Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "” Trump"


25 mentions found


As President-elect Donald Trump doubles down on his mass deportation plan, some Republicans are trying to assuage fears amid growing questions of who will be forced out of the country. The prospect of mass deportations is generating fear and apprehension among families with noncitizen members and businesses that employ undocumented workers. The president-elect has also said he would withhold federal grants to police that don’t cooperate in his mass deportation plan as well as use the National Guard to carry it out. But not long ago, some Republicans have resisted Democratic administrations' attempts to prioritize certain immigrants over others for deportation. “If he deports violent criminals, gang leaders and drug leaders, people who committed violent crimes like rape or murder, isn’t that mass deportation?” Muniz asked.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, “ It’s, they’re, , Joe Biden's, , Maria Elvira Salazar, Salazar didn't, Sen, Marco Rubio, Obama, Biden, ” Trump, noncitizens, Greg Abbott, Salazar, Rubio, Abbott, Artemio Muniz, Muniz, , ” Muniz Organizations: NBC News, Time, Florida Republican, Miami, GOP, NBC, Center, Administrations, Department of Homeland Security, National Guard, Texas Gov, Trump, Customs, Democratic, DHS, Supreme, Federation of Hispanic Republicans, Texas GOP, Republican Locations: Trump, U.S, Florida, Dade, , United States, Texas, Louisiana
If he wins the election in November, he has pledged to follow a similar course on another contentious policy proposal: ending birthright citizenship. Under Trump’s proposal, at least one parent would need to be a citizen or legal resident for a child to receive birthright citizenship. Trump had pledged to end birthright citizenship when first running for president in 2015 and he raised it again in 2018. Opponents of birthright citizenship say that language means citizenship is denied to anyone whose parents are not legally in the country. Sometimes relevant information could be hard to determine, such as if the immigration status of an absent parent is not known to the other.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Trump, ” Trump, , Omar Jadwat, “ It’s, Mark Krikorian, Paul Ryan, Ken Cuccinelli, Cuccinelli, Christopher Hajec, James Ho, Ho, Wong Kim Ark, ” Hajec, , Emma Winger Organizations: Supreme, American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Immigration Studies, American Immigration Council, . Citizenship, Immigration Services, Republican, of Homeland, Trump, Heritage Foundation, Immigration Reform Law Institute, Circuit, Appeals, Social Security Administration, State Department, Department of Homeland Security, Social Locations: U.S, United States, New Orleans, States, San Francisco, China
Yet Durham found that no senior FBI or CIA officials had committed crimes. Former intelligence officials disagree on whether Trump would seek to use the spy agencies against domestic political opponents, and if he did, how the intelligence workforce and courts would respond. Presidents face few legal constraints when it comes to their authority over the intelligence agencies, legal experts and former senior officials said. Supporters of Trump say dire warnings about the future of the intelligence agencies under a new Trump administration are hysterical and overblown, and that his record at the White House shows that he strengthened the spy agencies. “And the other is the risk that the intelligence agencies will be directed to do things that are either unlawful or inappropriate.”
Persons: Donald Trump, Kash Patel, MAGA, Gina Haspel, Patel, Trump, Marc Short, Mike Pence, Mike Pompeo, Dan Coats, , José Luis Villegas, ” Trump’s, Joe Biden, Brian Hughes, Justice Department —, Vladimir Putin, , ” Trump, Putin, Devin Nunes, John Ratcliffe, Robert O’Brien, Sen, Marco Rubio, Robert Mueller's, Hillary Clinton, Bill Barr, John Durham, Durham, Steve Bannon, ” Bannon, Nixon, Chip Somodevilla, Trump’s, Glenn Gerstell, ” “, Robert Litt, ” Litt Organizations: Lawmakers, CIA, Justice Department, White House National Security Council, NBC News, , Texas, FBI, Trump, DOJ, Democratic National Committee, Trump White House, Washington , D.C, National Security Agency, White House, National Intelligence, NBC Locations: Minden, Nev, Russian, Moscow, Helsinki, Devin Nunes of California, Russia, Vietnam, Washington ,, , Virginia
Washington CNN —Just days after winning a comeback election, President-elect Donald Trump is evaluating how his campaign promises might translate into policy. As a candidate, Trump pledged to slap 60% tariffs on all goods coming in from China and 10% tariffs on goods imported from all other countries. “The way that President Trump looks at tariffs are not in isolation. Trump’s economic advisers – and the president himself – view the forthcoming tariff revenue as a way to offset that cost. “If he can use the tariffs as a means to an end, he’ll do that.”CNN’s Katie Lobosco contributed to this report.
Persons: Washington CNN —, Donald Trump, , Trump, Kelly Ann Shaw, Hogan Lovells, , ” Trump, Larry Kudlow, it’s, ” “, Karoline Leavitt, Vance, Jake Colvin, ” Colvin, “ That’s, Robert Lighthizer, Elon Musk, , he’s, Katie Lobosco Organizations: Washington CNN, CNN, Trump, Republicans, Jobs, Tax, Center, Social Security, Advisers, , National Foreign Trade Council, European Union, EU, EV Locations: China, Trump’s, America, Canada, There’s, Tesla
Powell to Trump: Go ahead, make my day
  + stars: | 2024-11-08 | by ( Elisabeth Buchwald | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
That’s essentially what Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is experiencing with President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House. When a reporter asked the Fed chair if he’d resign if Trump asked him to, Powell didn’t miss a beat. Removing a Fed chair isn’t so simpleIf Trump, or any president for that matter, were to try to remove a Fed chair, they would encounter a steep uphill battle. Ultimately, the Supreme Court could have the final say on what merits a “for cause” firing of a Fed chair. Trump has tried testing the limits anywayNevertheless, Trump threatened to fire Powell on several occasions when he was first president.
Persons: That’s, Jerome Powell, Donald Trump’s, Trump, he’d, Powell didn’t, , , curtly, ” Powell, Powell, won’t, Powell doesn’t, Joe Biden, ” Trump Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal, Trump, Republican, Bloomberg, Economic, of Chicago Locations: New York
President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday named co-campaign chair Susie Wiles as his White House first chief of staff, one of the most important non-elected posts in Washington. “Susie Wiles just helped me achieve one of the greatest political victories in American history, and was an integral part of both my 2016 and 2020 successful campaigns,” Trump said in a statement Thursday. After Trump’s resounding victory Tuesday over Vice President Kamala Harris, there was an overwhelming sense that Wiles was the frontrunner to be White House chief of staff. “I’m told you know something about Florida,” Trump told Wiles when they first spoke on the phone, NBC News reported in March. Response to Wiles’ hire as chief of staff was overwhelmingly positive from Republicans.
Persons: Donald Trump, Susie Wiles, White, Wiles, “ Susie Wiles, ” Trump, “ Susie, , Joe Biden, Rick Scott, Ron DeSantis, Kamala Harris, , Pat Summerall, Jack kemp, Raymond Donovan, Reagan, John Delaney, John Peyton, Trump, Jeb Bush, Sen, Marco Rubio, “ I’m, Ballard, Susie, ” Donald Trump Jr Organizations: White House, Trump’s, Florida Gov, White, NBC, Trump, Labor, Republican, Gov, NBC News, DeSantis, Ballard Partners, Mercury, Republicans Locations: Washington, Florida, U.S, American, Jacksonville, Fla, New York City
Donald Trump’s return to the presidency has done something no political opponent could: put an end date on his time atop the Republican Party. Trump single-handedly remade the Republican Party in his own image, not only becoming its unquestioned leader but also rewiring what the Grand Old Party stands for. “We are getting four more years of Trump and then eight years of JD Vance!” Trump Jr. said last week as he campaigned for Ohio Senate candidate Bernie Moreno. He had a shaky start, but he has steadied himself,” a veteran Republican operative said. “A Trump win means [the 2028] field will be slower to develop,” a longtime Republican operative said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, MAGA, Trump, , “ Trump, Reagan, JD Vance, Vance, Gene J, Donald Trump Jr, ” Trump, Bernie Moreno, “ JD, steadied, , Ron DeSantis, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Vivek Ramaswamy, Brian Kemp, Nikki Haley, Glenn Youngkin, Sen, Ted Cruz of, Tim Scott of, Ronald Reagan, ” DeSantis, I’m, “ Huckabee Sanders, , Huckabee Sanders, Ramaswamy, Haley, ” Haley, Dave McCormick can’t, Donald Trump Organizations: Republican Party, Trump, Old Party, Republicans, Republican, Trump Republicans, Reagan Democrats, Ohio, White House, Florida Gov, Georgia Gov, South Carolina Gov, Virginia Gov, Trump Republican, Gov, GOP, Trump ” Republicans Locations: Trump, Butler , Pennsylvania, Bedford , Pa, Arkansas, Georgia, Virginia, Ted Cruz of Texas, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Florida, Iowa, Ohio, South Carolina, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Fed Chair Jay Powell said Thursday that he would not resign if president-elect Donald Trump asked him to. Asked whether he would step down amid chatter that Trump's advisors had suggested he do so, Powell replied, "No." Trump himself nominated Powell as Federal Reserve chairman in 2017 in his first administration. Powell made the comments during his regularly scheduled remarks following the release of the Federal Open Market Committee's latest statement on interest rate policy. Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Jay Powell, Donald Trump, Powell, Trump, readying, ” Trump, Scott Bessent, Kevin Warsh Organizations: Federal, Trump, Bloomberg, Chicago Economic, Reuters, CNN, NBC News, CNBC
If chosen, Wiles would become the first female White House chief of staff in history. “The team of rivals concept did not apply here.”"Susie is as good as they get," a second Trump campaign official said. A third Trump campaign official said Wiles is already playing the de-facto chief of staff role and that staffers widely want her to get the job. “She would be everybody’s number one pick, but it’s his decision,” the first campaign official said. Other names actively under consideration for the White House chief of staff role include Brooke Rollins, a former top White House aide to Trump who now leads the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute, and former House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Susie Wiles, Wiles, , Susie, She'd, Trump, , I’m, Trump's, Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, Linda McMahon, Pat Summerall, they’ve, ” Trump, Matt Gaetz, Lutnick, Butler , Pennsylvania —, McMahon, Brooke Rollins, Kevin McCarthy, Rollins, McCarthy Organizations: White, Trump, NBC, Democratic, White House, Policy Institute, Fox News Locations: Thurday, American, Florida, Butler , Pennsylvania
Trump picked up a larger portion of voters under 30 than any Republican presidential candidate since 2008, according to NBC News exit polling, improving with both young men and young women. In 2020, President Joe Biden beat Trump by 11 percentage points among young men; this year, Trump beat Kamala Harris by 2 points. Among young women, Biden’s 35-point lead over Trump in 2020 shrunk to a 24-point lead for Harris. Among young white men without college degrees, Trump beat Harris, 56% to 40%. “Every candidate and party had an opportunity to really listen to young voters and hear what they really wanted,” Kawashima-Ginsberg said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Adin Ross, Theo Von, Bussin, Joe Rogan, ” Dana White, Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, “ it’s, , Kei Kawashima, Ginsberg, Young, Kawashima, Rogan, influencers, Jake Paul, ” Kawashima, Ryan Jones, Jones, would’ve, Jaiveer Bajwa, Kaeli Bennet, Barron Trump, Joe Rogan’s, Barron, Sobolewski, Von, ” Trump, Von’s, Alex Cooper’s “, Gen, Harris ’, Anil Cacodcar, you’re, ” Cacodcar Organizations: Trump, Republican, NBC, Tufts University’s Center for Information, Research, Civic, Edison Research, Harris ’, Trump ., YouTube, Harvard, Biden Locations: United States, Pennsylvania, Ohio
Trump and the GOP have denied the tariffs would be inflationary, pointing to Trump’s success in imposing tariffs in his first term without reigniting inflation. Yet those tariffs, at $300 billion on selected Chinese goods, were much more targeted than the $3 trillion worth of blanket tariffs Trump is now expected to propose. And the inflationary environment is different now, too: During Trump’s first term, inflation only briefly ever climbed above 2%. It was Trump who appointed Powell to lead the Federal Reserve in his first term. But Trump has signaled a willingness this year to abandon the long-running principle of maintaining the Fed as an independent body.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump’s, Trump, ’ Anna Kelly, David Seif, Jerome Powell, Powell, ” Trump, ” Seif, Seif Organizations: Federal, Wall, Federal Reserve, Nomura Holdings, Trump, GOP, Republican National Committee, Nomura, Fed, Bloomberg, Chicago Economic, Reuters Locations: China
Maansi Srivastava for NBC NewsMaansi Srivastava for NBC NewsTrump embraced that narrative in his victory speech in Florida early Wednesday. About 80% of white evangelicals backed Trump in Tuesday’s election, the NBC News Exit Poll shows. During his first term in office, Trump and his staff welcomed Christian leaders, including Sheets, to the White House. Julia Demaree Nikhinson / APJohnson and others who shared that worldview were on hand for Trump’s victory speech at a convention center in West Palm Beach, Florida. Around 3 a.m., he recorded as those gathered to celebrate Trump’s victory began to sing a classic Christian hymn.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Lance Wallnau, Donald Trump, Carlos Bernate, , Wallnau, ” Trump, “ You’re, Trump, God, Maansi Srivastava, NBC News Maansi Srivastava, Silvia Barnaby, Britney Barnaby, Matthew Taylor, Taylor, Christian Trump, ” Taylor, Dutch Sheets, NBC News Sheets, ” Sheets, Mike Johnson, Julia Demaree Nikhinson, Johnson, Sean Feucht, Feucht Organizations: America, NBC, Trump, NBC News, NBC News Trump, White, Institute, Islamic, Jewish Studies, Christian Trump loyalists, U.S . Capitol, Dutch, Christian, Wade, Republican, Facebook Locations: America, Washington, Florida, Tuesday’s, Maryland, Virginia Beach, Va, Roe, Louisiana, West Palm Beach, Fla, West Palm Beach , Florida, Christian
CNN —Rory McIlroy thinks that Donald Trump’s return to presidency could help unify the fractured landscape of men’s professional golf by brokering a deal between the PGA Tour and the breakaway Saudi-backed LIV Golf. When asked on Wednesday if Trump could deliver on his own assertion that he could fix the LIV-PGA Tour deal in 15 minutes, McIlroy said: “He might be able to. The US-based circuit and the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), which is behind LIV Golf, remain locked in negotiations, with the initial deadline for the partnership of December 31 last year extended into 2024. When asked about the PGA Tour and LIV on the podcast, recorded Sunday ahead of the election, he added: “I’m really going to work on other things, to be honest with you. “Great news from LIV golf.
Persons: Rory McIlroy, Donald Trump’s, LIV Golf, Trump, McIlroy, He’s, Elon Musk, it’s, he’s, LIV, , ” Trump, Bill Belichick, Jim Gray Organizations: CNN, PGA Tour, HSBC Abu Dhabi Championship, Saudi Public Investment Fund, Trump, PGA, LIV Locations: Saudi, Saudi Arabia, United States
While Trump may not want to associate with that plan, it was formulated by his allies – at least 140 people associated with Project 2025 worked in Trump’s administration, according to a review by CNN’s Steve Contorno. Trump’s adviser Stephen Miller said on Fox News to expect deportations to begin the moment Trump is again president on January 20, 2025. Commonly referred to as “Schedule F,” Trump’s plan was to undo long-standing protections for nonpartisan civil servants. John McEntee, who was director of the White House Presidential Personnel Office during Trump’s first administration, worked on Project 2025, building a list of Trump loyalists suitable for administration roles. Only one of the 26 potential positions in a Trump Cabinet, Vice President-elect JD Vance, is in place.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , CNN’s Steve Contorno, Russell Vought –, Biden, What’s, Stephen Miller, , , it’s, Carlos Gimenez, CNN’s Pamela Brown, ” Gimenez, we’ll, ” CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez, Tom Homan, Obama, John McEntee, McEntee, he’s, Kennedy, Walker, Joe Biden’s, JD Vance, John Kelly, Donald Jr, It’s, that’s, Nixon Organizations: CNN —, Ukraine “, Heritage Foundation, Trump, Management, National Guard, Fox News, Florida Republican, ICE, CNN, DC, White, United, Trump Cabinet, Defense and Homeland Security, Republican Locations: Ukraine, Florida, Trump, Georgia, United Nations, United States,
CNN —Donald Trump believes presidents have almost absolute power. In his second term, there will be few political or legal restraints to check him. It’s not guaranteed that just because Trump has massive power he will spurn constitutional checks and balances. No other president has come into office armed with a Supreme Court ruling that grants significant immunity to presidents for official acts. Attempts to prosecute Trump’s political foes on spurious grounds, meanwhile, could theoretically see mass resignations of Justice Department staff.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, he’ll, It’s, , Adam Kinzinger, Arizona Sen, John McCain, Marjorie Taylor Greene, , scoffed, CNN’s Dana Bash, ” Trump, Jack Smith, Elie Honig, Corey Brettschneider, ” Brettschneider, Patrick Henry’s disquiet, George Washington, Brettschneider, Henry, , Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Viktor Orbán, he’s, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Don McGahn, John Kelly, Mark Esper, That’s Organizations: CNN, White, Republican Party, GOP, Republican, Trump, Capitol, Electoral College, , Affordable, Georgia Republican, Justice Department, Trump —, Brown University, Citizens, Democratic House, Department, Constitutional Convention Locations: Washington, , Ohio, Ukraine, Arizona, Illinois, Georgia, New York, America, Hungarian, New Hampshire, Trump
Photos this week: October 31-November 7, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-11-07 | by ( Kyle Almond | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +1 min
Four years after losing the presidency, Donald Trump won it back in Tuesday’s election. The Republican nominee, who served from 2017-2021, defeated Vice President Kamala Harris to complete a historic political comeback. “I want to thank the American people for the extraordinary honor of being elected your 47th president and your 45th president,” Trump said at an election-night event in West Palm Beach, Florida. Harris, the nation’s first female vice president, was hoping to shatter a nearly 250-year-old glass ceiling to become the nation’s first female president. “But hear me when I say: The light of America’s promise will always burn bright.”Here are some of the stories that made headlines over the past week, as well as some photos that caught our eye.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, ” Trump, , Trump, Harris, Joe Biden’s Organizations: Republican, Democratic Locations: Tuesday’s, West Palm Beach , Florida, America, Butler , Pennsylvania, Lebanon
He has lavished praise on his campaign co-chairs, Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles – who Trump named as his White House chief of staff on Thursday evening. In the 2016 election, Trump lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton – and he repeatedly claimed falsely that he had won it. Trump’s priority is to finalize his Cabinet and senior White House staff, and the second wave is to sort deputy secretaries. Trump’s aides, however, anticipate that he will make use of the golf courses at Andrews Air Force Base when back in the White House. Trump mostly golfed at his club in Virginia while at the White House during his term.
Persons: Donald Trump, Chris LaCivita, Susie Wiles –, Trump, he’s, Hillary Clinton –, Elon Musk, Musk, ’ Trump, Jason Miller, ” Miller, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Biden, ” Trump, Harris, Trump’s, Barack Obama, Andrews, CNN’s Zachary Cohen Organizations: Palm Beach , Florida CNN —, Trump, White, White House, CNN, NBC News, Andrews Air Force Base Locations: Palm Beach , Florida, Florida, Lago, Virginia
CNN —Donald Trump announced on Thursday that his campaign manager, Susie Wiles, will be named his White House chief of staff. “Susie Wiles just helped me achieve one of the greatest political victories in American history, and was an integral part of both my 2016 and 2020 successful campaigns,” the president-elect said in a statement. It is a well deserved honor to have Susie as the first-ever female Chief of Staff in United States history. “Susie Wiles ran Trump’s best campaign of the three, and it wasn’t particularly close,” Turning Point USA CEO Charlie Kirk wrote on X. The president, and America, would be well served with Susie in that key role.”CNN’s Kaitlan Collins and Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.
Persons: Donald Trump, Susie Wiles, “ Susie Wiles, Susie, ” Trump, Wiles, Trump, Laura Loomer, Brooke Rollins, Rollins, , Kamala Harris, Pat Summerall, Chris LaCivita, Trump’s, Charlie Kirk, doesn’t, ” CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Kevin Liptak Organizations: CNN, White, Staff, United, Policy, Pentagon, NFL, Trump, Palm Beach Convention Locations: United States, Trump, Florida, Palm Beach, America
Trump’s win came about with the help of Musk and his wealthy tech friends including investors Peter Thiel and David Sacks. They boosted Trump with financial contributions, fundraising help and public endorsements on subjects such as the economy and deregulation. Few other major tech executives publicly endorsed in the presidential race, though some of them made vague comments praising one or the other candidate. Trump has a complicated history with many tech CEOs. In their social media posts, several tech CEOs used the word “decisive” to describe Trump’s victory and they employed popular buzzwords like “innovation” in an apparent attempt to identify common ground.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy, Trump, ” Zuckerberg, ” Trump, Zuckerberg, , Musk, Trump’s, Peter Thiel, David Sacks, Bezos, Reid Hoffman, — wouldn’t, , bitcoin, Musk’s, Parler, Jeff, Mike Davis, Ivan Raiklin, Cook Organizations: Tech, Trump, titans, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, The Washington, Democratic, Trump’s, Pentagon, The Washington Post, III, Trump Tower, Google Locations: Silicon Valley, Butler , Pennsylvania, Tesla, Coinbase, County, State
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who may play a key role overseeing public health issues in a second Trump administration, said Wednesday that he won't take away people's vaccines. "I’m not going to take away anybody’s vaccines," Kennedy said in an interview with NBC News when asked if there are specific vaccines that he would remove from the market. He will meet with senior Trump aides on Wednesday to discuss his role going forward. Shannon Finney / Getty Images file"If vaccines are working for somebody, I’m not going to take them away. Three days before the election, Trump hadn't ruled out whether he would ban certain vaccines.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Trump, I’m, Kennedy, , Shannon Finney, Trump hadn't, ” Trump, haven't, it's, ” Kennedy, Vaughn Hillyard, Rebecca Shabad Organizations: NBC News, Children's Health Defense, Trump, Department of Health, Human Services, Washington , D.C, Getty, Food and Drug, Republican White House, West Palm Beach Locations: BEACH, Fla, Washington ,, Europe, Canada, West Palm, New York
To lower housing costs, Trump has said he would allow homes to be built on federally protected land, something that could help increase the supply of homes in places like Nevada and Arizona. TaxesTrump has proposed a number of tax cuts, including a complete elimination of the federal income tax. Those cuts lowered the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%, reduced individual income tax rates, and increased the standard deduction. That could create havoc for workers and consumers and reduce the amount of income taxes the federal government brings in. About 40% of Social Security recipients pay federal income taxes, typically because they have other sources of income that raise them above a certain threshold where they are required to pay income tax, according to the Social Security Administration.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , ” Trump, , Decker, Matt Priest, , Priest, It’s, He’s, hasn’t, Immigration Trump, Jim Tobin, Trump’s Organizations: Trump, Chicago Economic, Companies, National Bureau of Economic Research, Footwear Distributors, Retailers, U.S, Federal Reserve, Immigration, Business, Pew Research Center, NBC News, National Association of Home Builders, NBC, University of New, University of Pennsylvania, Social Security, Social, Social Security Administration Locations: U.S, China, Nevada, Arizona, Alaska, Saudi Arabia, Russia, University of New Hampshire
But the balance of the evidence from the NBC News Exit Poll suggests that Trump owes his victory to more common, less polarizing factors that drive many elections year in and year out. That included a striking shift of Latino voters into the GOP column compared with 2020 — they backed Trump by 13 points more. Women broke for Harris, 54%-44%, while men favored Trump, 54%-44% — a gap in support amounting to 22 percentage points. But in 2020, Trump performed even worse among women, losing them to Biden 57%-42%. A final factor favoring Trump: his appeal among Americans who are less attached to politics and elections:
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, , Trump’s, ” Trump, Dobbs, coy, Harris, George W, Bush Organizations: NBC, Democratic, Voters, Trump, Biden Locations: United States
Former President Donald Trump has gained 266 electoral votes — just four away from the 270 he needs to be elected 47th President of the United States. Republicans will control the Senate: Republicans will win the US Senate majority, CNN projects, shifting the balance of power in Washington. The Republican march to control started early on election night when West Virginia Gov. Battleground projections: Early on Tuesday evening, Trump swept reliable red states and Vice President Kamala Harris picked up blue strongholds. Harris will speak later today: The campaign’s co-chair Cedric Richmond told supporters the vice president wasn’t going to speak Tuesday evening, but is expected to speak today.
Persons: Donald Trump, ” Trump, , Jim Justice, Sen, Joe Manchin, Democratic Sen, Sherrod Brown, Bernie Moreno, Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Cedric Richmond, wasn’t, Richmond Organizations: ” CNN, Senate, Republicans, CNN, Republican, West Virginia Gov, Democrat, Democratic, Trump, Howard Locations: United States, Florida, America, Washington, In Ohio, North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Former President Donald Trump declared victory early Wednesday — NBC News has not projected a winner — after he took a series of swing states, including Pennsylvania. “I want to thank the American people for the extraordinary honor of being elected your 47th president and your 45th president,” Trump told supporters at a victory party at the Palm Beach County Convention Center. “Because we are going to help our country heal.”Family and supporters surround former President Donald Trump at the Palm Beach Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Fla., early Wednesday. Evan Vucci / APTrump was also leading in the popular vote by nearly 5 million votes at 2:30 a.m. ET, a lead that, if it holds, will make him the first Republican nominee to win the popular vote since George W. Bush in 2004.
Persons: Donald Trump, , ” Trump, , Julia Demaree Nikhinson, Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, ” Vance, Trump, Evan Vucci, George W, Bush Organizations: NBC, Convention, Palm Beach Convention, Trump, Fox News, Republican Locations: BEACH, Fla, Pennsylvania, Beach, Palm Beach, West Palm Beach, United States of America, Georgia, North Carolina
Republicans have averted a potential disaster in Nebraska, with NBC News projecting that Sen. Deb Fischer has won re-election to a third term. Fischer faced a surprisingly competitive challenge from independent Dan Osborn, a mechanic and union leader who cast her as a creature of Washington. Fischer's win gives the Republicans 51 Senate seats, putting them over the threshold needed for control of the chamber, NBC News projects. But it has been nearly 20 years since the state elected a Democrat to the Senate, and Republicans typically carry statewide races with ease. Fischer was elected to the Senate in 2012 in a resounding victory over Democratic former Sen. Bob Kerrey, who had also been governor.
Persons: Sen, Deb Fischer, Fischer, Dan Osborn, Donald Trump, Fischer's, Osborn, “ Deb Fischer, she’s, ” Trump, AdImpact, Bernie Sanders, Bob Kerrey Organizations: NBC News, Republican, GOP, NBC, Democrat, Senate, Labor, Washington Examiner, MSNBC, Democratic Locations: Nebraska, Washington
Total: 25