The Wall Street Journal relies on vote-counting services from the Associated Press. Here’s a look at how it all works on Nov.
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After many months of twists and turns, election week has finally arrived. Our journalists have been working tirelessly to ...
The Wall Street Journal relies on vote-counting services from the Associated Press for vote tallies on Election Day. The AP has counted the vote since 1848 and uses its data to call winners ...
A University of Rochester probe found Ranga Dias manipulated data, including in a paper claiming the discovery of a ...
The German company’s layoffs and pay cuts are a warning to America about Biden-Harris climate policies.
They account for more than one-quarter of the voter pool, strategists say, though estimates vary. By contrast, Wall Street ...
Stephen Kreider Yoder, 67, a longtime Wall Street Journal editor, joined his wife, Karen Kreider Yoder, 68, in retirement in ...
There's no need to adjust your screens, ladies and gentlemen—the jobs number you saw Friday was accurate. In the last payrolls report before Tuesday's election, and the Federal Reserve's rate decision ...
Investors were in a good mood Tuesday. What that might mean for the election is anyone's guess. Major U.S. stock indexes rose across the board as voters headed to the polls. Some trades early in the d ...
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WSJ Opinion: How Republicans Flipped the Senate
Chuck Schumer Loses His Senate Majority Gavel ...
Daniel Kiss is an associate graphics reporter and cartographer at The Wall Street Journal, based in London. He joined the ...