Kamala Harris calls Trump to concede, emphasize peaceful transfer of power, says aide

THE LATEST: 

  • Kamala Harris calls Donald Trump to concede the election: aide
  • Wisconsin projection puts Trump over the top in presidential race.
  • Trump also wins battlegrounds Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania.
  • Harris is expected to speak Wednesday afternoon.
  • The current electoral vote tally is 292 for Trump and 223 for Harris.
  • Republicans reclaim Senate, with House control still uncertain.
  • Abortion rights activists hailed ballot measure wins in some, but not all, states. 

Republican Donald Trump will become the 47th president of the United States after beating Democratic candidate Kamala Harris in Tuesday’s election to complete a stunning political comeback.

Harris called president-elect Trump on Wednesday to concede the election and congratulate him on his victory, according to a senior adviser to the vice-president. The aide, who declined to be identified discussing a private conversation, said Harris talked about the need for a peaceful transfer of power.

Trump, 78, is the first person to win two non-consecutive presidential terms since Grover Cleveland 132 years ago and the first to ever hold the nation’s highest office as a convicted felon.

  • Do you have a question about the U.S. election result? Or what a second Trump term will look like? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca.

The victory was sealed when swing state Wisconsin and its 10 electoral college votes were called for Trump by the U.S. networks and The Associated Press just after 5:30 a.m. ET on Wednesday, putting him over the necessary 270 electoral college votes needed to win the presidency.

Trump took Wisconsin for the second time in three elections after narrowly losing it to Joe Biden four years ago. He did the same in Michigan, with its 16 electoral college votes, in an election call that came down just after midday on Wednesday.

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Lawrence Douglas, professor of law at Amherst College in Massachusetts, says that while Donald Trump won’t be able to pardon himself on state charges against him, he won’t likely serve time and, as president, he’ll be able to make sure federal cases against him don’t go to trial.

This time, Biden bowed out of the election weeks after a disastrous performance in a rare June debate. It was the beginning of a remarkable campaign home stretch during which Trump survived an assassination attempt and weeks later was golfing when an armed man was arrested on the premises. While concerns about Biden’s age and capacity to handle the job were paramount, Trump will be the oldest president upon inauguration on Jan. 21, 2025.

Trump also scored wins in battleground states Georgia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. The presidential outcome in Arizona and Nevada has yet to be determined.

There were 296 electoral college votes for Trump and 224 for Harris, with a potential maximum of 314 for the Republican if he swept the remaining states.

“It is now clear that we’ve achieved the most incredible political thing. Look what happened. Isn’t this crazy?” Trump told cheering supporters after the Pennsylvania result, at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Fla., just before 2:30 a.m. ET. “I want to thank the American people for the extraordinary honour of being elected your 47th president.”

Trump will return to office with Republicans having control of at least the Senate to boost his agenda. Control of the House of Representatives was still in doubt early Wednesday.

Harris, 60, is expected to address supporters and the nation sometime on Wednesday.

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Donald Trump’s running mate, J.D. Vance, celebrated their election night success after several battleground states were called for Trump, promising to lead ‘the greatest economic comeback in American history.’

In a result with worldwide reverberations, enough American voters overlooked Trump’s turbulent first time — he was twice impeached by the Democratic-led House, and his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, after he promoted false claims of widespread voting fraud.

Trump, 78, faced criminal indictments related to that post-election period, as well as a real estate fraud case in New York that led to a conviction earlier this year. Sentencing is due to take place in that case later this month.

Several people of diverse backgrounds are shown standing, looking concerned or sad.
Supporters of Democratic presidential nominee Vice-President Kamala Harris leave an election night campaign watch party after it was announced that she would not speak on Wednesday, on the campus of Howard University in Washington, D.C. (J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press)

Trump’s improbable comeback carries implications at home and abroad, from the wars in Ukraine and in the Middle East, to the bargaining tables where America’s allies face tough conversations on defence spending and trade.

Canada risks being hit harder than most from Trump’s threat of a 10 per cent tariff on all imported products.

LISTEN l CBC’s longtime Washington correspondent Keith Boag on the race that was:

Front Burner24:58America embraces a second Trump presidency

For months, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris rallied voters with a message: “We’re not going back.”
But as the election was finally called in the early hours of Wednesday morning, it’s now clear that America does in fact want to go back.
Back to Donald Trump.
Keith Boag, longtime CBC Washington correspondent, joins us to break down how this happened, and what a second Trump presidency could hold.
For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts [https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts]

Inflation, border concerns for voters surveyed

Trump ultimately won over voters with grand promises to improve the economy, block the flow of immigrants on the southern border and with his siren call to “make America great again.” He also appealed to religious voters in both parties by seizing on the Democrats’ support for the transgender community.

After Trump’s declaration of victory, the American dollar surged and U.S. stock futures hit record highs as investors bet on lower taxes and higher interest rates.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron, Western leaders who Trump sometimes criticized during his first term, were among the world leaders congratulating Trump by Wednesday morning. They were joined in offering congratulations by, among others, India’s Narendra Modi, Recep Erdogan of Turkey and Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whose phone call with the U.S. president in 2019 was the centrepiece of Trump’s first impeachment on Capitol Hill, did so as well.

“I appreciate President Trump’s commitment to the ‘peace through strength’ approach in global affairs,” Zelenskyy said on X. “This is exactly the principle that can practically bring just peace in Ukraine closer.”

On foreign policy, Trump has pledged to fundamentally alter the U.S. relationship with NATO and to resolve the Ukraine war with possible peace talks that might require Kyiv to cede territory. Trump has expressed concern with the amount of U.S. aid to Ukraine, though in many cases that money supports American companies and jobs involved in arms and defence production.

Overall, though, domestic concerns weighed heavily for U.S. voters. About half of Trump voters said inflation was the biggest issue factoring into their election decisions. About as many said the same for the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 115,000 voters.

At the same time, Black and Latino voters appeared slightly less likely to support Harris than they were to back Biden four years ago, according to AP VoteCast. About eight in 10 Black voters backed Harris, down from the roughly nine in 10 who backed Biden. More than half of Hispanic voters supported Harris, but that was down slightly from the roughly six in 10 who backed Biden in 2020.

Exit polls of voters also illustrated a significant gender gap in several states, with Harris enjoying a double-digit margin among woman voters and Trump enjoying large margins from male voters.

Two television screens are shown, one with a map of the United States and other featuring a stock market update.
An employee walks past the screens showing ongoing U.S. presidential election results, left, and a foreign exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and the Japanese yen, early Wednesday in Tokyo. (Shuji Kajiyama/The Associated Press)

While Harris was able to tap into the Biden war chest, her campaign of less than four months was more comparable in duration to candidates in a Western parliamentary democracy than the U.S., where candidates often announce their intention to run 18 months out. Trump, a well-known quantity, announced his third presidential bid in November 2022.

Harris was seen as the consensus winner in a debate with Trump, but she struggled to define when asked by reporters how her presidency would differ from the Biden administration in which she’s served. While Biden passed more significant legislation in his term than Trump, voters were gloomy about the economy — and the effects of the America Jobs Plan, Inflation Reduction Act and Chips and Science Act will take years to assess.

On the economy, Trump said he would impose sweeping tariffs on imported goods and on specific companies and countries. He pledged to end taxes on tips and overtime, to make emergency generators tax-deductible in states hit by natural disasters, to lower corporate tax rates and to open federal lands to foreign companies and housing. He also vowed to undo much of Biden’s climate change work.

Trump was also ahead in the popular vote, with over 51 per cent to Harris’s 47 per cent, although results in western states that are reliably Democratic could reduce that margin. Still, Trump had never reached even 48 per cent in his two previous presidential runs.

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