The US is going to the polls, as the incumbent Donald Trump faces Joe Biden. Click the states in the interactive map to view results as they come in.

by Chris Lefkow and Sebastian Smith with Peter Hutchison in Wilmington

Americans woke up on Wednesday not knowing who the next US president would be as votes were still being counted in six key states that could swing the bitterly contested election to Republican incumbent Donald Trump or Democrat Joe Biden.

Fueling fears of a constitutional crisis, Trump prematurely declared victory overnight and threatened to demand the intervention of the Supreme Court to stop vote-counting but it continued nonetheless.

“We did win this election,” the 74-year-old president told cheering supporters in the East Room of the White House before the final vote tallies were complete. “This is a fraud on the American public.”

The Biden campaign slammed Trump’s victory claim as “outrageous, unprecedented, and incorrect” and a “naked effort to take away the democratic rights of American citizens.”

Joe Biden
Joe Biden. File photo: Gage Skidmore, via Flickr.

“The counting will not stop. It will continue until every duly cast vote is counted,” it said. “If the president makes good on his threat to go to court to try to prevent the proper tabulation of votes, we have legal teams standing by ready to deploy to resist that effort.”

The outcome appeared to hinge on the results from six states where a winner has not yet been declared — Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

As of 9:00 am (1400 GMT), Biden had a slim lead in Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin while Trump was ahead in Georgia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

But state election officials cautioned that with tens of thousands of ballots outstanding in some states — millions in others — the races could shift.

The tight White House race and recriminations evoked memories of the 2000 election between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore.

The Bush vs Gore race, which rested on a handful of votes in Florida, eventually ended up in the Supreme Court, which halted a recount while Bush was ahead.

Donald Trump
Donald Trump. Photo: Shealah Craighead/White House, via Flickr.

A deluge of mail-in ballots because of the coronavirus pandemic has slowed down the vote count in some states this year, several of which only began counting mail-in ballots on Tuesday.

Michigan officials, for example, said they hoped to have all of the votes counted by the end of the day while in Pennsylvania officials said it could be several more days.

“If everything keeps up, we’ll have the total results in the next couple of days,” Al Schmidt, the City Commissioner of Philadelphia, the largest city in Pennsylvania, told CNN.

“But Pennsylvania allows votes to be received and counted up until Friday and three days after the election.

“So we can’t count what we don’t yet have.”

Record turnout

The US Elections Project estimated total turnout at a record 160 million voters including more than 101.1 early voters, 65.2 million of whom voted by mail.

In an election that took cast under the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic that has claimed more than 230,000 lives in the United States, Trump appeared to have avoided a Democratic wave predicted by some polls.

But it remained unclear Wednesday morning which candidate would capture the 270 votes needed for victory in the Electoral College that determines the winner of the presidential race.

Trump took the podium at the White House after 2:00 am and declared that he would go to the Supreme Court because “we want all voting to stop.”

Voting had already ended by the time Trump began speaking and he appeared to be calling for the nation’s highest court to stop vote counting.

Trump has railed for months against mail-in ballots, charging without evidence they could be fraudulent.

Biden had earlier warned that vote counting would take a while as he greeted his own backers at a socially distanced rally in his home state of Delaware.

“We believe we’re on track to win this election,” the 77-year-old former vice president and senator from Delaware said. “Keep the faith, guys, we’re going to win this.”

Trump for the past four years has often been quick to say he is being treated unfairly but even a few of his fellow Republicans voiced unease at his dramatic intervention.

“Stop. Full stop. The votes will be counted and you will either win or lose. And America will accept that. Patience is a virtue,” tweeted Adam Kinzinger, a Republican congressman who won reelection.

“I disagree with what he did tonight,” said former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, who helped Trump prepare for his first debate against Biden.

“There’s just no basis to make that argument tonight,” Christie told ABC News. “There just isn’t.”

‘Constitutional crisis’?

Foreign countries also sounded the alarm, with German Defence Minister Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer warning Trump could create a “constitutional crisis.”

Biden is the first Democrat in 24 years to win Arizona, seizing on the southwestern state’s changing demographics and the popularity of astronaut Mark Kelly, who won a Senate seat held by a Republican.

But no other states immediately flipped and Trump won an early prize in Florida, where his hard line against Latin American leftists helped him make inroads among Cuban Americans.

Democratic hopes fizzled of turning around Texas, a Republican bastion indispensable for Trump, and Ohio.

Biden, as expected, comfortably won the biggest prize of all, California, as well as New York and easily kept Minnesota and New Hampshire, two states where Hillary Clinton in 2016 had only eked out victories over Trump.

White House Washington DC USA
Photo: Joe Campbell via Flickr.

Attention again turned to three states that elected Trump four years ago — Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — with ballots still waiting to be counted from the Democratic stronghold cities of Detroit, Philadelphia and Milwaukee.

Biden said he was feeling “real good” about Michigan and Wisconsin and voiced confidence about Pennsylvania, where he was born.

Biden said he was also competitive in Georgia — a state that until recently had not appeared to be in play — as election workers in its largest city Atlanta halted counting for the night after a pipe burst.

Pundits had been warning for weeks that this year’s election results would take time — and voiced fears Trump would cause chaos or even violence by questioning the process.

While there were no immediate reports of unrest, stores have been boarded up throughout the capital Washington.


It’s been a campaign for the history books, upended by the Covid-19 pandemic and taking place in a nation on edge after a summer of civil unrest. As voting gets underway, here are some of the highlights in review:

Biden’s primary comeback – click to view.

Joe Biden got off to a bad start in the battle to become the Democratic Party candidate.

In the first primary in Iowa in February, he came a distant fourth in a caucus hit by delayed results.

His campaign appeared on the edge of collapse as left-winger Bernie Sanders gathered support in the following primaries, before Biden scored a stunning recovery in South Carolina, thanks largely to African Americans voters.

Sanders pulled out of the race in April, and the Democratic rivals rapidly united behind Biden.

Donald Trump became the Republicans’ nominee in March without serious opposition.

Covid changes everything – click to view.

The spread of the Covid-19 pandemic from March upended the normal campaign schedule, putting a stop to all large rallies and meetings.

Biden, 77, has spent much of the year in his house in Wilmington, Delaware, as a patchwork of shutdowns across the country plunged the economy into crisis.

Trump, 74, started a daily briefing on the pandemic at the White House, often using it as a surrogate campaign event. He later halted the briefings as the death toll soared.

In mid-June, Trump tried to revive his ground campaign with a big rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but poor attendance made it a fiasco.

The George Floyd protests – click to view.

The police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed African American, in the Midwestern city of Minneapolis in May touched off months of mass anti-racism protests across the United States — some of them turning violent.

With much of the nation locked down, and the campaign muted by the pandemic, tens of thousands filled the streets to demand an end to police brutality and systemic racism — a call largely embraced by the Democrat Biden.

Trump tacked in the opposite direction, seizing on the civil unrest as the work of “anarchists” and pushing a law-and-order message that would remain central to his reelection campaign.

Conventions, reinvented – click to view.

The usual glitzy conventions for thousands of party loyalists were reduced to bloodless, almost totally virtual events in August, with Biden supporters watching by video-link as he accepted the Democratic nomination.

At the end of September, the two candidates clashed in their first televised duel. It quickly descended into an evening of interruptions, personal attacks and crosstalk that left many viewers shocked.

Both candidates blamed one another and claimed victory.

Trump catches Covid – click to view.

In the early hours of October 2, the president announced that he had tested positive for the coronavirus.

He spent three nights in hospital, declaring after his return to the White House that he had beaten Covid, and calling on Americans not to let the virus “dominate” their lives.

The candidates’ second debate was canceled, but the one on October 23 was a much more civilized affair than their bad-tempered first showdown.

Final hectic push – click to view.

Only just recovered, Trump has held a series of packed rallies across swing states right up to polling day.

Many in the audience have not worn masks as the president vowed to secure an against-the-odds win.

Biden took a starkly different approach, always wearing a mask and holding a limited number of small, socially-distanced events.

Text: AFP.

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