Matt Flegenheimer, in New York 37m ago
As he prepares to lead a divided Washington, President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. will confront the ultimate test of how much times have changed, and how much he has. Read more ›
Michael Cooper, in New York 4:20 PM ET
A few hours after Rudy Giuliani held a news conference in Philadelphia questioning the results, a small protest against him broke out in New York, the city he once led as mayor.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 4:07 PM ET
The White House declared a “lid” at 3:59 p.m., indicating that President Trump has no intentions of appearing in public today to make a statement about his loss. (He could still tweet his feelings at any moment.)
Eric Schmitt, in Washington 3:55 PM ET
Former Senator Sam Nunn, Democrat of Georgia, in a phone interview about Biden: “He can help heal the country. All of his instincts are to govern from the middle, from the center.”
Catie Edmondson, in Washington 3:39 PM ET
Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 2 House Republican, takes a cue from President Trump, saying “the election is not final” until legal challenges are resolved.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 3:29 PM ET
Trump’s motorcade arrived back at the White House, having driven past crowds of mostly Biden supporters. Trump waved at reporters as he entered the West Wing side entrance.
Katie Glueck, in Wilmington, Del. 3:12 PM ET
In many ways, he ran as the politician he has always been. And for one extraordinary election, that was enough. After a half-century in public life, Joe Biden is president-elect. Read more ›
Adam Nagourney, in Los Angeles 2:44 PM ET
What to watch: former Republican presidents and candidates validating Biden’s victory. In particular, George W. Bush. Mitt Romney was quick to do it. Watch for Bob Dole.
Michael Grynbaum, in New York 2:34 PM ET
On Fox News, Chris Wallace says the Trump campaign has presented no hard evidence of fraud. He notes that “tens of thousands of votes” would have be reversed to change the result.
Michael Gold, in New York 2:24 PM ET
The reaction in America has been — predictably, given this election — divided. In big cities supporting Biden, celebrations erupted. Trump’s supporters voiced disappointment and disbelief. Live coverage ›
Matt Flegenheimer, in New York 37m ago
As he prepares to lead a divided Washington, President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. will confront the ultimate test of how much times have changed, and how much he has. Read more ›
Michael Cooper, in New York 4:20 PM ET
A few hours after Rudy Giuliani held a news conference in Philadelphia questioning the results, a small protest against him broke out in New York, the city he once led as mayor.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 4:07 PM ET
The White House declared a “lid” at 3:59 p.m., indicating that President Trump has no intentions of appearing in public today to make a statement about his loss. (He could still tweet his feelings at any moment.)
Eric Schmitt, in Washington 3:55 PM ET
Former Senator Sam Nunn, Democrat of Georgia, in a phone interview about Biden: “He can help heal the country. All of his instincts are to govern from the middle, from the center.”
Catie Edmondson, in Washington 3:39 PM ET
Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 2 House Republican, takes a cue from President Trump, saying “the election is not final” until legal challenges are resolved.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 3:29 PM ET
Trump’s motorcade arrived back at the White House, having driven past crowds of mostly Biden supporters. Trump waved at reporters as he entered the West Wing side entrance.
Katie Glueck, in Wilmington, Del. 3:12 PM ET
In many ways, he ran as the politician he has always been. And for one extraordinary election, that was enough. After a half-century in public life, Joe Biden is president-elect. Read more ›
Adam Nagourney, in Los Angeles 2:44 PM ET
What to watch: former Republican presidents and candidates validating Biden’s victory. In particular, George W. Bush. Mitt Romney was quick to do it. Watch for Bob Dole.
Michael Grynbaum, in New York 2:34 PM ET
On Fox News, Chris Wallace says the Trump campaign has presented no hard evidence of fraud. He notes that “tens of thousands of votes” would have be reversed to change the result.
Michael Gold, in New York 2:24 PM ET
The reaction in America has been — predictably, given this election — divided. In big cities supporting Biden, celebrations erupted. Trump’s supporters voiced disappointment and disbelief. Live coverage ›
Matt Flegenheimer, in New York 37m ago
As he prepares to lead a divided Washington, President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. will confront the ultimate test of how much times have changed, and how much he has. Read more ›
Michael Cooper, in New York 4:20 PM ET
A few hours after Rudy Giuliani held a news conference in Philadelphia questioning the results, a small protest against him broke out in New York, the city he once led as mayor.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 4:07 PM ET
The White House declared a “lid” at 3:59 p.m., indicating that President Trump has no intentions of appearing in public today to make a statement about his loss. (He could still tweet his feelings at any moment.)
Eric Schmitt, in Washington 3:55 PM ET
Former Senator Sam Nunn, Democrat of Georgia, in a phone interview about Biden: “He can help heal the country. All of his instincts are to govern from the middle, from the center.”
Catie Edmondson, in Washington 3:39 PM ET
Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 2 House Republican, takes a cue from President Trump, saying “the election is not final” until legal challenges are resolved.
Michael D. Shear, in Washington 3:29 PM ET
Trump’s motorcade arrived back at the White House, having driven past crowds of mostly Biden supporters. Trump waved at reporters as he entered the West Wing side entrance.
Katie Glueck, in Wilmington, Del. 3:12 PM ET
In many ways, he ran as the politician he has always been. And for one extraordinary election, that was enough. After a half-century in public life, Joe Biden is president-elect. Read more ›
Adam Nagourney, in Los Angeles 2:44 PM ET
What to watch: former Republican presidents and candidates validating Biden’s victory. In particular, George W. Bush. Mitt Romney was quick to do it. Watch for Bob Dole.
Michael Grynbaum, in New York 2:34 PM ET
On Fox News, Chris Wallace says the Trump campaign has presented no hard evidence of fraud. He notes that “tens of thousands of votes” would have be reversed to change the result.
Michael Gold, in New York 2:24 PM ET
The reaction in America has been — predictably, given this election — divided. In big cities supporting Biden, celebrations erupted. Trump’s supporters voiced disappointment and disbelief. Live coverage ›
First Candidate to Beat an Incumbent in More Than a Quarter-Century
- After several tense days of vote-counting in a handful of battlegrounds, Joe Biden achieved a decades-long ambition in his third attempt at the presidency.
- Mr. Biden’s victory amounted to a repudiation of President Trump by millions of voters exhausted with his divisive conduct and chaotic administration.
- The result also provided a history-making moment for Kamala Harris, who became the first woman — and first woman of color — on a winning presidential ticket.
BidenWinFlip
TrumpWinFlip
Reporting votes
Percentages are estimates of how much vote has been counted.
Source: Vote totals from N.E.P./Edison Research
沒有留言:
張貼留言