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US election 2024 live: most swing state polls closed as Harris and Trump pick up big electoral wins with New York and Texas | US elections 2024

Key events

  • 52s ago

    Fani Willis, Georgia DA prosecuting Donald Trump, is re-elected

  • 3m ago

    Marylanders elect Democrat Angela Alsobrooks to the Senate

  • 10m ago

    Trump aides see reasons for hope in early results

  • 22m ago

    Trump wins Texas

  • 27m ago

    Trump wins Ohio

  • 36m ago

    Trump wins North and South Dakota, Louisiana, Wyoming, Harris carries New York

  • 41m ago

    Polls close across midwestern states, including battlegrounds Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan

  • 41m ago

    Democrat Josh Stein elected North Carolina governor, beating Republican Mark Robinson, who called himself ‘black Nazi’

  • 51m ago

    Trump wins Miami-Dade, a closely watched Florida county

  • 55m ago

    Measure to protect abortion access in Florida fails

  • 1h ago

    Harris wins Illinois

  • 1h ago

    Harris wins Delaware, New Jersey

  • 1h ago

    Trump wins Arkansas

  • 1h ago

    Polls close in Arkansas

  • 1h ago

    New Jersey Democrat Andy Kim becomes first Korean American elected to Senate

  • 1h ago

    Lisa Blunt Rochester elected Delaware’s first Black female senator

  • 1h ago

    Republican senator Rick Scott re-elected in Florida, limiting Democrats’ options for keeping majority

  • 2h ago

    Trump triumphs in Florida, Oklahoma, Tennessee, South Carolina, Harris wins Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island

  • 2h ago

    Harris wins Maryland, Trump carries Mississippi, Alabama

  • 2h ago

    Polls close across east coast, midwestern states, including pivotal Pennsylvania

  • 2h ago

    Trump wins West Virginia, Republicans pick up Senate seat

  • 2h ago

    Polls close in battleground state North Carolina, West Virginia, Ohio

  • 2h ago

    Georgia independents breaking for Trump by slim margin – exit poll

  • 3h ago

    Progressive Bernie Sanders re-elected to Senate

  • 3h ago

    Trump wins red states Kentucky and Indiana; Harris picks up blue Vermont

  • 3h ago

    Polls close in battleground Georgia and five other states

  • 3h ago

    Philadelphia district attorney says Trump’s ‘cheating’ claim ‘unfounded’

  • 4h ago

    How do we know who won? A guide to calling this election

  • 4h ago

    Voting finishes in parts of Kentucky and Indiana as first US polls close

  • 4h ago

    First polls soon to close in US election

  • 4h ago

    Republican Philadelphia official says ‘no truth’ to Trump’s claim of election fraud

  • 4h ago

    Harris campaign sees high Puerto Rican turnout in Pennsylvania

  • 4h ago

    Fears for democracy and state of economy top issues for voters, exit polls suggest

  • 4h ago

    First election result in tiny New Hampshire village sees a Trump-Harris tie

  • 5h ago

    When do the polls close tonight?

  • 5h ago

    Voting enters final hours as Harris and Trump hope to win presidency

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Harris wins Illinois

Kamala Harris has won Illinois, the Associated Press reports, taking the 19 electoral votes in the Democrats’ midwestern stronghold.

No Republican has won the state since 1988.

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David Smith

I am at Donald Trump’s election watch party at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Florida.

There are men in suits – often with red ties – and women in mostly red dresses. Other guests have gone full Maga with “Make America great again” caps and other regalia.

Most are gathered inside a black, cavernous exhibition hall, the focus of which is a giant US flag hanging from the ceiling, then a row of US flags on a stage where a lectern and microphone are set up. Unlike his 2016 party in New York, there is no sign of Maga caps displayed in glass cases like museum relics; however, a big pile of free Maga caps was on a table outside.

The hall is buzzing with conversation but dominated by giant screens showing Fox News’s coverage of election results with the volume turned up loud.

Elsewhere, people are standing in a queue to have their photo taken against a big black canvas that says: “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” Steve Bannon’s daughter Maureen is doing the rounds. And in one of the allocated press filing centres, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani is podcasting away, providing a live commentary on events for anyone who will listen.

Supporters wait at an election night campaign watch party for Donald Trump in West Palm Beach, Florida tonight. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP
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Updated at 20.49 EST

Will Craft

A helpful reminder from Guardian US data editor Will Craft:

Votes have started coming in across the east coast. But early US vote counts are misleading.

Large numbers of early votes and vote-by-mail ballots means that the vote count will shift as the night goes on, and votes from large, urban precincts might radically shift the count with one report.

States will be reporting totals throughout the night and it’s important to avoid the red or blue mirage.

Our results page is here:

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Harris wins Delaware, New Jersey

Kamala Harris added blue states Delaware and New Jersey to her trove of electoral college wins, the Associated Press reports.

The news agency has yet to call any of the three swing states where polls have closed: Pennsylvania, Georgia and North Carolina.

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Trump wins Arkansas

Donald Trump has won Arkansas, the Associated Press reports, gaining its six electoral votes.

The state last voted for a Democrat in 1996, when Bill Clintonits former governor, ran successfully for a second term.

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Polls close in Arkansas

It’s closing time for polling places in Arkansas, the home state of Democratic former president Bill Clinton but otherwise a solidly red state.

Expect its six electoral votes to be quickly declared for Donald Trump.

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New Jersey Democrat Andy Kim becomes first Korean American elected to Senate

Andy Kim is the winner of New Jersey’s Senate race, the Associated Press reports, making the Democratic congressman the first Korean American elected to Congress’s upper chamber.

Kim takes over from fellow Democrat Robert Menendezwho resigned his seat after being convicted of bribery charges. George Helmyalso a Democrat, was appointed to replace Menendez, but did not run for a full term.

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Lisa Blunt Rochester elected Delaware’s first Black female senator

Democrat Lisa Blunt Rochester has won the race for Delaware’s Senate seat, the Associated Press said, becoming both the first woman and first African American to represent the state in Congress’s upper chamber.

Rochester is currently the state’s at-large congresswoman, and broke the same barriers when first elected in 2016.

US Representative Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del, smiles after voting during early voting, Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024, in Wilmington, Delaware. Photograph: Gail Burton/AP
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Updated at 20.22 EST

Republican senator Rick Scott re-elected in Florida, limiting Democrats’ options for keeping majority

Republican Rick Scott has won re-election as Florida’s Senator, the Associated Press said, blocking Democrats from an upset victory in the increasingly Republican state that could have helped them preserve their majority in Congress’s upper chamber.

Democrats have a 51-seat majority in the chamber, but earlier lost the West Virginia seat held by retiring independent senator Joe Manchin. The party had hoped their candidate Debbie Mucarsel-Powell could oust Scott in the Sunshine state and give them another seat, but those hopes have been dashed.

They still have a chance to keep the majority, but it requires the re-election of Sherrod Brown in Ohio and Jon Tester in Montana, or a surprise victory by Colin Allred in Texas. All of those are red states.

Rick Scott talks with supporters and reporters in Tampa earlier today. Photograph: Octavio Jones/Reuters
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Updated at 20.25 EST

Trump triumphs in Florida, Oklahoma, Tennessee, South Carolina, Harris wins Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island

The Associated Press has called Oklahoma, South Carolina, Florida and Tennessee for Donald Trumpand Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut for Kamala Harris.

None of these results are surprising, with the two candidates winning states that have supported their respective parties for years. If there is anything to note, it’s that Florida was called so quickly – when Trump first won in 2016, it was viewed as a swing state, but has since become reliably Republican.

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