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Election experts say a lot could go wrong

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The storm has already disrupted early voting, which could put more pressure on precincts on Election Day, or keep some people from voting altogether.

In some states, the outcome could hinge on provisional ballots, the validity of which was uncertain when they were cast. In Ohio, where more than 200,000 provisional ballots were cast in 2008, state law requires a 10-day waiting period before they can be counted. With polls showing the presidential race to be very close in the state, it isn’t hard to imagine a scenario in which an Electoral College majority hangs on the results in Ohio, but no winner can be determined until Nov. 17.

In the battleground states of Colorado and Florida, a recount is mandatory if the margin between the candidates is within 0.5 percent of the total vote. In Ohio, it is mandatory if the margin is within 0.25 percent.

How likely is such a close finish? Not so unlikely. In 2004, the margin between George W. Bush and John F. Kerry was within 0.4 percent in Wisconsin. In 2000, the vote between Bush and Al Gore was within 0.01 percent — one one-hundredth of 1 percent — in Florida, where a recount was ultimately stopped by the U.S. Supreme Court. It was also within half a percentage point in five states, including Ohio, and under a quarter of a percentage point in two of those states.

Members of both parties seem convinced that the other side has tricks up its sleeve.

On the right, the tea party-affiliated group True the Vote has geared up for election monitoring aimed at preventing voters from casting fraudulent votes, while groups on the left and center have mobilized to ensure that no one is improperly stopped from voting.

True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht said in an email interview that her group had no plans to disrupt voting or intimidate anyone.

“True the Vote trains citizen poll watchers to never communicate verbally or nonverbally with voters — they are not even allowed to offer directions to a restroom or give the time of day!” she said. There have been complaints in the past about the group’s behavior at the polls, and there have been reports this year that True the Vote volunteers had been hired as poll workers in some Ohio precincts.

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