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Election Day: Time for voters to have their say

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The National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials estimates that 12 million Latino voters will visit the polls in this year’s election, which would be a 26 percent increase from 2008. More than 3 million Latinos are expected to vote in their first presidential election. A big turnout could mean the difference in Colorado, Nevada and perhaps Arizona.

Long lines. Polls might stay open past closing time, delaying the vote count. But if lines are too long and people get discouraged, they might go home.

Hurricane Sandy. Will voters be more sympathetic to Obama in hard-hit states such as Pennsylvania or New Hampshire? Or blame the feds for being too slow to respond?

CANDIDATES

Romney plans to vote early Tuesday at a Belmont, Mass., polling place near his home. Obama voted last month. Once the results are in, the president plans to address a rally at Chicago’s McCormick Place. Romney will host supporters at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center.

CONGRESS

One of the night’s most unpredictable cliffhangers involves control of the Senate.

Democrats now control 53 of the 100 seats, and they’re defending 23 to the Republicans’ 10. Close races in Virginia, Indiana and Massachusetts might offer early hints as to whether Republicans can achieve the net gain of four — three, if Romney is elected — to win control.

The next group of close races is farther west, notably in Wisconsin, Montana, Nevada and Arizona.

In the House, Democrats need a net gain of 25 for control, but independent analysts don’t expect the party to gain more than 10.

TELEVISION

In most areas, full election coverage begins at 6 p.m. EST on CNN and MSNBC, at 7 p.m. on ABC, Fox, CBS, NBC and Univision, and at 8 p.m. on PBS.

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(William Douglas in Orlando, Fla., Anita Kumar in Madison, Wis., and Franco Ordonez in Washington contributed to this article.)

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