US election recap: Exit polls reveal who voted for Donald Trump and Kamala Harris presidency

The Nightly
Broadly speaking, Donald Trump won over the voters he was always meant to. But one group got behind him in an unexpected way.
Broadly speaking, Donald Trump won over the voters he was always meant to. But one group got behind him in an unexpected way. Credit: The Nightly

Donald Trump has been elected President of the US for a second non-consecutive term. Recap a huge week in politics by scrolling through the posts below.

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As election week draws to a close, so too does The Nightly’s live blog.

If you’re just joining us, feel free to scroll through the posts below to recap a huge week in world politics.

Thank you for joining us throughout the week as we witnessed an historic election result and the return of Donald Trump to the White House.

Our coverage of US politics doesn’t end here though.

Stay tuned to The Nightly for all the latest news and updates on the incoming Trump Government and don’t forget to download your free edition of The Nightly every weeknight from 6pm AEDT.

Elisia Seeber

BEN HARVEY: If Trump wins the presidency, the left has itself to blame

If the numbers go Trump’s way, the left needs to have a hard look at itself. Here’s a bit of free advice to the progressives, writes Ben Harvey.
If the numbers go Trump’s way, the left needs to have a hard look at itself. Here’s a bit of free advice to the progressives, writes Ben Harvey. Credit: The Nightly

Political opinion polls are so ropey at the moment it’s impossible to gauge who will move into the White House.

If Donald Trump does get up, you can be sure that some journalists will say it’s a failure of democracy.

Poppycock.

A Trump presidency will not be a failure of democracy; it will be a product of democracy.

And democracy is a product of mathematics.

It won’t be simple mathematics because of the thoroughly confusing American electoral college (Google it if you dare) but the arithmetic won’t lie.

If the numbers go Trump’s way, the left needs to have a hard look at itself because if you are outwitted by a porn star-shagging bankrupted convicted felon then something is very wrong with your message.

Your tactics clearly need to be tweaked.

Here’s a bit of free advice to the progressives: slow down and stop yelling at us.

They need to put out ideas that make the rest of us feel a little uncomfortable and force us to, if not walk a mile in another person’s shoes, at least think about trying the shoes on.

Social progress takes time. Progressives need to get their head around that.

Read Ben Harvey’s full opinion piece here.

The crucial State where voters don’t care

The Nightly correspondent Max Corstorphan is on the ground in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he says large sections of the community won’t be voting and would rather talk about sport.

He reports:

In one of the most important swing states of the 2024 US presidential election, most locals are celebrating a one-point win this weekend — but not in the race to the White House.

The State has a population of almost 11 million people, and nearly 4 million have already voted. However many others simply are “not voting”, instead putting their effort into turning up for sporting games and music in the city.

​​Read the full story here​​.

Ducksworth Grill and Bar in Charlotte showed what the locals were actually interested in.
Ducksworth Grill and Bar in Charlotte showed what the locals were actually interested in. Credit: The Nightly
Elisia Seeber

Markets brace for US election showdown

Uncertainty about the outcome of the hotly-contested US presidential election saw financial markets begin the week on a cautious note.

Shares in Asia subdued while the dollar eased slightly ahead of a busy week headlined by the US presidential race.

The week will also provide investors with global monetary policy catalysts with rate decisions from the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England (BoE), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), Riksbank and Norges Bank.

China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) standing committee meets from Monday to Friday and will be closely watched for further details of a raft of stimulus measures that were announced recently.

Trading was thinned in Asia on Monday with Japan out for a holiday, but MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.7 per cent, recovering from its fall to a five-week low on Friday.

US stock futures though lost ground, with Nasdaq futures falling 0.11 per cent, while S&P 500 futures eased 0.14 per cent.

The dollar was on the back foot, with the euro last 0.4 per cent higher at $US1.0877 ($A1.6496). The yen jumped 0.7 per cent to 151.88 per dollar.

Kamala Harris, Donald Trump
Financial markets are being cautious, reflecting uncertainty about the outcome of the US election. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Dealers said the dip in the dollar might be linked to a well-respected poll that showed Democratic candidate Kamala Harris taking a surprise three-point lead in Iowa, thanks largely to her popularity with female voters.

Analysts believe Trump’s policies on immigration, tax cuts and tariffs would put upward pressure on inflation, bond yields and the dollar, while Harris was seen as the continuity candidate.

-- By Rae Wee, Reuters

Read more from Reuters here.

Is the US dictator-proof?

One of the most troubling sentiments filtering out from the US in the lead-up to the election is the concern over whether or not the country will recover from the deep political divisions being sown right now. It was only back in May that The Economist asked: Is the US dictator-proof?

Feckless war-making, a financial crisis and institutional rot have loosed a ferocity in America’s politics that has given presidential contests seemingly existential stakes.

Americans have heard their leaders denounce the integrity of their democracy. They have seen fellow citizens try to block the transfer of power from one administration to the next. They have good reason to wonder how much protection their system guarantees them against the authoritarian impulse rising around the world.

Read more from The Economist here.

FILE - Insurrectionists loyal to President Donald Trump breach the Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021. A man who attacked police officers with poles during the U.S. Capitol riot has been sentenced to more than five years in prison. The sentence that U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan gave Mark Ponder on Tuesday, July 26, 2022, matches the longest term of imprisonment so far among hundreds of Capitol riot prosecutions. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
Insurrectionists loyal to President Donald Trump breach the Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021. Credit: AP
Georgina Noack

US voting machine staff fear doxxing, threats if Trump loses

Staff at US voting machine companies have removed public information about themselves from the internet and made contingency plans with local law enforcement ahead of the 2024 election after suffering harassment in 2020.

Some workers reported being “doxxed” - that is, having personal information like their home address or phone numbers shared online - after Donald Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “stolen” from him.

Sara Cutter, the executive director of the American Council for Election Technology, says staff aren’t taking chances this time around.

Ms Cutter said staff had to prepare because the “level of threat has increased exponentially and has not cooled off since 2020”.

Read the full story here.

Stark difference in closing messages laid bare

Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have offered starkly different closing messages as they each fight for a tiny sliver of undecided voters in seven battleground states — Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona and Nevada — that are expected to decide who will be the next president

The Washington Post reports that Vice President Kamala Harris used her campaign stops in Michigan on Sunday to reiterate her message that she would be a president for all Americans by inviting those who disagree with her to the table, while Republican nominee Donald Trump doubled down on portraying a dystopian future for the country that he claimed only he could fix.

Polls show the two candidates remained deadlocked across all seven states, with one of the most closely contested presidential races in modern history.

Read the full story here​.

Max Corstorphan

Major poll puts Kamala ahead in most swing states

The New York Times and Sienna College have released new ​​​​polling results​​​​ placing Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of former President Donald Trump in four of seven swing states.

In Nevada, polled voters supported Ms Harris 49 per cent to Mr Trump 46 percent.

North Carolina swung to Ms Harris 48 percent to the republican’s 46 per cent.

In Wisconsin, where Ms Harris appeared alongside rapper Cardi B on Friday, Ms Harris leads 49 per cent to Mr Trump 47 per cent.

Mr Trump had a clear lead amongst likely voters in Arizona with 49 per cent of support, Ms Harris trailing behind at 45 per cent.

The poll, one of the most respected, showed Ms Harris and Mr Trump neck and neck in Pennsylvania at 48 per cent and Michigan 47 per cent.

However, despite Harris’ much needed swing to secure a blue wall, the publication claimed it was going to be a “photo finish”.

Political commentators are continuing to flag that when a candidate secures a swing, it can engage a portion of the other party to get out and vote.

Voting is the US in not compulsory so voter turnout could play the deciding factor.

Max Corstorphan

Fears Trump ‘sowing the seeds’ to overturn election result

False claims about voter fraud in Pennsylvania have raised concerns that former Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump might once again seek to overturn the vote there or in other battleground states likely to determine the winner.

Opinion polls, both nationally and in the seven closely divided states, show Trump locked in a tight race with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in the countdown to election day on Tuesday.

Trump continues to falsely claim his 2020 loss to Democratic President Joe Biden was the result of widespread fraud in multiple states that Trump lost, while he and his supporters have spread baseless claims about this election in Pennsylvania.

Similar rhetoric about voter fraud after the 2020 vote led to a violent mob of Trump supporters attacking the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, seeking to halt or sway the congressional count of the electoral votes that determine who becomes president.

“This is sowing the seeds for attempts to overturn an election result that cuts against Donald Trump,” said Kyle Miller, a Pennsylvania policy strategist for the advocacy group Protect Democracy.

​​​READ MORE​​​

Max Corstorphan

‘Shoot through the fake media’: Trump

In Lititz, Pennsylvania, former President Donald Trump spoke about his increased security at rallies following attempts on his life.

“To get me, someone would have to shoot through the fake news, and I don’t mind that so much,” Mr Trump said.

The Republican nominee often calls media outlets “fake news”, claiming they show bias and do not report on the good he does.

Max Corstorphan

Harris preaches to the converted

Vice President Kamala Harris attended a Sunday service at Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ in Detroit Michigan, telling the congregation that they “have the power”.

“So church, in just two days we have the power to decide the fate of our nation — for generations to come,” Harris said at the start of her remarks to the congregation.

Bishop John Drew Sheard (left) leads the congregation in a prayer over Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris during a church service at Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ.
Bishop John Drew Sheard (left) leads the congregation in a prayer over Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris during a church service at Greater Emmanuel Institutional Church of God in Christ. Credit: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

The Democratic nominee then quoted scripture from Jeremiah, saying: “For I know the plans I have for you. They are the plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.”

It was a move well received by the religious crowd who broke into cheers and applause.

She told church-goers that it was “not enough to only pray”, asking them to make a plan a vote.

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