Hillary Clinton,Bill Clinton

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, accompanied by her husband, former President Bill Clinton, right, greets supporters outside Douglas G. Grafflin School in Chappaqua, N.Y. after voting.

(Andrew Harnik, Associated Press)

CLEVELAND, Ohio - More voters say they were contacted by Hillary Clinton's campaign than by Donald Trump's, according to new, preliminary results from a Morning Consult/POLITICO Exit Poll that appear to confirm Clinton's organizational advantage in the presidential race.

See below for more on this story as well as the latest hourly compilation, from Cleveland and Northeast Ohio, to across Ohio and the nation on Election Day 2016. Scroll to the bottom for hourly update posts from earlier Tuesday.

Exit poll hours before polls close is preliminary

Seventeen percent of voters say they were contacted by Clinton's campaign by phone or in person, compared to only 8 percent who say Trump's camp reached them. Another 9 percent say they were contacted by both campaigns, and 62 percent say neither campaign made contact with them.

The results - based on online interviews with 9,704 early and Election-Day voters - are preliminary and could change significantly as the day goes on. Read more.

When do the polls close across the country?

North Carolina county requests extended voting hours

The Durham County Board of Elections requested that voting be extended in the county by 90 minutes.

The unanimous recommendation, which was sent to the state Board of Elections at 1:30 p.m., came after a glitch in the electronic voter check-in system required a switch to paper roll books, elections spokesperson Briana Khan told CNN. Read more.

Cuyahoga County voters pleased with experience

The Cuyahoga County Board of Elections reported more than 3,000 voters took a survey - 95 percent reported they had a good or very good experience voting; 80 percent waited less than 10 minutes or not at all.

If you've voted you can take the survey: surveymonkey.com/r/nov16gen

Board of Elections director Pat McDonald reports a smooth day with minimal issues. He predicts a 67 percent voter turnout.

Economists urge people to vote against Trump

A letter signed by 790 economists, some whom have won the Nobel Prize in economics, urged voters not to vote for Trump.

"His statements reveal a deep ignorance of economics and an inability to listen to credible experts," the letter reads. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the letter, which was signed almost entirely by college professors. Read more.

Eric Trump may have broken the law

Eric Trump may have broken the law Tuesday after he tweeted a picture of what appears to be his own ballot with a vote for his father. Then he broke social media code by deleting his tweet of the ballot picture. Read more.

Jurors in murder trial excused early to go vote.

Jurors were excused at noon Tuesday so that they would have an opportunity to vote following brief deliberations in the murder trial of a Georgia man whose toddler son died after being left for hours in a hot car. Read more.

Some voters in Pennsylvania asked for photo ID

Although a photo ID is not required under Pennsylvania law to vote there have been incidents of poll workers asking for an ID at polling places. Read more.

Two Florida poll workers fired after spat

Two part-time election workers in Broward County were fired for violating professional standards when they responded to a disagreement between two poll watchers representing the Democratic and Republican parties. Read more.

University of Wisconsin issues voting IDs for out-of-state students

University of Wisconsin-Madison officials have come up with a clever way to ensure that the 14,000 students on campus from out-of-state can vote under Wisconsin's new voter ID law, the Associated Press reported.

UW-Madison's student ID cards don't comply with the law because they expire in five years, rather than two years under the law. UW officials set up tables at all campus polling stations where they're printing out paper voting-only IDs that let students vote.