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| | The balance of power | The midterm elections are underway, and one question looms large: Who will win control of Congress? It's Tuesday's news. | | |
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Control of Congress hangs in the balance as Americans cast ballots today in the 2022 midterm elections. Someone has won the record-breaking Powerball jackpot. And controversy about Qatar hosting the World Cup continues as the tournament nears. |
👋 Hello! Nicole Fallert and Laura Davis here! It's Election Day, so we're tag-teaming the news today. Let's do this. |
But first, did you catch that lunar eclipse? 🌝 We sure as heck didn't. Totally slept through the alarm. Too bad it's the last one until 2025. |
The Short List is a snappy USA TODAY news roundup. Subscribe to the newsletter here or text messages here. |
No major issues at polling sites as voters cast midterm ballots |
Election watchdogs reported routine issues in key battleground states Tuesday but no major problems as ballots were cast across the country. The midterms are the first national election since 2020, when former President Donald Trump refused to accept the results, sparking conspiracy theories and thrusting voting processes into the spotlight. Live updates on the midterms. |
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😲 Stressed about the midterms? You're not alone. Here's how to stay calm. |
| An adjudication board reviews ballots at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix. | John Moore, Getty Images | |
Will Democrats get a boost from youth turnout? |
Democrats are betting that a summer of unprecedented news – including the overturn of Roe v. Wade, rising inflation and President Joe Biden's student loan relief program – could prompt young voters, especially women, to turn out at historic levels. But younger voters are notorious for skipping the polls, especially during midterms, fueling worries that even such a momentous news year might not be enough to get those ballots in. And the data on young voters is fraught. Read more. |
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🛑 Can't read the story about young voters? That's because it's subscriber-only. To access more compelling reporting like this, please consider joining our subscriber community. |
| Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams poses for photos with students at Georgia State University in Atlanta. | Elijah Nouvelage, Getty Images | |
What everyone's talking about |
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We've got a Powerball winner, folks |
A single ticket sold in California won the record-breaking $2.04 billion Powerball drawing Tuesday morning, Powerball officials announced. The winning ticket was sold at a service center in Altadena in Los Angeles County, according to a tweet from the California Lottery. Monday's highly anticipated drawing was delayed about 10 hours because a participating lottery was still processing its sales and play data, the Multi-State Lottery Association said in a statement. The winning numbers of the largest lottery prize ever were 10-33-41-47-56 and the Powerball was 10. |
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| Customers line up for Powerball tickets at a grocery store in Brooklyn, N.Y. | Bebeto Matthews, AP | |
Why a museum wants a Vietnam vet's unusual prosthetic legs |
The last day Jack Simpson had both his legs was Nov. 10, 1968, when he was a 19-year-old Marine deployed for the Vietnam War. At 6 a.m. Nov. 11 – on Veterans Day – Simpson stepped on an anti-tank land mine. The double amputee went through various pairs of prosthetic legs about every two years throughout his life – which ended from COVID-19 in February 2021. But his prosthetics were so unique, the National Museum of the Marine Corps wants them for its collection in Quantico, Virginia. Here's why. |
| In June, Jack Simpson's prosthetic legs became a part of the collection at the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Quantico, Va. | CRYSTAL VANDER WEIT/TCPALM | |
Real quick |
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🌤 What's the weather this Election Day? Check your local forecast here. |
World Cup ambassador from Qatar denounces homosexuality |
An ambassador for the World Cup in Qatar has described homosexuality as a "damage in the mind" in an interview with German public broadcaster ZDF only two weeks before the opening of the soccer tournament in the Gulf state. The comment highlights concerns about the conservative country's treatment of gays and lesbians. Former Qatari national team player Khalid Salman told a German reporter in an interview that being gay is "haram." That means "forbidden" in Arabic. Read more. |
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| Demonstrators gathered to raise awareness of the human rights situation in Qatar, host of the World Cup, in front of the FIFA Museum in Zurich, Switzerland. | Michael Buholzer, AP | |
'I Voted' stickers got a revamp by readers |
As voting is underway across the USA, what better way to show your patriotism than a sticker on your shirt? Last week, we asked readers for their take on the classic "I Voted" stickers. They delivered. All the submissions are masterpieces and deserve to be on stickers around the country. We can't really help with that, but thank you to everyone who submitted a design! |
| From Caroline Reisman: "A butterfly is probably the last thing you'd think about during this election." | Submitted to USA TODAY | |
Did you vote? Tell the world! Share one of our reader-designed "I Voted" stickers to your Instagram Story. See all the stickers here. |
👏 A round of applause for our artists: Caroline Reisman, New York, N.Y.; Rande Brewer, Colorado; Glenn Murray, Buffalo, N.Y.; Roseann Standera, Buffalo, N.Y.; Bob Balsman, Johnstown, Colorado. |
A break from the news |
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| Shetland pony Pumuckel stands between the hooves of gelding Ron-Sheer Oct. 6, 2022, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Breckerfeld. | Bernd Thissen, picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images | |
Laura L. Davis is an Audience Editor at USA TODAY. Send her an email at laura@usatoday.com or follow along with her adventures – and misadventures – on Twitter. Support quality journalism like this? Subscribe to USA TODAY here. |
This is a compilation of stories from across the USA TODAY Network. Want this news roundup in your inbox every night? Subscribe to the newsletter here or text messages here. |
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