Long lines and faulty voting machines have dominated the opening hours of the 2018 US midterm elections, with hundreds of voters using social media to vent their frustrations.
Record numbers of voters are expected to turn out in the first nation-wide poll since the divisive election of Donald Trump as president in 2016.
Some of the biggest problems reported on Tuesday were in Georgia, where some voters reported waiting up to three hours to cast their ballot, but problems have also been reported in New York, Philadelphia, Washington DC and Virginia.
Endless spiraling lines. Everyone is mad. This is my nightmare. #ElectionDay pic.twitter.com/PgGK8Y63lV
— Barry Hott (@binghott) November 6, 2018
Barry Hott, a social media director from New York, said he spent nearly two hours trying to vote in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, in cramped, disorganised and “borderline dangerous” conditions as ballot scanners broke.
He said: “I initially waited outdoors in the rain but that’s to be expected.
“Once I got inside and it was filled with lines zigzagging and spiralling across the place, very disorganised.”
Mr Hott, 31, said the machines to scan people’s ballot papers broke, souring the mood as voters became worried that their votes would not be counted.
Snapshot of the block-long turnout to #BeAVoter on the UWS this morning. #ElectionDay pic.twitter.com/nk5Aa4GuSq
— Alex Israel (@AlexIsrael) November 6, 2018
At a polling place in Snellville, Georgia, more than 100 people took turns sitting in children’s chairs and on the floor as they waited in line for hours.
Voter Ontaria Woods said about two dozen people who had come to vote left because of the lines.
At a poll site in Atlanta, voters waited in the rain in long lines that stretched around the building.
Hannah Ackermann said officials at the polling site offered various explanations for the delay, including blaming workers who did not show up and overloaded machines.
Atlanta Precinct 09A. Wait times greater than 1 hour. Machines keep ‘overloading’ and no one coming out. People having to leave for work. Does this count as voter suppression? Now being told to turn my phone off because it may interfere with voting machines. pic.twitter.com/sftmlPU7Rz
— Hannah (@gtwifi) November 6, 2018
Back in New York, Mr Hott said successful voters were leaving the polling station and encouraging those still waiting in line.
He added: “People were really excited. They were coming out and saying ‘stay in line, you have to do this’, cheering everyone on. I found that to be really motivating and exciting. Important.”
More than 35 million Americans cast their vote before election day, almost double the number of postal votes counted in the 2014 midterm elections, which had the lowest total turnout for midterms since 1942.