Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams’s campaign argued in a press conference today that a recount or runoff is still possible—if all the votes in the state are counted. Republican candidate Brian Kemp cannot declare victory in their midterm race, as he did on Wednesday, they said, due to thousands of uncounted or unaccepted ballots throughout the state.

In strong terms, members of Abrams’s litigation team and campaign demanded that Kemp’s office or the office of the secretary of state release the data on as-yet-uncounted provisional ballots as well as military and overseas votes, which Kemp’s spokeswoman Candice Broce claimed to amount to around 22,000 to 24,000. Abrams’s camp also indicated that additional early votes had been reported after at least one county had said that all of its early votes had been tallied—they believe that, contrary to what Kemp has said, if all of the remaining votes are counted, there could be enough additional votes for Abrams to trigger an official recount, or even a runoff election.

The Abrams race in Georgia is among a few highly contested election races around the country, including Andrew Gillum’s in Florida, which is narrowing toward the threshold for a recount. Both Abrams’s and Gillum’s races became national flash points for potential repudiation of so-called Trumpism by the left in 2018; both candidates not only ran progressive campaigns, focusing on health care, immigration, and poverty, but were black challengers taking on white Republican candidates.

Here, what you need to know about where these races stand:

Update, 3:24pm EST: Both the Florida governor and Senate races are now in recount territory. The race between Gillum and Ron DeSantis for governor has narrowed to a percentage below the threshold legally needed to trigger a recount by machine. A communications consultant with the Gillum campaign tweeted the vote count below. Gillum now only trails by .47 percent. Incumbent Bill Nelson and outgoing governor Rick Scott’s Senate race has narrowed to about .22 percent, which is under the legal threshold of .25 percent for a manual recount. Regarding both races, according to Florida law, Secretary of State Ken Detzner must order a recount once it passes the legal requirements; the candidate with fewer votes can decline—but not request—a recount.

Abrams’s team says with as-yet-uncounted votes, runoff or recall is still possible.