The Latest: The most recent advancements in the US elections

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on Election Day 2016 (all times EST): 

12 p.m. 

Very rich person Warren Buffett is dedicating a portion of Election Day to get-out-the-vote endeavors — as he drives voters to the surveys on a trolley he procured. 

The long-lasting Democrat had guaranteed to support turnout at a Hillary Clinton rally in Omaha in August. Buffett says a few people have it harder than others — possibly a sickness or issue with their auto. He says he needs to do his part so everybody gets an opportunity to vote. 
The Latest: The most recent advancements in the US elections

More than 1,000 individuals have volunteered to help Buffett drive voters to the surveys. 

Buffett is a supporter of Clinton's, however on Tuesday he declined to discuss that. Rather, he said he simply needed to urge everybody to vote paying little heed to gathering alliance. 

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11:40 a.m. 

President Barack Obama says on Twitter that "advance is on the vote" Tuesday. 

He's encouraging his more than 11 million Twitter adherents to "go vote." He likewise says they ought to ensure that their companions, family and everybody they know votes, as well. 

Obama has crusaded forcefully to choose Democrat Hillary Clinton. 

He utilized the "advance is on the vote" line at a considerable lot of the get-out-the-vote revitalizes he featured for his previous secretary of state. 

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11:35 a.m. 

Decision authorities say voting machine issues in southern Utah are constraining survey specialists to utilize paper tallies, possibly influencing a huge number of individuals. 

Utah Director of Elections Mark Thomas says a programming issue has influenced all voting in Washington County, however so far shows up it seems constrained to that area. 

He says in regards to 52,000 enrolled voters there have yet to cast their polls. 

Decision specialists are attempting to settle the PC issue and trust they can begin utilizing the voting machines later as a part of the day. 

Thomas says authorities were set up with reinforcement paper polls. Yet, he said they should print progressively if the issue endures. 

There are around 80,000 aggregate enrolled voters in Washington County. Somewhere in the range of 28,000 have as of now cast their tallies through early voting. 

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11:25 a.m. 

Donald Trump has voted in New York City. 

Many spectators looked as Trump, his significant other Melania, little girl Ivanka, and child in-law Jared arrived Tuesday morning at their surveying place at a state funded school on Manhattan's East Side. 

Trump said: "it's a significant privilege, a gigantic respect" to cast his poll. 

He said he's inclination sure about regards to the result, refering to "colossal eagerness." 

With respect to his longstanding worries about voter extortion, he says. "We're generally worried about that." 

His last message to voters: "Make America extraordinary once more. That is all it is. That is what it's about." 

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11:05 a.m. 

Hillary Clinton is getting some peculiar inquiries in Election Day radio meetings. 

Clinton called WKZL in North Carolina and was asked whether she inclines toward Pepsi or Coke? Coke, said Clinton. 

Bathroom tissue — over the top or under the base of the roll? "More often than not over, yet I can live with under," joked Clinton. 

What's more, dozing courses of action. Clinton told WXKS in Boston that she won't switch which side of the bed she thinks about if chose president. The White House will need to put the storied presidential telephone on her side, not as an afterthought that her previous president spouse considers. 

She said: "I have my side, and it works extremely well for us." As for Bill, she said, "I think he'll be upbeat to give me a chance to answer it." 

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10:55 a.m. 

WikiLeaks boss Julian Assange says he wasn't attempting to impact the U.S. presidential decision when his association distributed hacked messages from Hillary Clinton's battle. 

In an announcement Tuesday, Assange denied he was attempting to bolster Green Party hopeful Jill Stein or render retribution for the imprisoning of previous U.S. insight investigator Chelsea Manning. 

Keeping an eye on was sentenced to 35 years in jail for releasing mystery U.S. government archives to WikiLeaks. 

Assange recommends WikiLeaks would distribute material on Clinton's Republican opponent Donald Trump, on the off chance that it got proper material and passed judgment on it newsworthy. 

Assange said Wikileaks has not yet got data on the battles of Trump, Stein or different competitors "that satisfies our expressed article criteria." 

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9:55 a.m. 

As voters cast their tallies for president, some are persuaded, while others are holding their breath. 

In Indianapolis, 50-year old homemaker Ranita Wires said she voted in favor of Hillary Clinton since she believes her, yet said "this has been the most exceedingly bad," and she's "so happy it's over." 

Craig Bernheimer voted in favor of Donald Trump at his nearby surveying station in Tulsa, Oklahoma early Tuesday, saying it has more to do with "what the other didn't bring." 

New Mexico truck driver Richard Grasmick said he respected Libertarian competitor Gary Johnson and planned to vote in favor of him, yet became baffled by Johnson's broadcast flubs on outside undertakings issues. 

He said, "I needed to run with Gary yet he fizzled me." Grasmick voted in favor of Donald Trump. 

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9:20 a.m. 

Lines were long in a few spots, however couple of voters making a beeline for the surveys early Tuesday seemed, by all accounts, to be experiencing issues. 

Presidential Elections more often than exclude sporadic voting issues, for example, machines not working appropriately. Calls to Election Protection, a national voter helpline, included individuals reporting long lines as an aftereffect of machine issues in three regions in Virginia. What's more, Election authorities at a modest bunch of regions in Durham County, North Carolina, were utilizing paper move books after specialized issues with PC registration. 

In front of the decision, there was nervousness about whether voters would confront issues. Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump said the decision was fixed and Democrats cautioned that Republicans were wanting to scare voters. There were additionally worries about programmers upsetting Election frameworks. 

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8:45 a.m. 

Donald Trump's eldest child says that his family will "regard the result" of a "reasonable decision." 

Donald Trump, Jr. told CNN's New Day Tuesday that he supposes his dad "will stay included fairly" on the off chance that he loses the decision. He said he trusts that the vitality encompassing his dad's crusade "retreats to the general population we are attempting to battle for, the general population who haven't had a voice in quite a while." 

He said, all things considered, that "ideally we shed some light on the procedure," and empowered individuals to talk their psyches openly, "without being placed in some wicker bin, without being confined a corner." 

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8:40 a.m. 

Ladies over the United States are wearing pantsuits Tuesday in a show of support for Hillary Clinton. 

Numerous were roused by a Facebook aggregate called Pantsuit Nation that has more than 2 million individuals. Some are additionally wearing white out of appreciation for the suffragists who wore white when they battled for ladies' voting rights in the mid 1900s. 

In Alexandria, Virginia, Heather O'Beirne Kelly says she's wearing a white pantsuit, motivated by the Facebook assemble and composed endeavors to inspire ladies to wear white to vote. 

New Yorker Denise Shull attempted to purchase a white pantsuit on Amazon, however they were sold out. She's wearing a high contrast suit to bolster Clinton, additionally to symbolize "ladies gaining ground." 

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8:35 a.m. 

Hillary and Bill Clinton are voting in the place where they grew up of Chappaqua New York. 

The Clintons welcomed supporters holding up outside the surveying place subsequent to throwing their tickets Tuesday morning. 

Hillary Clinton said it was "the most lowering feeling" to vote "since such a variety of individuals are depending on the result of this race." 

Charge Clinton said he's anxious to be a political life partner, kidding that he had "15 years of practice." 

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8:30 a.m. 

President Barack Obama is keeping up an Election Day custom: a round of get ball with companions. 

Obama touched base at the exercise room at the Army's Fort McNair in the District of Columbia around 8 a.m. He wore dim, easygoing garments and a baseball top, and conveyed a couple of high-top athletic shoes. The White House didn't say who the president would play with. 

Upon the arrival of his re-Election in 2012, Obama's b-ball colleagues included previous Chicago Bulls player Scottie Pippen. 

Obama began the Election Day convention amid the 2008 presidential battle. 

The president has been battling forcefully to choose kindred Democrat Hillary Clinton, including featuring get-out-the-vote energizes for her in three states on Monday. 

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8:15 a.m. 

Tim Kaine is not giving the greatest Election of his life a chance to hinder his Tuesday schedule. 

In the wake of voting at 6 a.m. furthermore, doing a round of national morning TV appears, Kaine met a gathering of companions for breakfast at the City Diner in Richmond. 

Kaine and his companions attempt to meet each Tuesday at the coffee shop, a couple of miles from his home. 

The U.S. congressperson and previous Virginia senator was welcomed with cheers as he strolled into the eatery 

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8:10 a.m. 

Donald Trump says the presidential battle has been an "astounding procedure" that place him in contact with the unfulfilled desires of the American individuals. 

Met by telephone Tuesday on "Fox and Friends," the Republican presidential candidate said he's seen "such a large number of trusts and dreams that didn't happen, that could have been assisted with appropriate authority." 

Trump says he "took a little warmth" for raising "illicit migration" from the day he propelled his battle, however "at last it was the proper thing to do." 

Trump said his crusade is a "development" and the American individuals are "unfathomable." 

Inquired as to whether he had any second thoughts, Trump said "beyond any doubt, there's things I would have done diverse." He didn't name any. 

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8 p.m. 

Eric Trump says that his dad will conced
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