November 3, 2016
AP, the most trusted source of information on election night with a history of accuracy dating to 1848, will offer that expertise to its member news organizations, customers and the public across all platforms when it counts the vote and covers the results on Nov. 8.
"In this most contentious and controversial of election years, we are focused on ensuring our vote count, race calls, and our reporting and analysis of events are accurate, fast and authoritative," said AP Washington Bureau Chief Sally Buzbee, who is in charge of campaign coverage. "We will be there to report what is occurring, in real time, and to quickly explore what it means for the country and the globe."
In addition to its robust text, photo and video coverage across all 50 states, AP will provide live video from voting sites across the U.S., candidate rallies and an AP vote count center, as well as live shots overlooking the Capitol and the White House.
Shareable text, video and photo elements will be available on APNews.com and the AP News app, as well as on AP Twitter accounts. Unique to AP News will be video interviews with AP staffers from the Washington newsroom and "Voter Voices" videos from around the country. AP also plans to utilize Facebook Live during election night.
Here are the highlights of AP’s coverage plans:
AP election coverage to include live video, shareable content
The Associated Press on election night will have video interviews with staffers and other shareable content from across the U.S. to augment its reports to members and customers worldwide.AP, the most trusted source of information on election night with a history of accuracy dating to 1848, will offer that expertise to its member news organizations, customers and the public across all platforms when it counts the vote and covers the results on Nov. 8.
"In this most contentious and controversial of election years, we are focused on ensuring our vote count, race calls, and our reporting and analysis of events are accurate, fast and authoritative," said AP Washington Bureau Chief Sally Buzbee, who is in charge of campaign coverage. "We will be there to report what is occurring, in real time, and to quickly explore what it means for the country and the globe."
In addition to its robust text, photo and video coverage across all 50 states, AP will provide live video from voting sites across the U.S., candidate rallies and an AP vote count center, as well as live shots overlooking the Capitol and the White House.
Shareable text, video and photo elements will be available on APNews.com and the AP News app, as well as on AP Twitter accounts. Unique to AP News will be video interviews with AP staffers from the Washington newsroom and "Voter Voices" videos from around the country. AP also plans to utilize Facebook Live during election night.
Here are the highlights of AP’s coverage plans:
- AP
will
be
reporting
the results for nearly 7,000 races, 4,700 of which
are contested and will be tabulated, tallying the vote to elect the
president, Congress and governors, plus state and some regional and
local races. Its tabulation of results is used by almost every major
news organization in the United States, plus numerous international
clients.
- AP
will
call
the
winner in the presidential race state by state, plus 34
Senate, 12 gubernatorial and 435 congressional races, using
state-of-the-art analytical tools and its premier vote count to help
determine when a race is decided. State-based race callers also will
designate winners in about 4,000 additional down-ticket races, from
state constitutional officers to state legislatures to ballot
initiatives.
- Timely updates on presidential and other key races and an interactive showing the balance of power will be available on APNews.com as well as on the AP News app. Push alerts and breaking news banners will provide the latest news. You can download the AP News app here.
About
AP
The
Associated Press is the essential global news network, delivering fast,
unbiased news from every corner of the world to all media platforms and
formats. Founded in 1846, AP today is the most trusted source of
independent news and information. On any given day, more than half the
world's population sees news from AP. On the web: www.ap.org.
Contact
Lauren
Easton
Media
Relations Manager
The
Associated Press