By Grace Segers, CBS News–

Election Day has passed, but four of the biggest races have yet to be called. The Arizona Senate race, the Florida gubernatorial and Senate races, and the Georgia gubernatorial race have narrow margins between Democratic and Republican candidates.

Here is a look at where vote counts — and possible recounts — stand in the three states several days after voters across the country hit the polls:

Arizona Senate race

Votes are still being tallied in Arizona, and Democratic Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema has extended her lead over GOP opponent Martha McSally since Election Day.

Sinema’s campaign on Sunday evening was characterizing her growing lead over McSally as “insurmountable.” Sinema’s campaign manager, Andrew Platt said that Sunday’s results showed that McSally had lost every batch of voters from Maricopa County counted so far by early Sunday evening. McSally’s campaign had expected the Maricopa County mail-in votes to be GOP votes for her, but instead, Sinema’s lead has grown. Her campaign said that as of Sunday, her lead expanded to 32,640 votes over McSally.

The Associated Press said that about 200,000 votes remained uncounted, and officials estimate the counting will be finished Thursday.

McSally had led by a narrow margin in the days after Election Day, but Sinema took the lead when ballots from heavily Democratic areas such as Maricopa County were counted.

One reason it is taking days to count the votes is that around three-quarters of Arizona’s voters send mail-in ballots, meaning that they fill out their votes at home and mail them to their county board of elections. Since some mail-in ballots arrive close to Election Day, it takes longer to count them.

Additionally, Maricopa County and Pima County — two primarily Democratic counties — allow voters to address problems with their mail-in ballots up to five days after the election if there is a disparity between the signature on their voter registration and the signature on the ballot envelope. Last week, four county Republican parties sued to prevent counties from trying to verify signatures after polls closed.

Arizona Democrats and Republicans reached a settlement on the issue on Friday, allowing voters in rural counties as well as in Maricopa and Pima to have extra time to fix problems with their ballots. The counties have until November 14 to address the issue.

Florida: Senate and governor races

Over half of Florida’s 67 counties began recounting votes Sunday in the tight Senate and gubernatorial races. Broward County has run into some problems already. Broward officials said that they mistakenly counted 22 absentee ballots that had been rejected because the signature on the return envelope didn’t match the one on file. Those ballots have been mixed in with 205 legal ballots, so Brenda Snipes, Broward County election supervisor, said it wouldn’t be fair to throw out all the ballots, according to the AP.

Counts in Miami-Dade and Pinellas and Hillsborough counties in the Tampa Bay area are proceeding without incident so far.  Smaller counties are to start their recounts Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. All  complete the recount by a Thursday deadline.

Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner ordered recounts in the Senate and governor races on Saturday. Florida election law dictates that a machine recount must be undertaken if the margin between two candidates is within half a percentage point.

Republican Senate candidate and current Gov. Rick Scott is leading incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson by less than 15,000 votes, or roughly .2 percent. Republican gubernatorial candidate Ron DeSantis is leading Democrat Andrew Gillum by less than 40,000 votes, around .4 percent.

The ballot-counting issues are centered in Broward County and Palm Beach County, two populous counties that tend to vote Democratic. On Friday, Scott won two lawsuits — one ordering the Palm Beach County elections supervisor to submit “over-voted” and “under-voted” absentee ballots to the Palm Beach County Canvassing Board for public review of each vote before they are counted. Over-votes are ballots in which the machines read that the voter may have selected more than one candidate, and under-votes occur when the machine does not register a vote on the ballot. The other lawsuit ordered the Broward County elections supervisor to release records of voter information.

Scott and President Trump have claimed without offering evidence that Democrats are tampering with the election.

If the machine recount finds one or both of the races to be within one quarter of a percentage point, a manual recount will be held.

Georgia governor race

If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote in Georgia, the top two candidates advance to a runoff.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Brian Kemp is currently leading with 50.3 percent of the vote, above the threshold for a runoff. However, Democrat Stacey Abrams argues that not all votes have been counted, and mobilized a campaign to reach out to voters who used provisional ballots to ensure their votes were counted.

Kemp’s camp argues there are not enough ballots left uncounted to narrow the margin and ensure a December 4 recount would take place.

Vote totals must be certified in all Georgia counties by Tuesday evening.

Accusations of voter suppression cast a shadow over the vote tabulation. Kemp was Georgia secretary of state until his resignation on Thursday. During his tenure, his office removed 1.5 million voters from the rolls. His office also suspended the registration of 53,000 voters shortly before the election, 70 percent of whom were black, although a judge ruled that these voters could cast a ballot on election day. Democrats argue that Kemp’s seeming victory is due to tactics of voter suppression.