Amid a historic Minnesota election with record early voting totals, a steady stream of Minnesotans continued to cast their ballots until the polls closed Tuesday evening, many of them saying the stakes were higher than ever.
Though lines were reported early at many polling places, they largely faded a steady trickle of voters as more than 1.8 million people has already cast and returned absentee ballots. By the time the polls closed at 8 p.m., the majority of voters had long since returned home while volunteers dismantled polling stations.
Hussein Jama walked out of Edison High School in northeast Minneapolis to the sound of applause from poll workers. It was 8 p.m., and he was the last voter to cast a ballot here as the doors closed behind him.
Jama, 40, had been out of state all day working in transport, and didn't know if he would make it in time. "I was a little bit nervous," he said.
Four minutes before polls closed, Sammy Patzner, 28, had finally made up her mind. "It's been a tough one for me," she said. "I don't follow politics very deeply."
Waiting till the end of the day, "it gave me the rest of the day to think about" who she wanted to win the presidency. When she looked over her options, she was stunned by what she saw. "I was surprised Kanye West was on the ballot," she said.
"I just wanted to make sure that I at least voted," she added. "All I know is that I didn't vote for Kanye."
Judith Rodgers and her team of election workers were starting to take signs down as Tom Payne cast his ballot, the final voter before the polls closed at Edina-Morningside Community Church. The 44-year-old said he's "nonpolitical" and wasn't even certain who he would vote for when he walked into the polling site before casting a vote for Biden.