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Photos: E-ballots and the 2004 election

Americans turn out in heavy numbers to choose the next president, some casting votes on new e-voting machines.

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Photos: E-ballots and the 2004 election

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London's Evening Standard newspaper carries a headline proclaiming victory for George W. Bush in the U.S. presidential election.

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Republicans celebrate at a post-election rally in Washington, D.C., as electoral votes are tabulated.

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Some Californians got to use the new eSlate electronic voting system, which consists of 9,000 machines set up in over 1,700 polling locations in Orange County. Those choosing to vote with a traditional ballot were given optical scan paper ballots. Some voters reportedly forgot to press the Cast Ballot button before they left.

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The inside of an electronic voting booth in New Mexico shows a large touch-sensitive pad.

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Steve Lurya, working on behalf of the Verified Voting Foundation, looks over voting machines ahead of Tuesday's vote as part of the pre-election test observation in San Jose, Calif.

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Early voters waited up to 5 hours on Oct. 31 to cast their electronic votes in Miami, Fla.

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Workers at the voter alert hotline at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia took calls Tuesday from people reporting possible irregularities at polling places. Pennsylvania was viewed as a critical swing state in the presidential election.

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A voter casts her ballot on a new touch-screen e-voting machine in the Century Village retirement community in West Palm Beach, Florida.

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Loni Miller, a White House presidential advance staffer, uses her BlackBerry to make plans for the next day of campaigning in early October just after landing with President George W. Bush at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.

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A campaign staffer for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry talks on the phone as Kerry delivers a speech in Columbus, Ohio, in October.

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Webshots user gumdrop 2420: John Kerry addresses Kerry-Edwards rally in St. Louis in August.

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Webshots user gevaudan 101: President George Walker Bush.