Voters in the tiny New Hampshire town of Dixville Notch cast their votes just after midnight (0500 GMT Tuesday), kicking off the quadrennial U.S. presidential elections on Tuesday.
A working staff locks the ballot box during the preparation for the voting at a polling station in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, the United States, Nov. 5, 2012. Ten registered voters are expected to cast their ballots at the stroke of midnight on Tuesday Nov. 6, in Dixville Notch, signifying the official beginning of the voting in the 2012 U.S. presidential elections. [Photo: Xinhua] |
Only ten voters cast their ballots, and the result showed a tie, with President Barack Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney each garnering 5 votes.
Dixville Notch, located in the far north of New Hampshire, is well known for its longstanding middle-of-the-night vote in the U.S. presidential elections, a symbolic event which marks the casting of the first ballots and the elections' initial results.
Polling stations elsewhere are generally open between morning till nightfall on election day.
In addition to presidential elections, voters are also voting Tuesday for 33 Senate seats, all 435 House of Representative seats, 11 state governor seats and numerous local offices.
Midnight voting in Dixville Notch took place despite major renovations underway at the Balsams Grand Resort Hotel, the traditional balloting place.
A local ski lodge, a grey bungalow in the ski resort, was used as a makeshift polling station for the presidential elections.
The ballot box, with a brass lock on it, was placed under the big sign, which says "Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, the First in the Nation."
It was snowing as the voting began in Dixville Notch, and the temperature stood at minus six degrees Celsius.
Traditionally, the voting in Dixville Notch takes place in less than a minute.
Reporters from all over the world outnumbered the voters in the polling station in the hamlet in northern New Hampshire.
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