The last election had a lot of trouble, and it took a long time for the results to come in. This time around, things appeared to run smoothly.
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More than 435,000 voters showed up at the polls, Harris County Clerk Teneshia Hudspeth said, and that includes more than 211,000 who voted in-person on Election Day itself.
The county clerk's office is now in charge of elections after Texas legislatures did away with the elections administrator position in Harris County.
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Officials are using a system called Service Now to report and fix any Election Day problems. There were reportedly more than 2,800 calls that came in Tuesday.
About 21% of those calls came from voters who were looking for polling locations, officials said. The other 79% came from voting centers and mostly concerned equipment set up and operation.
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County officials said it appeared things went well, but they know next year's presidential election will require additional support.
"More election workers, more election workers, you will notice that to run elections in Harris County, it takes a lot of people. You are witnessing that tonight. So I would like to see more election workers recruited to learn the job, to be trained, to be a part of this operation because a year from now, we will be looking at twice the size we are doing tonight," Hudspeth said.
Houston's top two mayoral candidates, John Whitmire and Sheila Jackson Lee, are headed to a runoff election on Dec. 9. Typically, less voters show up for runoff elections.
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