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.
It's now 8 p.m. Eastern, and results are going to start flooding in from a big crop of states. The last polling places have closed in Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Tennessee. Here are our forecasts for the races in those areas:
Many polling places are also closing in Kansas, Michigan, North Dakota, South Dakota and Texas — more on those states when they've closed in full.
As of 7:45 p.m. ET, statewide, with 14% of the expected vote reporting statewide, Trump leads in Georgia with 62% of the vote, followed by Harris with 38%.
However, there is still many votes left to tally from more Democratic areas of the state, including the Atlanta metro area.
In Douglas County, which is considered part of metro Atlanta, with 74% of the expected vote reporting, Harris leads by more than double Trump’s margin for now with 65.9% of the vote, followed by Trump with 33.6%.
Democrats in particular might be ready to elect a woman
Is the United States ready to elect a female president? As polls continue to close around the country, that remains one of the implicit questions facing voters. Women have slowly gained political power in the House and Senate and Harris, as vice president, is the first woman to ever hold that position. As Meredith wrote earlier, though, not only are women candidates more likely to be Democrats, but polling shows that Democrats also are more likely to think it's important to elect a woman.
Overall, a little more than half (53%) of Americans say that there are too few women in elected office, according to the Pew Research Center. But that number has gone down in recent years, possibly because the number of women serving in Congress has gone up. Women made up 28% of all congressional representatives of those sworn in last year, the largest share in history.
In general, party identification tends to matter more on issues related to gender, with Republicans more likely to have a traditional view of the role of men and women. Those attitudes also shape attitudes on abortion. Democrats are also more likely to say its extremely or very important to them to elect a woman in their lifetimes, according to Pew.
Polling from PerryUndem, a nonpartisan research firm that has surveyed voter attitudes on gender and women in power since 2015, found similar splits. 83% of Democrats said, "I want there to be equal numbers of men and women in positions of power in our society" in a 2022 PerryUndem survey, while only 40% of Republicans agreed. Many voters have become more attuned to gender in politics since Clinton, the first woman major-party candidate for president, narrowly lost the race to Trump in 2016. Their polling has found that voters became more likely to attribute her loss to sexism in the years that followed.
Keeping an eye on interesting races and initiatives in Maryland
Abortion is already legal in Maryland, but tonight voters will decide whether they want to enshrine the right to an abortion and "reproductive freedom" in the state's constitution. If there are enough yea votes on Ballot Question 1, there would be an amendment to the state's constitution guaranteeing "the ability to make and effectuate decisions to prevent, continue, or end one's own pregnancy." Polling ahead of tonight suggests that the initiative should easily pass. A September UMBC survey found that 69% of likely voters plan to vote in favor of Question 1, while only 21% said they planned to vote against it. Of course, in a solidly blue state like Maryland, support for abortion rights isn't all that surprising. The same poll found that 57% of likely voters preferred Harris, compared with 35% who said that they backed Trump.
Beyond that, I'll also be keeping an eye on the congressional race taking place in Maryland's 6th District. The seat is now up for grabs after Rep. David Trone abandoned his post to run for U.S. Senate — where he lost in the Democratic primary. Tonight, Democrat April McClain-Delaney and Republican Neil Parrott will go head-to-head, and polling suggests the race will be a tight one. According to the Washington Post, an early poll of the race showed Delaney and Parrott deadlocked in the district, which has a partisan lean of R+1. Delaney's husband — John Delaney — once represented the now-swing district and is marketing herself as the best candidate to address issues affecting women. To that end, she's repeatedly attacked Parrott for a vote he took while serving as a state delegate that made spousal rape harder to prosecute. Parrott, however, has defended this vote and argued that "having workplace sexual harassment laws in marriage doesn't make sense." His campaign is largely focused on issues important to Republican voters, including border security and stricter immigration reform.