J. Ann Selzer's Nov. 1 poll showed Kamala Harris leading Donald Trump in Iowa, 47% to 44%. Trump eventually carried the state by 13 points.
Iowa candidates have until Nov. 18 to request a recount in their race. Here's who is asking for a recount and how the process works.
After a big election night that saw Republicans grow their majorities, GOP lawmakers have reelected Jack Whitver and Pat Grassley as their leaders.
Republicans represent all of Iowa’s four congressional districts but Democrats are hopeful of their chances in the general election
In addition to the Statehouse races, Democratic 1st Congressional District candidate Christina Bohannan has requested a recount.
J. Ann Selzer, who wrongly predicted Iowa would turn blue and vote for Vice President Kamala Harris in this year’s election, is ending her polling career to take on new opportunities. “Would I have liked to make this announcement after a final poll aligned with Election Day results?
Two weeks after her firm incorrectly found Vice President Kamala Harris surging in increasingly red Iowa, pollster J. Ann Selzer said Sunday she is leaving election polling and ending her longstanding relationship with the Des Moines Register, which dates back to 1997.
Hours after top pollster Ann Selzer announced she was retiring from election polling following her shocking miscalculation that Donald Trump would lose Iowa to Vice President Kamala Harris earlier this month, the president-elect vowed that an investigation is “fully called for,” accusing Selzer of “election fraud.”
Wednesday's certification votes cap off the 2024 election process and set the stage for candidates who wish to request recounts to do so by Nov. 18.
Selzer announced her retirement from election polling after one of the biggest misses of the 2024 election cycle.
FairVote, a nonpartisan advocacy group that promotes voting reform, found that it's extremely rare for a recount to reverse the outcome of a race.