Major voting problems scant despite ominous warnings
WASHINGTON — Election Day came and went with no obvious signs of the catastrophic problems some had feared, including large-scale fraud, intimidation or hacking.
Voters across the country instead encountered the types of glitches that arise in every election — long lines, occasional broken machines, discrepancies in voting rolls and some hot tempers.
The scattered problems included malfunctioning voting systems at polling stations in Texas, computer trouble in North Carolina that forced officials to rely on a paper check-in process and triggered long lines, and arguments and skirmishes between supporters of Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, including one reported to have involved pepper spray.
There were reports in some states of voters waiting in line for hours to cast a ballot.
