Rahma Ahmed's first trip to the voting booth was a long one.
Ahmed, who became a U.S. citizen this year, waited most of the afternoon Tuesday, part of it outside in the rain, before finally casting a ballot at an overrun polling place in south Minneapolis. She was angry, she said, but also determined.
"I just became a citizen. I have to vote, because it's my duty," Ahmed said.
Despite occasional long lines, dark skies over much of the state, and even a bomb threat in a building near a polling site in southwestern Minnesota, voters appeared to enthusiastically turn out Tuesday in a general election that featured a hard-fought presidential campaign and two down-to-the-wire state ballot initiatives.
Many polling places reported strong turnout -- often at the crack of dawn -- as Minnesota tried to maintain its record as the country's top state for voter turnout.
Ahmed was one of hundreds of voters at the Seward Square Apartments caught in a polling place change dictated by redistricting. Outside, a woman passed out ponchos and hats to those in line; someone else handed out pizza.
Minneapolis City Clerk Casey Carl said this year's redistricting tried to balance the number of voters across precincts, but the outcome was long lines at some, and no waiting at others.
While most of those in line waiting patiently, state Rep. Phyllis Kahn, DFL-Minneapolis, who doesn't live in the precinct but went to the polling place after hearing about the delays, was irate. She got election judges to open a different door to allow more voters to wait inside, out of the rain.