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Election Day 2024 live results: Trump takes back White House, Senate flips to GOP
We tracked races for president, Senate, House and more across the country.
With projections made in most states across the country, ABC has projected that former President Donald Trump will win the high-stakes presidential match-up against Vice President Kamala Harris. Early Wednesday morning, Trump secured enough Electoral College votes to set himself up for a second presidency by flipping the key swing states of Georgia, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Plus, Republicans are set to take back the Senate majority, with at least 51 seats locked down — while control of the House remained up in the air.
Reporters from 538 and ABC News are following along every step of the way with live updates, analysis and commentary on these races and all the others down the ballot. Follow our live coverage in full below.
Key Headlines
- Former President George W. Bush congratulates Trump
- Trump adviser says Trump and Harris have not connected yet as of earlier this morning
- Liz Cheney calls for accepting election results but for citizens to be 'guardrails of democracy'
- Will Trump have a (truly) unified government this time around?
- Baldwin takes the lead in Wisconsin's Senate race
- Trump wins Wisconsin and the presidency
- Trump could carry all seven swing states
- What went wrong in Pennsylvania
Careful making comparisons to 2020 when we don't have most of the vote yet
I've been seeing some posts on X making the rounds that emphasize how Trump is performing somewhat worse in most of the 30 or so Indiana and Kentucky counties that have reported at least some of their vote tally. But not a single one of those counties has yet reported more than two-thirds of its expected vote, and many of those counties' tallies include a large percentage or at least some substantial number of absentee/mail-in ballots, which we know are somewhat more Democratic than votes cast on Election Day. We need more votes before we can say something more substantial about what's happening in these places.y
Read reports of students' on-campus voting with caution
Here at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, turnout at the on-campus precincts is way up from 2020, and I know of at least a few students who skipped class to wait on the hour-long lines. But it's worth be cautious about how you interpret those results.
For one thing, the COVID-19 pandemic meant that there were far fewer students on campus four years ago, so it's hard to make direct comparisons. And we can't necessarily read these results as representative of the college-aged demographic: Fewer than half of 18- to 24-year-olds are enrolled in colleges, and some of those students live at home or off campus. So reports from campuses are important, but they don't tell us how young voters are reacting in general.
Delaware is poised to elect its first female senator
According to a recent analysis by Pew Research Center, there are 17 states that have never had a female Senator. After today's races are called, women could be elected to the Senate for the first time in Delaware, Indiana, Utah, New Mexico and Rhode Island. Of these women, Lisa Blunt Rochester, a Democrat in Delaware, is most favored, winning 98 in 100 simulations in our forecast. The other women running to be their state’s first senator are all longshots in their respective races, but include Democrats Valerie McCray in Indiana and Caroline Gleich in Utah, and two Republicans: Nella Domenici in New Mexico and Patricia Morgan in Rhode Island.
The US Senate currently stands at just 25% female representation.
Don't overreact to early returns
Here's a good example of overreacting to a small sample of results from another Indiana election ...