WASHINGTON — Voters in D.C., Maryland and Virginia headed to the polls on Tuesday to cast their ballots for the next president of the United States, along with more than a dozen congressional seats and at least one statewide ballot initiative.
You can find our live election results page here for all races on Tuesday – local, state and federal.
Below, explore our interactive maps to see live results for how your part of the DMV is voting for select races: president, congress and state ballot initiatives.
Note: Results will come in throughout the evening. Jurisdictions will be updated as results are made available, and may lag behind the latest numbers published by state election boards. In areas with multiple U.S. House races, find the results of select races below and complete election results here.
President of the United States
Depending on where you live in the DMV, you saw a slightly different slate of candidates for president on your ballot. Every voter in the country had the choice between the Democratic ticket (VP Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz) and Republican ticket (former Pres. Donald Trump and Sen. J.D. Vance).
In Maryland and D.C., voters also had the option of voting for the independent ticket of Robert Kennedy Jr. and Nicole Shanahan. Kennedy qualified to be on Virginia's ballot but withdraw in September after suspending his campaign.
In both Maryland and Virginia, the Libertarian Party (Chase Oliver and Mike ter Maat) and Green Party (Jill Stein and Rudolph Ware) qualified for the ballot.
Virginia voters also had two additional independent tickets that didn't qualify in the other jurisdictions: Claudia De la Cruz and Karina Garcia, who ran as the nominees of the Parts for Socialism and Liberation; and Cornel West and Melina Abdullah, of the Justice For All Party.
Click on a state below to zoom in to presidential election results at the county level (or ward level in D.C.).
District of Columbia
In D.C., voters got to select council members in Wards 7 and 8, as well as an at-large council member and two members of the Board of Education. D.C. residents also got to select three members of a so-called shadow delegation of non-voting members to Congress. The Democratic candidates are running unopposed in Wards 2 and 4.
District residents also got to weigh in on Initiative 83: Ranked Choice Voting and Open Primary Elections to Independent Voters Act of 2024. The initiative read:
If enacted, the Initiative would both: (a) implement ranked choice voting to allow voters to rank up to five candidates according to their preference in each contest for any office (other than political party offices); and (b) permit any voter who is not registered with a political party to vote in the primary election of that voter's choosing for all offices (other than political party offices). This Initiative will not be implemented unless the D.C. Council separately chooses to appropriate funds for the projected costs.
Maryland
In the DMV, Marylanders had a U.S. House Race to watch in Maryland's 6th Congressional District, as well as the statewide race for U.S. Senator between Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks and former Gov. Larry Hogan.
Abortion rights were also on the ballot, with all Marylanders asked to weigh in on adding a right to reproductive freedom to the state's constitution. The ballot initiative read:
The proposed amendment confirms an individual's fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including but not limited to the ability to make and effectuate decisions to prevent, continue, or end the individual's pregnancy, and provides the State may not, directly or indirectly, deny, burden, or abridge, the right unless justified by a compelling State interest achieved by the least restrictive means.
Virginia
Virginia voters in the DMV had two hotly contested races for the U.S. House of Representatives in Virginia's 7th and 10th Congressional Districts, as well as the choice of re-electing U.S Sen. Tim Kaine (D) to a third term or sending his Republican opponent, Hung Cao, to the U.S. Senate.
Virginia voters also had a ballot question asking whether the commonwealth's constitution should be amended so that the tax exemption currently available to the surviving spouses of soldiers killed in action would also be available to the surviving spouses of soldiers who died in the line of duty.