Tuesday kicked off a long tradition on Election Day in the United States: problems and errors at the voting stations.

In one case documented by VoteStand, a phone application that people can use to report voting problems, a Philadelphia voter reported “clear-cut” electioneering too close to polling stations.

“The staff working were not checking voter ID,” a Virginia voter reported.

“Partisan (literature) being passed inside protected polling location. Clear cut case of electioneering,” the voter tweeted.

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Most states ban electioneering or advocacy within spaces near voters.

Pennsylvania law says within a polling place, no one can “electioneer or solicit votes for any political party, political body or candidate, nor shall any written or printed matter be posted up within the said room, except as required by this act.”

Electioneering complaints were also made from Buffalo, New York, and Ashton-Sandy Spring, Maryland.

In Chantilly, Virginia, a disturbing complaint: “I was told that I had already voted via absentee ballot, which I hadn’t. I completed a provisional ballot.”

In Mishawaka, Indiana, a voter reported a single iPad was being used to check in voters. It created an average 40-minute wait, the voter reported. “Longer than it is ever been in the last 20 years,” the voter said.

But one of the more disturbing tweets came from a voter in Dumfries, Virgina.

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“The staff working were not checking voter ID,” the voter reported.

That’s a violation of law. According to the Virginia Department of Elections’ website: “You will need to show one acceptable photo identification card (photo ID) whenever you vote in person. This is Virginia law for all voters.”

In Centreville, Virginia, another complaint was that “poll workers allow several people [to] enter new address information at the polling place with no documentation.”

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Sometimes things got crazy. Two women in New York City showed up at the poll where Donald Trump was to vote, and took their shirts off. They were escorted out by police.

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In North Strabane Township, Pennsylvania, near the city of Washington, lines were long at one station. CNN reported voters there may have to wait two hours. The area is south of Pittsburgh, and likely to contain many Republican voters.

Facebook was also full of Election Day observations.

In Rochester, New York, reporter Steve Orr of the Democrat and Chronicle noted voters entered a graveyard to pay respects to the late great Susan B. Anthony, the suffragette who is credited with helping women gain the right to vote. Women cast their first presidential votes in 1920.

By noon on Tuesday, her gravestone was covered with “I voted” stickers.