Live vote count and map

US election 2024

Alaska voters will cast ballots in races for president and the state’s only member of the U.S. House. The House race is considered a “Toss Up,” according to ratings from the Cook Political Report.

Voters will also decide on two key ballot measures: one that would abolish ranked-choice voting and one that would raise its minimum wage and require employers to provide paid sick leave.

Alaska’s elections use ranked-choice voting. Voters will rank their top four picks in each race. If no one wins a majority, the lowest ranked candidate is eliminated and the second choice votes of their supporters are counted. The process continues until one candidate obtains a majority over the other.

Alaska will begin releasing results after its final polls close at 6 p.m. 1 a.m. Eastern Time.

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Chairman

Voting share of manager

you506070% Rep

CANDIDATE VOICES PCT
Kamala Harris Democratic 0 0%
Donald Trump Republicans 0 0%
Robert Kennedy Petitioner candidate 0 0%

House

CANDIDATE VOICES PCT
Mary Peltola* Democratic 0 0%
Nick Begich Republicans 0 0%
Eric Hafner Democratic 0 0%

Important ballots

Increase the current minimum wage of $11.73 to $15 an hour by 2027, then adjust annually based on inflation; require employers to provide paid sick leave

CANDIDATE VOICES PCT
Raise the minimum wage and implement future inflation-based increases, require paid sick leave for workers
Yes 0 0%
You may not change minimum requirements or require paid sick leave
No 0 0%

Eliminate primaries in all parties where four candidates advance; abolish ranked choice in general elections

CANDIDATE VOICES PCT
Return to the individual parties’ primaries and single-election general elections
Yes 0 0%
Hold top-four primaries and ranked-choice polls
No 0 0%

About this state

  • Alaska average
  • American average

Race and ethnicity

0 25 25 50% 50%

Educational attainment

0 10 10 20% 20%

Sources: American Automobile Association, US Census Bureau, Bureau of Economic Analysis

Note: Race and ethnicity proportions are based on Citizen Voting Age Population (CVAP) from Census Bureau ACS 5-year estimates, 2018-2022. Median household incomes are based on inflation-adjusted data from January to December 2023; education shares are for population 25 and over, both based on 2023 Census ACS 1-year estimates. Regional housing price parity is calculated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis and represents how much more (over 100) or less (less than 100) expensive housing rental costs are in a state compared to the national average in 2022, the most recent year available. The three largest professions per state is based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics release of Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics in 2023, the most recent data available.

Latest news about the 2024 US election

By Elena Mejia Jennah Haque Marie Patino Rachael Dottle Brittany Harris Julian Burgess Alex Graves Dean Halford Armand Emamdjomeh Edited by Allan James Vestal Rachael Dottle Alex Tribou Amanda Cox Martin Keohan With assistance from Jaci Kessler Lublin Gregory Korte Luis Daniel Palacios Peru Dayani Sam Dodge Oscar Bolton Green Steph Davidson Michelle Jamrisko Brad Skillman Alexandre Tanzi Chloe Whiteaker Vivianne Rodrigues Mark Cudmore Esha Dey Further research by Fola Akinnibi Kelsey Butler Anna Edgerton John Gittelsohn Gregory Korte Heather Landy Nadia Lopez Daniel Moran Kathy Rizzo Fiona Rutherford

Sources: Election results provided by the Associated Press. Additional data from US Census Bureau, American Automobile Association, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Cook Political Report with Amy Walter, Natural Earth, Redistricting Data Hub, US Department of Transportation, CME Group, Bloomberg Indexes, US Geological Survey and Bloomberg reporting.

Note: Estimated vote count percentage is based on the Estimated Expected Vote Percentage (EEVP) as calculated by the Associated Press. This project has been updated to clarify that Bloomberg News does not track results in congressional elections for terms ending in January 2025.