WASHINGTON —
Maricopa County, Arizona, has become the nation's ultimate swing county — a place that could determine whether Democrat Kamala Harris or Republican Donald Trump will be the next president and which party controls the U.S. Senate.
The county is so closely divided politically that it can take more than a week to learn who won it. This year, election officials warn it could be as long as 13 days to tabulate all of the ballots in Maricopa.
The drawn-out count has made Maricopa County — home to Phoenix and dozens of other communities — a center of election conspiracy theories.
But the reason it takes so long is simple. Here are some things to know about this consequential battleground:
It is a sprawling, fast-growing county
Maricopa County stretches across more than 9,000 square miles, more than four U.S. states. With its 4.5 million residents, the county is home to 60% of Arizona's voters. It has more residents than nearly half of the states in the country.
It wasn't always that way. In 1969, the county was still home to fewer than 1 million people. It became a magnet for conservatives like John Kavanagh, a retired New York Port Authority Police officer who in 1993 relocated with his family to Maricopa County.