| | November 06, 2012 | | THE END Fear, loathing, and frantic calling--that's the scene at a field office in the president's hometown. Lloyd Grove reports on why Obama's biggest supporters are worried. Plus, tune in to The Daily Beast's homepage tonight starting at 7 p.m. ET for live-streamed commentary with Tina Brown, Robert Shrum, Doug Schoen, Keli Goff, John Avlon, Mark McKinnon, and more. Tweet your questions to #newsbeastlive @DailyBeastTV. Here We Go! And it's a--tie? The first votes were cast in Dixville Notch, the tiny New Hampshire town that votes at midnight each year, and the candidates tied at five votes each--the first tie in the town's history. "Considering the way things are polling around the country, we may have been the first tie of the day," said town clerk Dick Erwin. "Keep your eyes on the news reports, because it's going to be a wild ride." Over in Hart's Location, another New Hampshire town with midnight voting, Obama opened up a clearer lead, taking 23 votes to Mitt Romney's nine and one single vote for Libertarian Gary Johnson. At least the counting was over fast: in Dixville Notch, the votes were counted in 43 seconds, as opposed to five minutes and 42 seconds in Hart's Location. New York It's been a big week of decisions in the Big Apple. In one that could prove controversial, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an emergency executive order allowing voters in New York to cast their ballots at any polling station in the state. The move will help voters affected by Hurricane Sandy to cast affidavit ballots outside their usual polling place. "We're trying to do the best we can," said Cuomo Monday. "We want everyone to vote." Going Solo? In a shift from the friendlier tactics he'd been using lately, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on Israeli television Monday that he is willing to attack Iran's nuclear program without support from the United States or, really, anyone. "When David Ben-Gurion declared the foundation of the state of Israel, was it done with American approval?" Netanyahu asked. However, the aggressive posturing could be just that: it could just be part of a rhetorical campaign to get other countries to put pressure on Iran. But only time will tell. | |
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