Trump wins Arizona, completing sweep of all seven battleground states, AP declares
Donald Trump won the presidential election in Arizona, the Associated Press (AP) declared on Saturday, completing a clean sweep of all seven battleground states and locking in a decisive electoral college victory over the Democratic vice-president, Kamala Harris.
Trump, who had secured the 270 electoral college votes needed to win the White House by early Wednesday, now has what is expected to be a final total of 312 votes to Harrisâs 226.
The win returned the state to the Republican column after Joe Bidenâs 2020 victory and marked Trumpâs second victory in Arizona since 2016. Trump had campaigned on border security and the economy, tying Harris to inflation and record illegal border crossings during Bidenâs administration.
Trump has also won the swing states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Wisconsin and Nevada. In 2020, Biden defeated Trump by winning six of the seven swing states â he narrowly lost North Carolina â and won 306 electoral college votes to Trumpâs 232.
Trump also won 306 in his 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton.
The Ap said Trump has won 74.6m votes nationwide, or 50.5%, to Harrisâ 70.9m, or 48%.
Meanwhile, Republican US representative Eli Crane won reelection to a US House seat representing Arizonaâs second congressional district. The freshman lawmaker defeated former Navajo Nation president, Jonathan Nez, who was vying to become the stateâs first Native American representative.
In a statement late on Saturday, Crane commended Nez for entering the race and thanked voters.
More on that in a moment, but first, here are the latest developments in US politics:
-
Protests against Trump erupted in the US on Saturday as people on both coasts took to the streets in frustration about his re-election. Thousands of people in major cities including New York City and Seattle demonstrated against the former president and now president-elect amid his threats against reproductive rights and pledges to carry out mass deportations at the start of his upcoming presidency.
-
Biden and Trump will meet on Wednesday in the Oval Office, the White House announced on Saturday. âAt President Bidenâs invitation, President Biden and president-elect Trump will meet in the Oval Office on Wednesday,â the press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said in a statement.
-
Republicans on Saturday appeared close to clinching control of the US House of Representatives, a critical element for Trump to advance his agenda when the president-elect returns to the White House in January. The AP reported that three US House races in Arizona were too early to call on Saturday, most notably the first and sixth congressional districts.
-
The president-elect has charged Howard Lutnick, a longtime friend, and one of the few high-profile figures in corporate America to vocally endorse his campaign, with recruiting officials who will deliver, rather than dilute, his agenda. The CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, and co-chair of Trumpâs transition team, has made no secret of his plan to stack the new White House with loyalists â and keep out anyone who threatens to derail his pledges.
-
A senior adviser to Trump said that the incoming US administrationâs priority for Ukraine will be achieving peace rather than helping it regain territory captured by Russia in the almost three years of the war. In an interview with the BBC, broadcast on Saturday, Bryan Lanza, who has been a political adviser to Trump since his 2016 presidential campaign, said: âWhen Zelenskyy says we will only stop this fighting, there will only be peace, once Crimea is returned, weâve got news for President Zelenskyy: Crimea is gone.â
-
An employee at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) has been fired from her job and is being investigated because she told a disaster relief team she was directing in Florida after Hurricane Milton to avoid homes displaying election campaign signs supporting Trump, conduct that the agency head on Saturday called âreprehensibleâ.
Key events
Edward Helmore
From gold-high top sneakers to Women-for-Trump tank tops, iron-on âFight, Fight, Fightâ patches to a poster depicting a 19th-century cowboy outlaw, sales of Trump merchandise at the Trump store in Scranton, Pennsylvania, tripled in sales in the days after the once and future presidentâs landslide second-term win in the US election last week.
In a hard week for Democrats, the goods flying off the shelves added insult to injury as Scranton has long been intimately linked to Joe Biden, lauded as his home town and symbol of his affinity with Americaâs working class.
Store manager Thomas Rankin said he never believed polls predicting a tight race. Trump voters, he believed, had simply kept quiet because they didnât want an argument. âA whole lot of the Democrat party, as soon as they got in the booth, went boom! They could see through the whole Democrat propaganda,â he said.
And then there were the rallies â Rankin, a former deadhead, said he used to go to a lot of concerts â and Trump had held hundreds with his trademark weave of folk tales, policy and political rhetoric.
âPeople travelled to them like they travelled for the Grateful Dead,â he said, and thatâs what I did. He drew people in, just like the Dead. People had fun, but they also had an interest in what he is saying.â
Bitter truths were plentiful in Scranton, last week, as voters in âScranton Joeâ Bidenâs home town broadly rejected Democratsâ proposition for a continuation under Kamala Harris.
Lackawanna county, which incorporates Scranton, lies at the top end of the Pennsylvaniaâs populous Route 222 voter corridor. It was once a Democratic stronghold but last week it swung five points toward Donald Trump compared with 2020.
Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said on Sunday he has spoken with US president-elect Donald Trump three times in the past few days aimed at tightening the strong alliance between Israel and the US.
âThese were good and very important conversations,â Netanyahu said in a statement, according to Reuters.
âWe see eye to eye on the Iranian threat in all its components, and the danger posed by it. We also see the great opportunities before Israel, in the field of peace and its expansion, and in other fields.â
Trumpâs White House circle takes shape amid fears over extremist appointments
Martin Pengelly
Donald Trumpâs second administration has begun to take shape amid fears over extremist appointments and how far right the US will go while Republicans control the White House and probably both chambers of Congress.
The range of names being put forward varies from members of Trumpâs inner circle to the worldâs richest man, tech mogul Elon Musk. Alongside plutocrats and technocrats are hardline ideologues on immigration and foreign policy and the controversial figure of Robert F Kennedy Jr, a leading vaccine conspiracy theorist.
On Thursday, Trump made his first appointment, naming Susie Wiles, a co-campaign chair, White House chief of staff. Hailing Wiles, 67, as âtough, smart, innovative ⦠universally admired and respectedâ, Trump reveled in naming âthe first-ever female chief of staff in United States historyâ.
The daughter of an NFL legend, Pat Summerall, Wiles has worked on Republican campaigns since the days of Ronald Reagan. But she faces a thankless task. Chief of staff is a hugely demanding role, both gatekeeper and adviser. Trumpâs first four-year term featured four: Reince Priebus, John Kelly, Mick Mulvaney and Mark Meadows. None flourished. Before this yearâs election, Kelly went so far as to say on record that Trump praised Adolf Hitler and met âthe general definition of a fascistâ.
Publicly, Wiles is a woman of fewer words. On election night, in his victory speech, Trump called her âthe ice babyâ.
The Trump transition team is co-chaired by Howard Lutnick, chief executive of the finance giant Cantor Fitzgerald, and Linda McMahon, the World Wrestling Entertainment impresario who led the Small Business Administration in Trumpâs first term. As ever, speculation is rife about top jobs. Given campaign promises including mass deportations of undocumented migrants and pardons for January 6 rioters, the role of attorney general is perhaps attracting most attention.
Jessica Elgot
The UK is examining all possible options when it comes to the US president-elect Donald Trumpâs approach to Ukraine, the chief secretary to the Treasury has said, as the UKâs chief of the defence staff said approximately 1,500 Russian troops were being killed and injured every day.
Whitehall officials are âconsidering and planning lots of different scenariosâ, Darren Jones told Sky News on Sunday. During the US election campaign, Trump said he would find a solution to end the war âwithin a dayâ, but did not explain how he would do so. His vice-president nominee, JD Vance, has been vociferously opposed to providing more funds to support Ukraine.
Jones said the UK would not be stepping back from its own commitments. âWe donât want any countenance of the idea that weâre stepping back from that. Thatâs why weâre offering them £3bn a year, which you know, in the fiscal context here in the UK, is difficult but the right decision for us,â he said.
âOfficials will be considering and planning lots of different scenarios â as they would do under any administration â to make sure that the UK is in the strongest possible position.â
However, Jones said he would not commit to spending 2.5% of GDP on defence by the end of the current parliament, saying that security and defence were a priority but that meant âtrade-offsâ in other areas.
Jones was also scathing about the Reform UK leader Nigel Farageâs offer to help the Labour government work with Donald Trump, saying:
The counterfactual here is that we do not have influence and we do not have relationships. Thatâs just not true.
I think [Mr Farage] should focus on working with his constituents in Clacton who deserve a bit of a full-time MP as opposed to a transatlantic commentator.â
Melissa Hellmann
Following Donald Trumpâs decisive victory in this weekâs presidential election, leaders of the anti-war group Uncommitted National Movement expressed their disappointment over the results, highlighting the Democratic partyâs failure to listen to its base and prioritize progressive policies. Since the movement formed last winter, its leaders have urged the Democratic party to heed their demands of a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and to adopt an arms embargo on Israel, or risk losing their votes.
While a full picture of how Arab and Muslim Americans voted in the presidential election is still being captured, this election showed a shift among communities that had long formed the Democratic base. A majority of Muslim Americans voted for the Green party candidate Jill Stein at 53%, according to a nationwide exit poll of more than 1,500 Muslim Americans by the civil rights group Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), followed by 21% for Trump and 20% for vice-president Kamala Harris.
In Michigan, which has one of the nationâs highest Arab American and Muslim populations, 59% of Muslim Americans voted for Stein, according to the CAIR poll, while 22% cast ballots for Trump and 14% supported Harris. While exit poll data on Arab American voters is not yet available, a September poll for the non-profit group Arab American Institute found that they were evenly split between their support of Trump and Harris at 42% and 41% respectively.
Now, Uncommittedâs founders and supporters say that the election results reveal that the Democratic party has lost touch with its working class and anti-war voters. Their message for the Biden-Harris administration and Trump is clear, said Uncommitted leader and Palestinian American activist Lexis Zeidan: the movement is not over. While organizing for Palestinian rights under a Trump presidency will be an uphill battle, leaders said, they plan to continue mobilizing activists to apply pressure on the US government until it ends its support of Israelâs war on Gaza, where more than 43,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks since last October.
âThe results of the election are really unfortunate because, with Trump taking office, thereâs a reality that domestically, policies are going to get worse, and peopleâs rights are at stake. And we know also for Palestine and the Middle East, itâs not going to get any better. It definitely didnât have to be this way,â said Zeidan. âDems could have been much smarter, much more strategic and they chose to stick with the status quo rather than listening to their base of voters.â
Judge set to decide whether Donald Trump’s criminal conviction should be overturned
A New York judge is set to decide this week whether president-elect Donald Trumpâs criminal conviction on charges involving hush money paid to a porn star should be overturned in light of the US supreme courtâs July ruling on presidential immunity.
Justice Juan Merchan has said he will make his decision by Tuesday. It is the first of two pivotal choices that the judge must make after Trumpâs 5 November election victory. Merchan also must decide whether to go ahead with sentencing Trump on 26 November as currently scheduled. Legal experts have said sentencing now is unlikely to happen ahead of Trumpâs 20 January inauguration.
A favourable ruling by Merchan for Trump on the immunity question or a sentencing delay would pave the way for him to return to the White House largely unencumbered by any of the four criminal cases that once appeared to threaten his ambitions.
The Kremlin said on Sunday that it saw âpositive signalsâ from US president-elect Donald Trumpâs position on Ukraine, while warning it was hard to predict how he would behave in office, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
âThe signals are positive. Trump during his election talked about how he perceives everything through deals, that he can make a deal that can lead to peace,â Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in an interview with state media published on Sunday.
But Peskov said it was hard to predict âto what extent heâs going to stick to statements that he made on the campaign trailâ.
Fema worker fired for telling Milton relief team to skip homes with Trump signs
Joanna Walters
An employee at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) has been fired from her job and is being investigated because she told a disaster relief team she was directing in Florida after Hurricane Milton to avoid homes displaying election campaign signs supporting Donald Trump, conduct that the agency head on Saturday called âreprehensibleâ.
Deanne Criswell, the administrator of the federal agency, posted on X:
More than 22,000 Fema employees every day adhere to Femaâs core values and are dedicated to helping people before, during and after disasters, often sacrificing time with their own families to help disaster survivors.â
She continued:
Recently, a Fema employee departed from these values to advise her survivor assistance team not go to homes with yard signs supporting president-elect Trump. This is a clear violation of Femaâs core values and principles to help people regardless of their political affiliation.â
Hurricane Milton roared across the Gulf of Mexico and hit Florida last month, crossing the state before reaching the Atlantic Ocean, just two weeks after Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida and then curved inland on a lethal path through Georgia and the Carolinas before dissipating in Tennessee. It killed 35 people.
The Fema employee has not yet been officially identified, but Criswell said of the actions:
This was reprehensible. I want to be clear to all of my employees and the American people, this type of behavior and action will not be tolerated at Fema and we will hold people accountable if they violate these standards of conduct.â
The agency has said it understood the conduct to be an isolated incident. The Daily Wire was the first to report on the actions of the employee, a supervisor, which it said it uncovered from internal correspondence.
Donald Trumpâs former Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, said he will not seek to join the president-electâs new administration but is ready to offer advice to his successor, including on how to strengthen sanctions on Iran and Russia and contain the growth of US debt, reports Reuters.
In an interview, Mnuchin told Reuters it was important for the Treasury to work towards strengthening US trade policy. This includes holding Beijing to its US goods purchase commitments in Trumpâs January 2020 Phase One deal to rebalance US-China trade, which he said âtheyâre not living up to.â
Serving as Treasury chief during Trumpâs first term âwas the experience of a lifetime, and Iâm happy to advise on the outside,â Mnuchin said on Friday. âIâm sure theyâll have a lot of great choices.â He declined to name any favourites.
Reuters reported on Friday that two prominent hedge fund investors, Scott Bessent, founder of Key Square Group, and John Paulson had emerged as the top contenders for Treasury secretary, and that Bessent had met Trump.
Mnuchin founded Liberty Strategic Capital, a private equity firm, after leaving office with investments from Softbank Group and Abu Dhabiâs Mubadala sovereign wealth fund.
Maya Yang
A senior adviser to Donald Trump said that the incoming US administrationâs priority for Ukraine will be achieving peace rather than helping it regain territory captured by Russia in the almost three years of the war.
In an interview with the BBC, broadcast on Saturday, Bryan Lanza, who has been a political adviser to Trump since his 2016 presidential campaign, began to elaborate on the strong signals the now president-elect had been sending to the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, on the campaign trail.
Lanza said:
When Zelenskyy says we will only stop this fighting, there will only be peace, once Crimea is returned, weâve got news for President Zelenskyy: Crimea is gone.â
A spokesperson for Trumpâs presidential transition effort said later on Saturday that Lanza had not been speaking on behalf of the president-elect.
Trumpâs transition effort is currently vetting personnel and drafting the policies that Trump could adopt during his second term.
âBryan Lanza was a contractor for the campaign. He does not work for President Trump and does not speak for him,â said the spokesperson, who declined to be named.
During the election campaign, Trump said he would find a solution to end the war âwithin a dayâ, but did not explain how he would do so.
Russia is open to hearing Donald Trumpâs proposals on ending the war, an official said on Saturday. Sergei Ryabkov, Russiaâs deputy foreign minister, said Moscow and Washington were âexchanging signalsâ on Ukraine via âclosed channelsâ, according to the AP. He did not specify whether the communication was with the current administration or Trump and members of his incoming administration.
UK minister says using Nigel Farage as link to Trump is ‘unlikely’
A British minister said on Sunday that the government is unlikely to ask the Reform party leader Nigel Farage to act as an intermediary to deal with US president-elect Donald Trump.
Farage is a friend of Trump and was at his election victory party in Florida. He has offered to act as an interlocutor between the UK government and the Trump administration, which takes power in January.
The Treasury minister, Darren Jones, said on Sunday that the government would probably reject that offer, reports the PA news agency.
âI think thatâs probably unlikely,â he told Sky News, saying Farage, who is a member of the UK parliament, should probably spend his time with his constituents rather than in the US.
Farage said at the weekend he has âa great relationshipâ with Trump and would be willing to act as an intermediary for the government because it is in the national interest.
Governments around the world are trying to figure out how to deal with Trump, who has promised to increase tariffs and whose first four-year term was characterized by a protectionist trade policy and isolationist rhetoric, including threats to withdraw from Nato.
UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, delayed starting a recruitment process for a new ambassador to Washington until the result of the US election was known. The role will be crucial in the coming years in navigating the UKâs relationship with the Trump administration.