The video, which was posted to Twitter by Priscilla Thompson of NBC News, shows voters waiting on line at 7:30 a.m. local time, just a half-hour after early voting locations opened for the day.

“LIVE LOOK at the line of people waiting to vote at 730am on NYE — the last day of early voting in Cobb County, Georgia. As a reminder, the states runoff elections will ultimately determine the balance of power in Washington DC,” Thompson wrote in the caption to her tweet.

The early voting period in Cobb County began on December 14, and ends at 3 p.m. local time today.

Twitter user Dave R Watson shared a photo at around 7 a.m. local time on Thursday, showing a similar line outside another early voting location in Cobb County, with a caption that read, “Last day of early voting in Cobb County. Line already snaking around polling location as polls open.”

“The line to early vote in DeKalb County, GA (early voting started weeks ago),” Twitter user Cameron wrote on Tuesday, including a photo of the line outside the early voting location.

The early voting period also ends on Thursday in DeKalb County, which is the fourth largest county in the state.

Across Georgia, several other counties had their final day of early voting on Wednesday, where similar lines of voters were seen.

In Fulton County, the state’s largest, early voting ended on Wednesday but voters were seen waiting in lines earlier in the week.

As the photos and videos show lines of early voters, the Georgia Secretary of State’s office confirmed to Newsweek that as of Thursday, there have been at least 2,812,532 early votes cast, which includes 895,859 mail-in ballots and 1,916,673 in-person votes.

The lines of voters come less than a week before the state’s Senate runoff. The January 5 runoff, which will determine which political party has the Senate majority, includes two races.

One race pits Republican incumbent David Perdue against Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff, while the other features Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler against Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock.

Newsweek reached out to each candidate in the Senate runoff for comment but did not receive a response in time for publication.