alone. in 2020, it was 170,000. this number is immense. it s something it s a conversation that probably arizona needs to have in terms of public policy. this is a number that keeps growing. in my ways, it s wonderful. arizonians appreciate the ease of the voting process and you can take your ballot and drop it off on election day, but it does inhibit us from having a highers percentage of returns available in the first 24, hour 8 hours. yeah. as you mentioned, you also have these tight races with the senate and the race for governor. all are waiting for these ballots to produce a result. more than 400,000 in maricopa county and 619,000 across the state left. the elections officials say they will hold a news conference later on this afternoon. one of the officials here told me that they re no longer going to hit the goal of having 95 to 99% of the results in by
district 2, which just flipped from red to blue today. this is a seat that republicans really wanted to hold and they lost. this is a flip in the other direction. tom mallinowski has been unseated by tom kane jr., the former governor, that won in a redistricted version of that voting area in new jersey. so that s a big story as well. in moments, the story of new york, which is really with each passing day, we get a deeper sense of what happened in new york, which is pretty remarkable. they flipped four districts, winning 10 of the whole states 26 seats. they ousted the head of the democrat campaign arm. the very influential democratic position. sean patrick maloney conceding. we ll show you that. we ll talk to two of those house members in just a moment, that
run-off. that is absolutely the way it looks right now. that would happen on december 6. but we first need to determine what happens in nevada and arizona to know whether or not it will come down to georgia. so let s start in arizona. here s the latest numbers between democratic senator mark kelly, who is the incumbent and blake masters waiting for those numbers to come up. the governor s race also there s masters and kelly. that s where that stands now. you can see the numbers at the bottom of your screen. 980,000 for kelly, 885 is where masters is right now. they re still counting. we ll talk about that in a second. the governor s race, too close to call with katie hobbs, the current secretary of state. there was some push-back over the fact that she s still overseeing the election process and kari lake at 49.7. the numbers very tight there as you can see.
they focused on weren t important but the ones that were most important to the residents of our respective districts, those are the ones that we stuck on and that s what we saw tuesday night. martha: how did you do with independents and democrats and how did you move them over? again, the issues that we dealt with were issues that middle class long islanders were focused on. they were laser focused on them. we stayed laser focused on the message and the issues and we brought those moderate democrats that feel like they completely lost their party to the left wing radicals and independents our way. martha: so george, you won in the district that was a democrat on long island. he ran for governor of new york. you beat robert zimmerman. we have the baseball card graphic of these two candidates. a lot of our viewers are familiar with. he s been on fox, on other channels. you were able to turn that
across the finish line who is also a flawed candidate. so i m just stunned. the statehouse may be gone. they didn t pick up anything, but this happened all over the country. what part of losing are people comfortable with here? you can t nominate candidates, these ultra maga folks, you know, did very poorly in the election. many of them lost are they re struggling. many normal mainstream candidates like tom kane jr., those are the ones who won. if you look at the sensibilities of a lot of voters, you can t expect them to win. when republican-elected leaders get tired of losing, that s when they turn on trump. are they tired? this is not the first election or midterm that he s lost. i ve said this for some time because i came from a purple district and i used to worry about this. i said, guys. look what s happening in these communities. we can t win here with donald trump. if more of them notice, they ll speak up. they want to be in the minority for a long time, get used to it. it i