Polls close at 7:30 PM ET in West Virginia and 9:00 PM ET in Nebraska.
Our guide to tonight's races can be found here. We'll be bringing you the results as they come in.
Results: Nebraska | West Virginia
4:33 PM PT (David Jarman): Polls have closed in West Virginia, which will be our appetizer for the next hour and a half, until our main course in Nebraska. The main race we'll be following is WV-02, especially the Republican primary, where ex-U.S. Trade Commissioner Charlotte Lane, ex-Maryland GOP chair Alex Mooney, and self-funding pharmacist Ken Reed are the main contestants. There's also a Dem primary in the 2nd, though former state party chair Nick Casey is favored over state Del. Meshea Poore.
5:04 PM PT (David Jarman): We have a trickle of reports in WV-03, where, as expected, Nick Rahall is easily turning away a primary challenge from veteran Richard Ojeda. We've got bupkus in the 2nd, though.
5:17 PM PT (David Jarman): We've finally gotten enough votes in WV-02 (more than 1,000 on each side) to merit a mention. On the GOP side, Alex Mooney has a pretty wide lead; he's at 43, with Charlotte Lane at 16, the previously-unheralded Jim Moss at 13, Ken Reed at 11, and Steve Harrison (a state Sen., but who raised almost no money) at 9. On the Dem side, Nick Casey is beating Meshea Poore 67-33.
5:24 PM PT (David Jarman): You might also follow along with the West Virginia MetroNews site, which is a little further along than the AP. With 4% reporting, they see a closer race, with Mooney leading Reed 36-28.
5:30 PM PT (David Jarman): Looks like we saw a surge of Charleston-area votes, because the WV-02 races got a lot closer. Mooney leads Lane, who pushed into 2nd, only 29-24, with Reed at 20; on the Dem side, Casey's lead over Poore is down to 56-44. (Mooney lives in the DC exurbs of the Panhandle; Poore, meanwhile, represents Charleston in the House of Delegates.)
5:43 PM PT (David Jarman): With 14% reporting, things are starting to gel, and Casey and Mooney have to be feeling pretty comfortable. Casey leads Poore 57-43 on the Dem side, while on the GOP side, it's Mooney 33, Lane 23, Reed 19, and Harrison 13.
5:54 PM PT (David Jarman): By the way, after an inexplicable delay (since she's winning with 80% of the vote), the AP finally called the WV-Sen Dem primary for Natalie Tennant (after giving Shelley Capito the checkmark from near the outset); regardless of who wins, it'll be the first time West Virginia has had a female Senator.
5:59 PM PT (David Nir): Here's a good link for Newark mayoral results. With almost half the votes counted, Ras Baraka has a narrow 51-48 lead on Shavar Jeffries in the race to succeed Cory Booker.
6:01 PM PT (David Nir): WV-03: The AP's called the race for Rep. Nick Rahall, who faced a challenge from Iraq/Afghanistan vet Richard Ojede. With 15% reporting, Rahall has 68% of the vote.
6:05 PM PT (David Nir): WV-02: 30% reporting and Money has 31 on the GOP side, with Lane and Reed both at 21. Casey is up 57-43 for the Dem nod.
6:11 PM PT (David Nir): The first trickle of votes is showing up in Nebraska, where polls closed a few minutes ago.
6:19 PM PT (Steve Singiser): NE-Sen: A solid chunk of votes are already in from Nebraska, and it looks like the late polls were correct: Ben Sasse is looking very good early on. He leads the GOP Senate primary with 44 percent of the vote. Sid Dinsdale (25 percent) and Shane Osborn (23 percent) lag well behind. On the Democratic side, Dave Domina has a commanding 74-26 lead over Larry Marvin.
6:19 PM PT (David Nir): The liveblog continues here.