVAREZ

OHIO

DUBLIN, Ohio — The parking lot at the Romney-Ryan state headquarters here in a suburban office park would be a bonanza for a minivan full of kids playing the license plate game.

Lots of Ohio, of course. Then the neighbors: Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan and Pennsylvania. Then a bit farther afield: Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

Then there is a tan Chevy Tahoe with Texas plates, belonging to John and Cheri Gilbert, a pair of soft-spoken believers in the Romney cause from the Houston area. “Our country recruited us,” said Mr. Gilbert, 67, a semiretired engineer.

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert, by their count, have knocked on 4,000 doors and made more than 1,000 calls on behalf of the Republican ticket. Mr. Gilbert said he and his wife had never been involved in a presidential campaign.

President Obama lost them when he pushed health care through Congress without a single Republican vote, and when, in their view, he traveled abroad and “apologized for who we are.”

The Gilberts said that on Wednesday, win or lose, they would pack up and return to Texas. “But the fight is not over,” said Mrs. Gilbert, 66. “We are going to be watching Congress, the Senate and whoever is president and vice president and hold their feet to the fire.”

— JOHN M. BRODER

WISCONSIN

MILWAUKEE — Forget hanging chads and contested ballots. In Wisconsin, some election officials are worried about fistfights.

Law enforcement agents here are being trained on mediating disputes at the polls.

In Milwaukee, lawyers from the district attorney’s office will be on call if tensions get out of hand. Bickering has already broken out at the clerk’s office in Sun Prairie, a small city outside Madison, where voters argued as they waited in line to cast absentee ballots.

Still reeling from a divisive recall fight this year, Wisconsinites are voting in a tinderbox atmosphere, stoked by a near-constant stream of attack ads. City clerks are bracing for a combustible combination of aggressive poll watchers and partisan voters. “We have to anticipate the worst,” said Neil V. Albrecht, the executive director of Milwaukee’s election commission. “This is a very politically polarized state right now, and an electrically charged climate when it comes to issues like voter fraud and voter disenfranchisement.”

Some voters are yearning for the finish line. Mary Markwiese, 59, a legal assistant, said the end of the campaign would be a relief. “It’s like watching the Packers in the Super Bowl,” said Ms. Markwiese, who supports Mitt Romney. “You’re just too nervous about it.”

— MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM

COLORADO

DENVER — Early voting is over in Colorado. The first completed ballots have already been scanned into computers. The candidates have all departed, making their last hoarse, passionate pushes for Colorado’s nine electoral votes before flying east.

So for the army of election workers and county clerks across Colorado, Monday was the eye of the storm. As the campaigns papered neighborhoods with door tags reminding people to vote, election workers answered phone calls and sorted through mail-in ballots. They ran last-minute training seminars for election judges and made sure the voting machines were working. They marshaled their staff and braced for a frenzied day that would begin at 6 a.m. sharp and might well last until past midnight.

The night before would be a restless one.

“It’s hard not having nightmares,” Gilbert Ortiz, the Pueblo County clerk, said in a telephone interview. “My wife is complaining to me that I’m giving speeches in my sleep about ballots.”

Mr. Ortiz was subsisting on Power Bars, coffee and pot roast his mother brought him for lunch. Other clerks had similar arsenals lined up for Tuesday.

“Coffee and Dr Pepper,” said Terri Carver, an election official in Alamosa County. “We just take one minute at a time, and keep smiling.”

— JACK HEALY

IOWA

DES MOINES — Most political junkies get their election fix from the comfort of their homes, where they watch pundits on cable television or scour the latest polls online.

But Jeff Reul needs to be closer to the action. So, for the past two presidential election cycles he has hopscotched swing states, hawking political pins and T-shirts from parking lots outside rallies to support his travels.

As he stood in the cold outside a rally for Representative Paul D. Ryan here on Monday afternoon, it was easy to see from his pins where he stood politically. There were the pins that said: “I’LL TAKE THE MORMON OVER THE MORON.” Others said “Don’t Tax Me Bro!” or “Hot Chicks Dig Ryan,” and “GIVE ME LIBERTY NOT DEBT.”

“It’s the best road trip you can take,” Mr. Reul said. “I can say I was there for history.”

Mr. Reul said that he had shaken hands with both Mitt Romney and Mr. Ryan, and sold buttons to celebrity politicians.

When asked what he planned to do after the election on Tuesday, Mr. Reul, a dietitian from Columbia, Mo., said: “Just go back to my boring life.”

— MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

VIRGINIA

ARLINGTON, Va. — Elaine Dawes has had pretty good luck calling people on President Obama’s behalf over the past month.

“Usually I get the enthusiastic people,” Ms. Dawes, 72, said Monday as she stood next to a power outlet clogged with charging cellphones.

In a storefront humming with activity two miles from the Pentagon, 20 volunteers dotted the room, many leaning forward in their folding chairs as they made last-minute calls.

“This is your neighbor in Arlington,” one volunteer said into a cellphone, sitting near a banner tracing progress toward their goal of knocking on 142,000 doors. As of Monday afternoon, the banner put them at just over 106,000.

Gabriel Thoumi, 41, estimated that they had seen about 30 percent more people coming in to volunteer on Monday compared with last week. He said volunteers were focused on encouraging people not only to vote, but also to decide ahead of time when to vote and how they would get to the polls.

“Their voice is as important as anybody else in this country, and it’s absolutely critical that everybody gets to vote, whoever they are,” he said. “Republican, Green, Libertarian, Democrat, it doesn’t matter. That’s the beauty of our country.”

— EMMARIE HUETTEMAN

NEW HAMPSHIRE

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Hours before Mitt Romney visited here on Monday, two of his sons, Tagg and Ben, traveled through the state visiting Romney “victory” offices and encouraging voters to get to the polls.

It is familiar turf for the family: they have a summer home in New Hampshire, and throughout the grueling race they would get together on Lake Winnipesaukee for breaks from the campaign trail.

But the state has not always been kind to Mr. Romney. In 2008, Senator John McCain won the presidential primary here, reviving his once moribund candidacy. But this campaign cycle, Mr. Romney won the primary decisively, and he hopes to repeat that success on Tuesday.

Both President Obama and Mr. Romney have rolled out their top surrogates across the state and have enlisted armies of volunteers to canvass and host get-out-the-vote efforts.

In the battle of signs, the Romney-Ryan ticket dominated Granite Avenue, a main stretch in downtown Manchester.

Ricardo Rodriguez, 42, a delivery man for a florist and an Obama volunteer, was undeterred.

“I’m not a political person,” he said on a cold Manchester night as snow began to fall. “But listening to Mitt Romney’s ideas about where he wants to take the country, it just sounds scary.”

— AMY CHOZICK

Read more…