Decision Desk HQ

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Decision Desk HQ

Decision Desk HQ is an American website that focuses on reporting election results in the United States. The company's president is Drew McCoy.[1] Decision Desk HQ uses an application programming interface (API) to get election results at the same time as they are published on websites provided by election officials. As of April 2025 it currently has United States election coverage partnerships with Nexstar Media Group owned outlets The Hill (newspaper) and NewsNation, as well as ballotpedia for U.S. local election coverage.[2][3]

Quick Facts Type of site, Available in ...
Decision Desk HQ
Thumb
Type of site
Election results
Available inEnglish
Created byBrandon Finnigan
URLdecisiondeskhq.com
CommercialYes
RegistrationNo
Launched2012
Current statusOnline
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History

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Decision Desk HQ, originally named Ace of Spades Decision Desk, was founded in 2012 by Brandon Finnigan as an alternative to what he deemed "slow" election calls by the Associated Press.[4]

It has called major races since the 2012 United States elections, and it first became known for calling the upset defeat of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor during his reelection bid to Virginia's 7th congressional district in 2014.[5]

In 2020, Decision Desk HQ was considered one of nine "official sources" for election results by Twitter[6] and provided election results to The Economist, BuzzFeed, Vox, and Business Insider.[1]

Decision Desk HQ was the first major election reporting organization to call the 2020 United States presidential election for Joe Biden.[1] The call was made shortly before 9 a.m. ET on Friday, November 6.[7] It made this call after projecting that Biden's lead in outstanding mail-in ballots from Pennsylvania left incumbent Donald Trump with no realistic path to win Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes. McCoy told Vox that the great majority of mail-in ballots from Pennsylvania were from heavily Democratic areas around Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. According to McCoy, Biden was winning the mail-in vote in those areas by a margin large enough to make his lead in the state insurmountable. By Decision Desk HQ's accounting, adding Pennsylvania to Biden's total gave Biden 273 electoral votes, three over the threshold to make him president-elect.[8] Vox, who partnered with Decision Desk HQ, called the election for Biden shortly after.[9] Statistician Nate Silver praised Decision Desk HQ's call and hoped other sources would follow suit.[10]

In November 2021 Decision Desk HQ acquired election news site Elections-Daily.com.[11] It also partnered with Europe Elects during the German and French elections of 2021 and 2022.

It did call the Missouri Congressional District 1 Democratic primary wrong, when Cori Bush beat incumbent Lacy Clay by almost three points.[12] Two years earlier, it miscalled a closer general election in California's 21st Congressional District for David Valadao who was beaten by Democrat T.J. Cox.[13]

During the 2022 United States elections, Decision Desk HQ provided election data to Nexstar Media Group owned media outlet NewsNation, ultimately calling control of Congress on November 15, 2022, 6:13 pm EST, a day before other media outlets.[2]

In November 2023 Decision Desk HQ announced a partnership with Nexstar Media Group owned The Hill and NewsNation for 2024 United States elections coverage.[14] Decision Desk HQ reprised providing election data to NewsNation, and was the first to call the 2024 United States presidential election for Donald Trump.[15]

In May 2024, Decision Desk HQ announced a partnership with Ballotpedia to provide real-time election results coverage for local elections in the United States.[3]

On March 31, 2025 Nexstar announced a continuation of it's partnership with Decision Desk HQ for the 2025 and 2026 United States election coverage for NewsNation and The Hill.[16]

Decision Desk HQ News

In 2021, Decision Desk HQ announced the creation of Decision Desk HQ News and the subsequent acquisition of its first site: Elections Daily. The new undertakings are designed to expand Decision Desk HQ's local news and international elections coverage.[17]

See also

References

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