Donald Trump won the presidency Tuesday night, defeating globalists, liberals and socialists to win the White House. (Reuters photo) |
With the final votes being tallied in Alaska, Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania, Trump was poised to finish with 306 electoral votes to Hillary Clinton's 232. As of this writing, the media awaited Clinton's concession and Trump's victory speeches.
According to Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, there would be no statement from the former secretary of state Wednesday morning. Podesta said three states were "too close to call," although several news organizations had declared one or more of those states for Trump, giving him more than 270 electoral votes.
"They're still counting votes and every vote should count," he said. "We'll have more to say tomorrow."
Traditionally, the victor waits for the concession speech before giving his own speech. It's unclear what races the Clinton campaign considers "too close." As of 2 a.m. EST Wednesday, Trump held the following leads:
Pennsylvania (20 EV, declared for Trump by the Associated Press, New York Times, and Politico)—approximately 76,000 votes with 89 percent reporting
Wisconsin (10 EV, declared for Trump by FOX News and Politico)—approximately 77,000 votes with 98 percent reporting
Michigan (16 EV)—approximately 58,000 with 94 percent reporting
Arizona (11 EV)—approximately 75,000 with 82 percent reporting
Trump also leads in the popular vote—56,763,692 to 55,708,378—by more than 1 million votes.
Clinton may not have wanted to concede Wednesday morning, but Wall Street seems to have decided the race is over. The Dow Jones Industrial Futures index was down 750 points when Pennsylvania's decisive results were announced.
At approximately 2:50 a.m., Trump came out on the stage to give his victory speech, having been introduced by his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence. He led off by indicating he had received a concession phone call from Clinton.
Keep checking here for updates as reaction comes in.
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