More than 75,000 votes cast in-person in Wisconsin's 1st day of early voting
Early in-person voting continues in Wisconsin after a record first day with 75,519 votes being cast Tuesday and some voters showing up to their polling sites before dawn with folding chairs, snacks and medication to stand in line.
The early voting period in Wisconsin lasts through Oct. 30, though the schedule is different in every municipality and is expected to bring a surge of absentee ballots in a state already boasting strong turnout: As of this morning, Wisconsin voters have cast nearly 40% of the total votes counted in the state in 2016.
Because Wisconsin voters fill out absentee ballots in-person, election clerks in the state won't start counting these votes until Election Day, so the timing of the results could vary depending on the staff available to each municipality.
In Madison, the City Clerk said 6,000 poll workers are signed up, compared with 3,000 for the 2016 election, and they "do not anticipate running any later than usual." Meanwhile, over in Milwaukee, the chair of the Milwaukee Democrats has been telling voters they should be prepared to wait until Nov. 11 so that people aren't concerned by delays.
-ABC News' Cheyenne Haslett