Tag: Trump

  • US Speaker Johnson congratulates ‘President-elect’ Trump

    US Speaker Johnson congratulates ‘President-elect’ Trump

    House Speaker Mike Johnson on Wednesday offered his congratulations to “President-elect” Donald Trump.

    “There is hope and morning in America again. Donald Trump is now our President-elect, chosen by the American people for such a time as this,” Johnson said.

    Read Also: Netanyahu congratulates Trump for ‘history’s greatest comeback’

    The Republican presidential candidate has however not been declared winner of the 2024 election but is a few votes away from attaining the milestone for a second time.

  • Netanyahu congratulates Trump for ‘history’s greatest comeback’

    Netanyahu congratulates Trump for ‘history’s greatest comeback’

    David Bolarinwa with Agency reports

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday congratulated Donald Trump on his claimed victory in the U.S. presidential election, describing it as “history’s greatest comeback” and marking a new chapter in the U.S.-Israel alliance.

    “Congratulations on history’s greatest comeback! Your historic return to the White House offers a new beginning for America and a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between Israel and America. This is a huge victory!” Netanyahu said in a statement by his office.

  • Trump supporters celebrate expected victory in Florida

    Trump supporters celebrate expected victory in Florida

    Donald Trump supporters gathered in Florida on election night, eagerly anticipating a speech from the former president after he clinched key victories in his race for the White House.

    At the Palm Beach County Convention Center, men in suits and women in dresses mingled with a diehard Trump fan sporting a leather vest emblazoned with the president’s name.

    Whether in formal wear or more casual attire, many attendees proudly donned Trump’s signature red “Make America Great Again” baseball caps.

    “I feel like Trump has won this election. This is over, and I feel like the world’s about to be much greater,” said Moses Abraham, 22.

    On Wednesday, Trump inched closer to a potential victory over Kamala Harris, leaving his Democratic rival with a slim path to stop his remarkable political comeback.

    Read Also: Trump wins swing States, edges ahead Harris in US election

    “This is like 2016. I feel we are on the same path to win. I feel very optimistic about tonight. Donald Trump is the perfect fit for America,” said Jo Ann Poly Calvo.

    Rocco Talarico, 68, wore a “MAGA” cap and a leather vest inscribed with “Born to Ride” and “Donald Trump.”

    He voiced strong confidence that Trump would ultimately secure the victory.

    “We need that because our country right now has no borders, our crime is bad, our stock market is bad, and our gas and food prices are high. Kamala (Harris) did nothing for four years,” he said.

    Mike McCormack, 50, was particularly outspoken in his criticism of Harris as he awaited Trump’s appearance on what could turn out to be one of the most significant U.S. election nights in recent memory.

    “I don’t feel Donald Trump could be influenced from outside as much, and I strongly believe that Harris is actually controlled and manipulated. I have no faith in her,” He said

    He also questioned the integrity of the polls, a topic Trump has raised repeatedly without evidence, suggesting a conspiracy by his opponents to deny him the presidency.

    “I have some confidence in this election (but) not a whole lot. There have been some suspicious things happening. People have been arrested and convicted of voter fraud. So, I don’t know,” said McCormack.

  • US Election: Trump set to address supporters in Florida after key swing States win

    US Election: Trump set to address supporters in Florida after key swing States win

    Supporters of Donald Trump gathered in Florida on election night, eagerly anticipating a speech from the former President after he secured key victories in the race for the White House.

    Men in suits and women in dresses mingled at the Palm Beach County Convention Center event, alongside a passionate Trump fan sporting a leather vest emblazoned with the former president’s name.

     Whether dressed in formal attire or more casual outfits, many attendees proudly wore Trump’s iconic red “Make America Great Again” baseball caps.

    Read Also: Trump wins swing States, edges ahead Harris in US election

    “I feel like Trump has won this election. This is over, and I feel like the world’s about to be much greater,” said Moses Abraham, 22.

    Trump pushed closer to victory over Kamala Harris on Wednesday, leaving the Democrat the narrowest of remaining paths to stop him scoring a stunning political comeback.

    “This is like 2016. I feel that we are on the same path to win. I feel very optimistic about tonight,” said Jo Ann Poly Calvo. “Donald Trump is the perfect fit for America.”

  • Trump wins swing States, edges ahead Harris in US election

    Trump wins swing States, edges ahead Harris in US election

    Donald Trump won the first of the swing states Tuesday as he pulled ahead of White House rival Kamala Harris, narrowing her path to victory in an agonisingly tight and suspenseful US presidential election.

    The first of the seven key battlegrounds — North Carolina — went to Trump, confirming his growing momentum.

    Democratic vice president Harris appeared to be underperforming in other key areas compared to the Republican former president.

    Harris’s camp said the race was now “razor-thin” and that her “clearest path” to victory was through the so-called Blue Wall swing states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

    Harris’s campaign director Jen O’Malley Dillon insisted in an mail to campaign staff, obtained by AFP, that “we feel good about what we’re seeing” in the Blue Wall.

    Trump spokesman Jason Miller said the mood in the Republican’s camp in Florida was “positive.”

    The US dollar surged and bitcoin hit a record high while most equity markets advanced as traders bet on a victory for Trump as the results of the US election rolled in.

    Trump’s early wins included the predictably Republican Florida and Texas while Harris won California, giving Trump 227 electoral votes and Harris 172. The magic number to win the presidency is 270.

    Read Also: Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    Results from the other closely-fought main swing states were all still pending, but Trump was maintaining a lead in Georgia.

    Republicans also flipped two Senate seats, in a major blow to Democrats as they fight tooth and nail to maintain their advantage in the chamber.

    City officials rejected the charge.

    There were also fears of violence if Trump loses and numerous buildings in central Washington were boarded up on Tuesday.

    Polls for weeks had shown a knife-edge race between Harris and Trump, who at 78 would be the oldest ever president at the time of inauguration, the first felon president, and only the second in history to serve non-consecutive terms.

    Harris, 60, would also be only the second Black and first person of South Asian descent to be president.

     She made a dramatic entrance into the race when Biden dropped out in July, while Trump — twice impeached while president — has since ridden out two assassination attempts and a criminal conviction.

    – ‘Super excited’ –

    A final overall result in the presidential race could still take hours — or even days.

    Casting a ballot in Arizona, Trump backer Camille Kroskey, 62, said she was voting in person due to concerns about voting fraud.

    “I want to make sure I drop my ballot where it’s going to actually land somewhere,” she told AFP.

    Harris will hold her watch party later at Howard University in Washington, a historically Black college that she attended as a student.

    “I’m a black woman. I’m an American. I’m super excited about the possibility of her becoming president,” a tearful Camille Franklin, who also went to the college. 

    Trump has vowed an unprecedented deportation campaign of millions of undocumented immigrants, in a campaign full of dark rhetoric.

    Harris has hammered home her opposition to Trump-backed abortion bans — a vote-winning position with women.

    The election was meanwhile being watched closely around the world including in the war zones of Ukraine and the Middle East, anxious to see how the next Oval Office occupant deals with the conflicts.

  • US Election: Trump leads with 227 electoral votes, Harris at 189

    US Election: Trump leads with 227 electoral votes, Harris at 189

     Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican former President Donald Trump are in a fierce battle for the White House with most polls across the United States closing early Wednesday. 

    However, a prolonged wait for final results is expected. 

    US media projections so far show Trump winning 23 states, including major victories in Texas and Ohio, the pivotal battleground state of North Carolina, and other traditionally Republican-leaning states.  

    Harris has so far captured 14 states including big electoral vote prizes California and New York — as well as the US capital Washington.

    So far, that gives Trump 227 electoral votes and Harris 189.

    Read Also: Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    To win the presidency, a candidate needs 270 electoral votes. With the race for the White House expected to hinge on a few crucial battleground states, the following is a breakdown of the states won by each candidate and their respective electoral votes, based on projections from major US media outlets including CNN, Fox News, MSNBC/NBC News, ABC, and CBS.

    – TRUMP (227) –

     Alabama (9) 

    Arkansas (6) 

    Florida (30) 

    Idaho (4) 

    Indiana (11) 

    Iowa (6) 

    Kansas (6) 

    Kentucky (8) 

    Louisiana (8) 

    Mississippi (6) 

    Missouri (10) 

    Montana (4) 

    North Carolina (16) 

    North Dakota (3)

    Ohio (17) 

    Oklahoma (7) 

    South Carolina (9) 

    South Dakota (3) 

    Tennessee (11) 

    Texas (40) 

    Utah (6) 

    West Virginia (4) 

    Wyoming (3)

    – HARRIS (189) – 

    California (54) 

    Colorado (10) 

    Connecticut (7) 

    Delaware (3) 

    District of Columbia (3) 

    Hawaii (4) 

    Illinois (19) 

    Maryland (10) 

    Massachusetts (11) 

    New York (28) 

    Oregon (8) 

    Rhode Island (4) 

    Vermont (3) 

    Virginia (13) 

    Washington (12)

  • Trump leads Harris in U.S. poll

    Trump leads Harris in U.S. poll

    • Both camps hopeful

    Republican candidate Donald Trump surged ahead as results of the United States presidential election trickled in.

    As at press time (4:00am), Trump had amassed more Electoral College Votes than Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Trump was leading in 20 states with 198 Electoral College votes. Harris had won in 10 with 109 Electoral College votes.

    There are 50 states in the United States.

    The states won by the Republican candidate are: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Kentuky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming Harris won so far in Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Colorado.

    The former president took the lead in the early results that trickled in, taking crucial swing state of Georgia.

    Both candidates were battling to find a path to the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.

    President Joe Biden was at the White House making congratulatory calls to Democrats who won their races.

    He called Senator-elect Lisa Blunt Rochester from his home state of Delaware.

    Blunt Rochester had breakfast with Biden last Monday when he voted in his home state.

    Read Also: U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    He also called Delaware’s Govenor-elect Matt Meyer and Wilmington’s new Mayor, former Governor John Carney.

    The 81-year-old also talked to New Jersey’s incoming-Democratic Governor, Representative Andy Kim and North Carolina’s incoming-Democratic Governor, Attorney-General Josh Stein.

    Harris is in Washington, D.C. to watch the election results at Howard University, her alma mater. Should she win, Harris would make history as the first U.S. president to have graduated from a historically Black college or university (HBCU), a milestone she celebrated with supporters at Howard, saying: “I am ready to be the next president.”

    Trump: I would acknowledge it if I lose

    Trump said: “I would be the first one to acknowledge it if I lost,” as he cast his vote alongside his wife, Melania, in Palm Beach, Florida.

    Wearing his signature “Make America Great Again” hat, Trump emphasised his willingness to respect a fair election outcome, signaling readiness to accept the results under the right conditions.

    However, Trump voiced sharp criticism over potential delays in Pennsylvania, calling them “an absolute outrage” and suggesting that extended counting timelines could lead to legal challenges if the process extends into the coming days.

    Trump underscored his ongoing concerns about election integrity, vowing to accept the outcome if, in his view, the election is conducted fairly.

    His remarks added to the tension surrounding Pennsylvania, a critical battleground state, as both campaigns brace for a possibly prolonged and contested vote count.

    Calls for immediate results as mail-in ballots delay counts

    At a final rally in Michigan, Trump called for an immediate election-night result, raising concerns about his insistence on a rapid conclusion despite the high volume of mail-in ballots.

    He told a crowd of supporters that “we want the answer tonight.”

    Experts warn that the influx of postal ballots, especially in swing states like Pennsylvania, may delay the outcome by days.

  • I don’t need to tell my supporters not to be violent if i lose- Trump 

    I don’t need to tell my supporters not to be violent if i lose- Trump 

    Former President Donald Trump said that he doesn’t need to instruct his supporters to refrain from violence or to accept the outcome of the election if he loses.

    This was gathered from a live update on CNN. 

    When asked if he would urge his supporters not to be violent  if he loses the election, he said: “I don’t have to tell them that.”

    Read Also: Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    He further stated that his supporters are not violent people. 

    “I don’t have to tell them that there’d be no violence. Of course they’ll be no violence. My supporters are not violent people. 

    “I don’t have to tell them. And I certainly don’t want any violence, but I certainly don’t have to tell them. These are great people. These are people that believe in no violence. Unlike your question. You believe in violence,” Trump said.

  • U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    Amid discontent and division, with opinion polls showing nearly two-third voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction under President Joe Biden, Americans head to the polls on Tuesday.

    While the United States economy is the envy of the industrialized world, emerging from COVID shutdowns with strong job growth and wage increases, many Americans complain those gains were gobbled up by high grocery and housing prices.

    Biden’s promise of a return to a more humane immigration regime than under Republican former President Donald Trump soon collided with the reality of a spike in illegal border crossings.

    Read Also: Election: Amid heightened security, fears for violence, U.S. voting begins

    The Supreme Court upended the legal landscape around abortion rights by overturning Roe v. Wade, inflaming one of the most divisive issues in American politics.

    And despite Biden’s pledge that America would serve as a stabilizing force in the world, overseas conflicts have overshadowed his presidency.

    Whoever triumphs in the election Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris will inherit the legacy of a Biden administration that made good on some promises, saw others swept off-course by events, and others still only partially fulfilled.

    NAN

  • Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    Harris vs Trump: U.S. braces for historic Election Day

    The unpredictable and razor-close U.S. presidential election culminates on Tuesday with voters across the deeply divided country deciding whether Kamala Harris or Donald Trump should be sent to the White House in January.

    Harris, the sitting Democratic vice president, and Trump, the Republican former president who is seeking a second four-year term, spent the final frenetic weeks of the campaign making their case to voters in the seven critical states that are likely to decide the winner.

    Pollsters say neither of the candidates in the battleground states – Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, North Carolina, Nevada, and Arizona – has a meaningful statistical lead, amplifying the sky-high uncertainty as the race hurtles to the finish line.

    Either Trump or Harris could still comfortably win if the polls are off and several of these states are won by one or the other candidate.

    But legal and political analysts warn there is a high likelihood that it could be days, or even weeks, before the next president is known if exceedingly tight races become mired in ballot recounts and legal fights.

    Leaders around the world, not least in Europe, will be watching carefully.

    The U.S. presidential election has an immense impact globally, with the United States playing a key role when it comes to international hotspots such as Ukraine, the Middle East, and Taiwan, as well as in influential bodies such as the NATO military alliance.

    Fears of “election-related violence are not idle speculation,” wrote the International Crisis Group’s Michael Wahid Hanna in a recent briefing, citing the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters trying to disrupt the certification of President Joe Biden’s win in the last election.

    “It remains possible that Trump will encourage supporters to sow chaos around vote counting and certification processes, thus attempting to call the results into question and create a pretext for extraordinary procedures to resolve a disputed election in his favour,” he wrote.

    Trump himself was targeted in two failed assassination attempts.

    A shooter at a July campaign rally in Pennsylvania left Trump bloodied but not seriously injured after a bullet grazed his ear.

    Weeks later, a man was found lurking with a rifle in the bushes of Trump’s Florida golf course as the former president played a game.

    Harris, a black and Indian American, made abortion rights and cost of living concerns the centrepieces of her campaign.

    But the former prosecutor and senator also focussed on the threat she says Trump – who was found guilty in a criminal hush-money trial in May – poses to democracy.

    She called him a “petty tyrant” who is “out for unchecked power,” in a speech at the same site where Trump had rallied his supporters on the day of the Capitol riot.

    Trump’s populist pitch to voters revolved around immigration, inflation and foreign policy, with promises to carry out mass deportations, impose across-the-board tariffs, roll back green energy initiatives and end the war in Ukraine “in 24 hours.”

    His speeches were filled with personal insults to Harris, whom he described as “lazy” and “dumb as a rock.”

    In one of his most inflammatory attacks, the former president falsely said she had misled voters about her racial identity.

    “So I don’t know? Is she Indian or is she black?” he asked.

    Harris, 60, has played down her race and gender. But if she succeeds, the daughter of an Indian-born mother and Jamaican-born father would become the first female president in the history of the United States.

    Of the 45 men who have held the job, none have been of Asian descent and only one has been black.

    A Trump victory would also be history-making.

    Only one other president – Grover Cleveland in the late 19th century – has succeeded in winning non-consecutive terms.

    The U.S. Constitution would prevent Trump from seeking a third term.

    Another win for the 78-year-old real-estate tycoon, reality TV star and convicted felon would also make him the oldest person ever elected president.

    Few would have expected the showdown between Trump and Harris a year ago.

    Trump’s grave legal troubles, which include his efforts to subvert the results of the last election, had many convinced that the Republican Party would not line up again behind the twice-impeached former president.

    But he easily knocked out his opponents in the party primaries to secure the nomination.

    With President Joe Biden seeking re-election for the Democrats, a rerun of 2020 seemed locked in.

    But in an unprecedented move, the 81-year-old dropped out of the race on July 21 following a disastrous debate performance against Trump that left Democrats in a panic about their chances in November.

    Democrats quickly coalesced around the vice president, a figure who most Americans told pollsters they knew little about.

    But Harris generated enthusiasm among previously demoralised Democrats and she was able to close Biden’s poll deficit with Trump.

    As Americans readied to go to the polls on Tuesday the contest was seen as a dead heat.

    Around 240 million people are eligible to vote in the election, which will also decide the make-up of the two houses of Congress –  the House of Representatives and the Senate.

    Which party controls those will have a major impact on the policy agenda of the incoming president.

    A wave of polling station openings will begin in the morning on the East Coast before moving across central and western states and ending in Alaska and Hawaii.

    But Election Day is not what it used to be. More than 75 million Americans have already cast their ballots by post or in-person early voting.

    That includes Biden, who voted in his home state of Delaware last month.

    (dpa/NAN)