Election 2024 updates: With Arizona, Trump sweeps all 7 swing states
The final electoral college count is Trump: 312, Harris: 226.
By538 and ABC News
Last Updated: November 9, 2024, 9:00 PM EST
Just days after former President Donald Trump was projected to have won the presidency, Trump's transition team operation has begun, with transition co-chairs confirming that he will be selecting personnel to serve under his leadership in the coming days.
Trump is also the projected winner in Arizona, a state the former president flipped after losing it to Joe Biden in 2020.
Trump's projected win in the vital swing state marks a sweep of the battleground states.
With ABC News projecting a win for Justice in the West Virginia Senate race, we can safely say that Jim Justice's English Bulldog, Babydog, is heading to D.C.
While she's not a newcomer to the political stage, having featured in Justice's appearance at the RNC, this will be her biggest move yet. And if you need a quick break from the barrage of election news, learn more about the top dogs of politics with 538's political dog quiz.
It's always a big moment on election night when massive Miami-Dade County in Florida reports its first batch of votes — and it just did. With 70% of the expected vote counted in the county, Trump is at 55% and Harris is at 44%. If that holds, it would be another huge shift rightward for the heavily Hispanic county. It voted for Biden by 7 points in 2020.
The order in which votes are counted is not the order in which they are cast
As election nerds, it's easy to slip into horse-race language about how one county "helped this candidate come from behind" or "put that candidate over the top." It's important, though, to remember that there is no special meaning to the order in which votes are counted — even as we watch results pour in from Kentucky, this is not a horse race. In some cases, the order in which votes are cast is the result of deliberate policy decisions, such as Pennsylvania's policy of not pre-canvassing (or counting) mail-in ballots prior to Election Day. Watching election returns is more like watching a football game's highlights after they've been spliced into a random order — and without the scoreboard to guide us.
All eyes on Mark Robinson — and his potential effect on a Trump win in North Carolina
As polls get ready to close in North Carolina, I wanted to bring attention to one of the biggest races on the ballot: the battle for the governorship, where the available evidence suggests that Republican Mark Robinson's chances of winning are slim as Democrat Josh Stein maintains a double-digit lead in the most surveys.
Robinson, the current lieutenant governor, has consistently trailed against Stein, but the distance between the two swelled after a September CNN report alleged that the Republican posted racist and transphobic messages on a porn forum more than a decade ago. The CNN report claims that, on one of the site's message boards, Robinson referred to himself as a "Black NAZI" and "perv," among many other degrading things. Robinson has denied that he wrote these posts, but he has a longstanding history of making disparaging comments. He once called the Holocaust "hogwash" and said that "transgenderism and homosexuality are "filth."
According to a New York Times/Siena College poll of likely voters in the Tar Heel State, Stein, the state's attorney general, has 56% support compared to Robinson's 38%. But a double-digit win of this magnitude would be historic in North Carolina. The last Democrat to win a gubernatorial race by this predicted margin was Governor Jim Hunt in 1980.
Of course, one of the biggest questions heading into tonight is whether Robinson will drag down Trump. But it doesn't look like that'll be the case. 538's forecast has Trump winning North Carolina 62 out of 100 times, which suggests that Robinson's political fallout might not affect Trump to any large degree. But even before the Robinson drama, the presidential race here was expected to be a tight one. Trump only won the state by one percentage point in 2020.
For whatever it's worth, Trump never rescinded his endorsement of Robinson, though he's distanced himself from the embattled Republican since this summer. And North Carolina's voters have a history of ticket splitting that could benefit Trump — even if it hurts Robinson: In 2000, for instance, Republican George W. Bush won the state with 56% of the vote. That same year, Democratic Governor Mike Easley was elected by an almost-similar margin.