WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Republican Donald Trump defeated Democrat and Vice President Kamala Harris to win the election for 47th President of the United States.
The Associated Press called the race for Trump early Wednesday morning after the former 45th president picked up wins in crucial battleground states, including Georgia.
With a win in Wisconsin, Trump cleared the 270 electoral votes needed to clinch the presidency, AP reports.
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Before the race was called, Trump and his running mate Ohio Sen. JD Vance addressed supporters at their election headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida.
“This was a movement like nobody’s ever seen before, and frankly, I believe this was the greatest political movement of all time,” Trump said.
The Harris campaign has not yet released a statement. The Vice President is expected to address the nation later this morning.
LIVE reaction on ABC News and Channel 2 Action News This Morning.
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Trump flipped Georgia. Why AP called the state for Trump
The story of how Donald Trump won the emerging swing state of Georgia is one of margins.
Four years ago, he lost the state by just under 12,000 votes. He reclaimed it by notching microscopic but difference-making improvements in his vote totals in dozens of deeply red counties, many of them small and rural. It was still enough to put him over the top with 50.8% of the vote when The Associated Press called the state for him at 12:58 a.m. Wednesday.
Though the race is likely to narrow as more ballots are counted, there were not enough votes to be tabulated in Democratic-leaning areas for Vice President Kamala Harris to overtake Trump’s lead, which would have required her to get 56.1% of the remaining vote. She also narrowly underperformed Joe Biden in some population-dense counties in the Atlanta metro area. For example, in Fulton County Biden got 72.59% of the vote in 2020. This year Harris got 71.89% when the race was called.
Those small differences were enough to secure Georgia’s 16 electoral votes for Trump. But they are also another salient data point that suggests Georgia will be a fiercely contested battleground for years to come.
ABOUT THE RACE:
Georgia was long considered a Republican stronghold. But in 2020, Biden’s squeaker victory made him the first Democratic presidential contender since Bill Clinton in 1992 to carry the state, an emerging political battleground made more competitive by changing demographics and the booming Atlanta metro area.
Still, there was little guarantee 2024 would be a repeat.
Harris aggressively campaigned in the state, but Georgia had appeared to be a bit more of a reach for her than other battlegrounds.
Still, Georgia’s political dynamics are volatile. And the state was still up for grabs going into Election Day because the Republican party’s grip loosened as older, white GOP voters died. They have often been replaced by a younger, more racially diverse cast .
But just because many moving to the booming Atlanta area brought their politics with them didn’t mean the fundamentals dramatically changed. Biden beat Trump by only 11,779 votes in 2020. Trump got all of the state’s 16 electoral votes.
WHY AP CALLED THE RACE: At the time the race was called, Trump was leading by 125,000 votes. Almost all advance votes in Georgia had been reported. His lead was larger than what Harris could be expected to make up from the remaining votes in Democratic strongholds. Trump was slightly ahead of his 2020 performance in enough counties to erase the deficit of less than 12,000 votes by which he lost Georgia four years ago.
- BRIAN SLODYSKO Associated Press
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