Today is so-called "Super Tuesday" in the US. Voters in 24 states are heading to the polls -- including in large population states like New York, California, and Illinois -- to decide who get to face off for the job of US president as the nominees of the Republican and Democratic parties. After the votes have been counted tonight, 52% of the Democratic and 41% of the Republican delegates will have been awarded, and it may be that we have a clearer picture of who those nominees are.
Following election returns from 24 states can be overwhelming, though. Certainly it is interesting and it can be a lot of fun (especially for political junkies), but that's a lot of data to absorb in a very short time. Thankfully, there are a number of tools on the web to make election watching easier. Below are some of our favorites.
In our opinion, CNN has by far the slickest and easiest to navigate election site out of all the major mainstream news media sources. They have a well designed, easy to navigate, and clearly laid out page that puts a wealth of information at your fingertips, including live election results, delegate counts, entrance and exit polls, candidate overviews, money charts, and general election info. If you're looking for just the straight state-by-state results, USA Today does a great job.
Politweets is our favorite Twitter politics mashup. Last month we said that, "For political junkies, Politweet will be a must monitor web-site on every primary date this season until we know who the candidates for the general election are." Assuming Twitter can keep the lights on, Politweets will again be a must watch site throughout the day. Also check out the SuperTuesday Twitter stream from the Virtual Vantage Points blog.
In an effort to make sure Twitter goes down, Google has also teamed up with the service to create a maps mashup that shows Twitter updates about the primaries as they come in from across the country. It will display election results down to the county level after the returns are in, as well. The Google News team also slapped together an election gadget so you can embed state-by-state results on your web page.

YouTube has a Google Maps mashup of their own that will aggregate and post geolocated videos throughout the day from candidates, news organizations, and YouTubers. The coverage isn't really restricted to Super Tuesday states, but it is still worth checking out -- many times the citizen journalist view is clearer than the one you get via mainstream sources.
Speaking of citizen journalism, MTV's Street Team has citizen journalists dispatched to 23 Super Tuesday states to upload live and recorded mobile videos and blog posts throughout the day (absent is a representative from West Virginia, whose primary is actually May 13 -- the Republican party is awarding some delegates today via a statewide convention, however). Last week we called MTV's online election coverage a coup for citizen journalism.
If mainstream journalism is more your thing, then Newsweek has you covered on the web. The magazine, along with owner the Wasington Post, is trotting out the heavy hitters for six continuous hours of live streaming web video coverage. Bob Woodward, Ben Bradlee, Sally Quinn, Howard Kurtz, and Leonard Downie will participate, with Newsweek editor Jon Meacham anchoring from Washingtonpost.com's headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. WaPo and Newsweek reporters Michael Isikoff, Howard Fineman, Jonathan Alter, and others, including those from online magazine Slate, will contribute reports throughout the evening. Newsweek's operation is aiming to bring the name appeal and polish of broadcast news to the web. We'll see if it works.
From the maker of Techmeme, Gabe Rivera's political memetracker keeps a pulse on the political blogosphere. It's a safe bet everyone will be buzzing about Super Tuesday today, but what are the individual storylines that will no doubt permeate the coverage? Following the related and discussion links on Memeorandum will let you find out. For a broader view of what people are talking about on the blogosphere, check out PoliticalTrends.info.
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Super Tuesday is here for the U.S. (I’m voting after work!), and Google, Twitter, and lots of other new media and social networking platforms are all a-buzz. Check out some nifty tools I’ve found for keeping on top of election results, news... Read More
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Meanwhile, I'm going to be tweeting from NPR headquarters as the precinct results come in conjunction with the NPR News Blog, using @nprnewsblog (for precinct results and official NPR race calls) and @acarvin (behind-the-scenes stuff).
Posted by: andy carvin | February 5, 2008 11:52 AMWe've put together a compilation on ResourceShelf with some direct links to real time databases from various Sect. of State/Commonwealth. California is one example. Some states do not offer this info but the links are full of background info about elections in the given state and often contain past results. One state, Georgia, is offering hourly updates via email.
http://www.resourceshelf.com/2008/02/05/super-tuesday-election-result-sources/
Posted by: gary price | February 5, 2008 2:29 PMA bit quick on the submit button.
I failed to mention in the post above that Ask.com has developed "Smart Answers" for all states/commonwealths having primaries both today and on other dates. Try a search for Super Tuesday or state primary (ex: New York Primary) and you'll find links to a variety of useful election sources.
Examples:
http://www.ask.com/web?l=dir&o=ffx&q=new+york+primary
http://www.ask.com/web?q=super+tuesday&qsrc=19&o=ffx&l=dir
Posted by: GARY PRICE | February 5, 2008 2:38 PMDiclosure: I work as Director of Online Info Resources at Ask.com.
You should add Yahoo's Political Dashboard - it's very well implemented:
Posted by: Nieves | February 6, 2008 4:15 AMhttp://news.yahoo.com/election/2008/dashboard/?d=ST
For the take from the best local politics and public affairs bloggers in each state, check out BlogNetNews.com
Next Tuesday is the Chesapeake primary which will be covered at:
http://www.blognetnews.com/delaware
http://www.blognetnews.com/maryland
http://www.blognetnews.com/virginia
Posted by: Dave Mastio | February 6, 2008 5:35 AM