
BIDEN - 279 | 217 - TRUMP
These are according to CNN projections. A candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the US presidency.
(Source: CNN)
44m ago
Alaska, which carries three electoral votes, also went to Trump in 2016.
CNN PROJECTION: Donald Trump will win Alaska https://t.co/FhzRTNfNOI #CNNElection pic.twitter.com/hHQyy3MM55
— CNN (@CNN) November 11, 2020
1h ago
'These are dictator moves': Defence officials alarmed as Trump installs more loyalists at the Pentagon
President Trump is continuing to remove senior defence officials and replace them with loyalists, creating growing alarm in the Pentagon that his rapid overhaul of key staff could undermine national security.
Since Trump fired Secretary of Defence Mark Esper on Monday, three other Defence Department officials have either resigned or been sacked.
Acting Under Secretary of Defence for Policy James Anderson quit on Tuesday after clashes with the White House over its attempts to insert controversial figures into top Pentagon positions.
Anderson was replaced by retired US Army Brig Anthony Tata, an ally of Trump and regular guest on Fox News.
1h ago
Biden plans move into White House as Trump clings to hope
US President-elect Joe Biden will further lay the groundwork for his new administration on Wednesday as President Donald Trump pursues a flurry of longshot lawsuits challenging the election results in an effort to cling to power.
Trump has declined to concede, instead lodging unsupported charges of election fraud that have gained little traction.
Judges so far have tossed out lawsuits in Michigan and Georgia brought by Trump's campaign, and legal experts say the litigation has little chance of changing the outcome of the 3 November election.
3h ago
Officials say no evidence of fraud, irregularities in US election - report
Election officials in several states in the US have claimed no evidence of fraud has been detected, according to a recent report by the New York Times.
Contacted by The Times, top election officials across the country said the election process was deemed a success.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly refused to accept the results of the 3 November election, claiming without evidence that there was widespread voting fraud involved in the process and that the election was stolen from him.
Trump along with his campaign have filed numerous lawsuits in key swing states and asked courts to issue injunctions to stop the certification of the results, AFP reported.
According to the report, The Times reached out to senior election officials in every state to find out whether any evidence of illegal voting had been suspected. The Times received direct response from officials in 45 states and spoke to other statewide officials and secretaries of state in the remaining states.
"There’s a great human capacity for inventing things that aren’t true about elections," Frank LaRose, a Republican who serves as Ohio’s secretary of state, told The Times.
"The conspiracy theories and rumours and all those things run rampant. For some reason, elections breed that type of mythology."
Democrat Steve Simon, Minnesota’s secretary of state, said: "I don’t know of a single case where someone argued that a vote counted when it shouldn’t have or didn’t count when it should. There was no fraud."
3h ago
7h ago
'Nothing's going to stop' transition of power in US, Biden says
President-elect Joe Biden said on Tuesday that nothing would stop the transfer of power in the US government, even as President Donald Trump says without evidence the election was marred by fraud and some of his Republican allies back probes.
Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has backed Trump's right to launch a legal challenge to Biden's victory in several battleground states such as Pennsylvania. Some senior Republicans sought to sow doubt about the outcome.
7h ago
Mexico's ambassador to US calls Biden 'prospective' President-elect
Mexico's ambassador to the United States on Tuesday called Joe Biden the "prospective" President-elect, in what could indicate a slight shift in position after the Mexican government said it was too soon to recognise a winner of the US election. Ambassador Martha Barcena published a series of talking points on Twitter titled "Position of the Government of Mexico" containing the new language. It was not immediately clear if the choice of words signalled a shift in Mexico's official stance.
The Democrat former vice president secured the presidency by winning Pennsylvania on Saturday, but Republican President Donald Trump has so far refused to concede, and is pursuing lawsuits in several states in a bid to hold on to power citing "illegal" ballots. State officials have said there were no significant irregularities in the 3 November election.
The Mexican foreign ministry did not offer specific comments on the ambassador's statement, with a ministry official saying it had been issued by the embassy. In response to questions from Twitter users, Barcena later gave several synonyms for the word "prospective".
"Prospective can be translated in several ways, presumed is one of them, virtual would be another, probable, eventual, future," she said in a Tweet. So far, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has held back from congratulating Biden for winning the election even as government leaders in many countries sent their best wishes.
"This principled position underlines the respect for the US political system and institutions and for both the Democratic and Republican parties as well as for President Donald Trump and prospective President-elect Joseph Biden," Barcena said in the document.
"Mexico is ready to engage in a constructive spirit with the future US administration, based on the enduring ties of friendship and neighbourliness that bind our two nations."
Lopez Obrador has reiterated he would not recognise the election winner until legal disputes were resolved, but said he had "no problem" with Biden.
Reuters
9h ago
9h ago
Biden brands Trump's refusal to concede an 'embarrassment'
President-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday called President Donald Trump's refusal to concede his election loss an "embarrassment" but dismissed the standoff as unimportant.
"I just think it's an embarrassment, quite frankly," Biden said when asked what he thinks about Trump's refusal to acknowledge defeat in the 3 November election.
"How can I say this tactfully? I think it will not help the president's legacy," Biden told reporters in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.
A week after the US election, Trump remained shut up in the White House, pushing an alternate reality that he is about to win and filing lawsuits alleging voter fraud that so far have been backed up by only the flimsiest evidence.
Biden, meanwhile, mostly ignored Trump.
9h ago
Trump campaign presses legal attack on election, as postal worker recants ballot fraud claims
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump's campaign said on Tuesday it would file a lawsuit to stop the battleground state of Michigan from certifying its election results, as congressional Democrats said a witness who had raised accusations of ballot tampering in Pennsylvania recanted his allegations.
The Michigan lawsuit will request that election results in the state not be certified until it can be verified that votes were cast lawfully, Trump campaign attorney Matt Morgan told reporters on a conference call.
It was the latest in a string of lawsuits the Trump campaign has filed since Democrat Joe Biden captured the presidency. Biden's victory in the 3 November election was propelled by wins in Michigan and Pennsylvania.
Trump has repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that there was widespread voting fraud.
Judges have already tossed lawsuits in Michigan and Georgia brought by the campaign, and legal experts say Trump's litigation has little chance of changing the outcome of the election.
- REUTERS
11h ago
Trump to make first public appearance since election called for Biden
US President Donald Trump will visit Arlington National Cemetery on Wednesday, the White House said, in what would be the president's first public appearance since the US presidential contest was called for his Democratic rival Joe Biden over the weekend.
Trump and first lady Melania Trump will visit the cemetery to mark Veterans Day, White House spokesperson Judd Deere told Reuters.
Since Election Day on 3 November he has made few public appearances and seems to have all but shelved normal presidential duties.
10 November 19:59
A week after losing the US election, President Donald Trump remained shut up in the White House on Tuesday, pushing an alternate reality that he is about to win and blocking Democrat Joe Biden's ability to prepare the transition.
"WE WILL WIN!" the Republican president tweeted, adding: "WE ARE MAKING BIG PROGRESS. RESULTS START TO COME IN NEXT WEEK. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"
The message referred to Trump's unprecedented decision for a US president to dispute a lost election, refusing to concede to his opponent and mounting a string of flimsy court challenges in states where Biden won.
Several suits have been thrown out almost immediately and the remainder clearly have no chance of overturning Biden's slim but convincing victories in multiple states.
10 November 18:59
US elections: Pandor says Trump uncertainty unsettling for world
International Relations and Cooperation Minister Naledi Pandor said the uncertainty in the US as President Donald Trump refuses to concede losing the elections was unsettling for the world.
In an interview with News24, Pandor said she believed President-elect Joe Biden has his work cut out for him following the bruising election last week.
10 November 18:39
Republicans back Trump's right to challenge Biden's victory
President Donald Trump will push ahead on Tuesday with longshot legal challenges to his election loss, as Republican US lawmakers and state officials defended his right to do so.
Pennsylvania Republican state lawmakers called for an audit of results in the state that on Saturday enabled Democrat Joe Biden to secure the more than 270 votes in the Electoral College he needed to win the presidency.
Trump has made baseless claims that fraud was marring the results. The count has been delayed by a surge in mail-in ballots prompted by voters' desire to avoid infection from the coronavirus pandemic.
Judges have tossed out lawsuits in Michigan and Georgia, and experts say Trump's legal efforts have little chance of changing the election result.
10 November 18:26
10 November 18:19
Trump campaign adviser Bossie tests positive for Covid-19 -source
The adviser charged with leading President Donald Trump's post-election legal challenges, David Bossie, has tested positive for Covid-19, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.
Bossie, a prominent conservative activist who leads advocacy group Citizens United, tested positive on Sunday, joining White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Housing Secretary Ben Carson as victims of the latest coronavirus outbreak to touch the White House. Bossie was picked to lead the legal challenges to Trump's election loss.
- Reuters
10 November 18:12
10 November 17:53
OPINION | The issue of land in SA: Will Biden speak up for his ‘favourites’ again?
Gabriel Crouse asks whether US president-elect will speak on the issue of contentious issue of land expropriation without compensation like he did on the issue of apartheid in 1986.
10 November 17:24
10 November 17:19
US Supreme Court begins arguments over fate of Obamacare law
The conservative-majority US Supreme Court on Tuesday began hearing arguments in a challenge by Republican-governed states backed by President Donald Trump's administration aiming to invalidate the Obamacare healthcare law.
President-elect Joe Biden has criticised Republican efforts to throw out the Affordable Care Act (ACA), as the law is formally known, in the midst of a deadly coronavirus pandemic and hopes to buttress Obamacare after taking office on January 20.
The justices were hearing a scheduled 80 minutes of arguments by teleconference in an appeal by a coalition of Democratic-governed states including California and New York and the Democratic-led House of Representatives to preserve Obamacare.
The case represents the latest Republican legal attack on the 2010 law, which was the signature domestic policy achievement of Democratic former President Barack Obama, under whom Biden served as vice president. The Supreme Court in 2012 and 2015 fended off previous Republican challenges to it.
The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority after the Republican-led Senate last month confirmed Trump's third appointee, Amy Coney Barrett. Most legal experts think the justices will stop short of a seismic ruling striking down Obamacare.
- Reuters
10 November 17:07
10 November 16:53
EXPLAINER | Citizen Trump will face legal woes
Since taking office in January 2017, President Donald Trump has been besieged by civil lawsuits and criminal investigations of his inner circle.
With Democrat Joe Biden capturing the presidency on Saturday, according to all major US television networks, Trump's legal woes are likely to deepen because in January he will lose the protections the US legal system affords to a sitting president, former prosecutors said.
Here are some of the lawsuits and criminal probes that may haunt Trump as he leaves office.
10 November 16:45
10 November 14:27
ANALYSIS | Trump’s lens for vote questions seems myopic
United States President Trump and his supporters are convinced that the 2020 presidential election was “stolen” from them. As they question the outcome, Trump and his backers are repeating allegations of illegally cast ballots and widespread election fraud as well as a US media conspiracy to prematurely project an election winner.
And in the wake of a race that featured very close outcomes in several battleground states, Trump wants Americans to believe that he’s been treated unfairly by election administrators and the US media.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell became the highest-ranking Republican to publicly back Trump’s efforts to question the election outcome Monday, saying on the Senate floor, “In the United States of America, all legal ballots must be counted and all illegal allots must not be counted. The process should be transparent and observable, and the courts are here to work through concerns.
”Yet, when faced with the exact same scenario in 2016, when Trump was declared the winner and not the loser, the reactions from Trump and Republicans were quite the opposite, raising the question: how could things be so completely different just because the projected winner is not Trump?
10 November 13:48
10 November 13:43
Trump once again falsely claims 'I won!' in response to a tweet from Georgia's governor
- Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp wrote in a tweet on Monday that the state's election results will "include legally cast — and ONLY legally cast ballots."
- US President Donald Trump shared Kemp's tweet, writing, "This is good news, it means I won!"
- President-elect Joe Biden is currently leading in the state and the overall presidential race was called by Insider and Decision Desk HQ on Friday morning and other major newspapers and networks on Saturday morning.
- Last week, the president claimed victory amid the nail-biting election, as states continued to count ballots and before news outlets began to project Biden's victory over the weekend.
- "We were getting ready to win this election," Trump said early Wednesday morning at the White House. "Frankly, we did win this election."
10 November 12:11
Why can't Trump accept his defeat?
Washington – With his defeat in the US presidential election, Donald Trump finds himself fighting against being tagged with a label he frequently applies to rivals, but which runs completely counter to his own brand: "loser".
The Republican is pursuing legal action in several battleground states, though his lawyers have so far failed to substantiate claims of fraud and observers see the possibility of the courts overturning the result of the vote as vanishingly small.
Yet, according to scholars and mental health professionals, the same authoritarian qualities that defined Trump's rise to power and his presidency make it almost impossible for him to digest a graceful concession to Democratic president-elect Joe Biden.
This, they warn, could make the post-election, pre-inauguration period a particularly unstable time for the country.
10 November 10:56
10 November 10:39
Trump refuses to concede, Biden leads on Covid
Washington – US President Donald Trump, who is refusing to concede election defeat, injected new volatility on Monday by firing his defence secretary, while president-elect Joe Biden made good on a promise to focus on leading the country out of the Covid-19 crisis.
With construction already starting in central Washington for the 20 January inauguration ceremony, an awkward and potentially chaotic transition period is under way.
Trump, in a move unprecedented for a US president, insists that the 3 November election was stolen from him.
10 November 10:22
10 November 10:21
Biden could lose out on security information, personal protection if Trump does not concede
- President-elect Joe Biden's team could lose out on key information that they would need to obtain before he formally takes office if Trump continues to not recognise him as president-elect.
- Trump has repeatedly refused to concede the election.
10 November 09:32
10 November 09:26
10 November 09:07
'Kamala represents the future' - US women, minorities celebrate vice president-elect Harris
New York – The first female vice president, and a symbol of American diversity – Kamala Harris has electrified many women and minority voters on the US left, who view her as the future more than Joe Biden.
As celebrations rolled on in major cities, excitement for some has shifted from Biden's election victory to his running mate.
"She's a wonderful role model for young girls," said Theodora Egbuchulam, a New York attorney. The 55-year-old black woman had gone to Times Square to celebrate the news.
"Kamala represents the future, and it makes me so proud that after everything that was done and said, we have an African-American woman in the White House," Egbuchulam said.
"It tells young girls and boys that America looks more like us than just a typical white male."
At 56, Harris brings new energy to the future administration of Biden, who at 77 is the oldest elected president. But her victory is even sweeter for the women who watched four years ago as Hillary Clinton suffered a shocking defeat to Donald Trump.
"We never had a woman in power like this. It's amazing," said Devi Kowlessar, a New York real estate agent who is Indian-American, like Harris.
"Hopefully she'll reunite Americans, and she'll make these past four years disappear," Kowlessar added, referring to Trump's time in office. "We want her to unite people, to bring love."
- AFP
10 November 09:04
Barr urges probes of vote irregularities as Trump mounts legal assault
WASHINGTON – US Attorney General William Barr told federal prosecutors on Monday to look into "substantial" allegations of irregularities in last week's election, prompting the top lawyer overseeing voter fraud investigations to resign in protest.
Barr sent his letter after days of attacks on the integrity of the election by President Donald Trump and Republican allies, who have alleged without evidence that there was widespread voter fraud.
Trump has not conceded the election to Democrat Joe Biden who on Saturday secured more than the 270 votes in the Electoral College needed to win the presidency.
Barr told prosecutors that "fanciful or far-fetched claims" should not be a basis for investigation and that his letter did not indicate the Justice Department had uncovered voting irregularities affecting the outcome of the election.
But he did say he was authorising prosecutors to "pursue substantial allegations" of irregularities of voting and the counting of ballots.
Richard Pilger, who for years has served as director of the Election Crimes Branch, announced in an internal email that he was resigning from that post after he read "the new policy and its ramifications".
Biden's campaign said Barr was fuelling Trump's far-fetched allegations of fraud.
"Those are the very kind of claims that the president and his lawyers are making unsuccessfully every day, as their lawsuits are laughed out of one court after another," said Bob Bauer, a senior adviser to Biden.
- REUTERS
(PHOTO: Mandel Ngan/AFP)
10 November 07:18
In a new lawsuit filed in Pennsylvania on Monday, the campaign of United States President Donald Trump sued Kathy Boockvar, Pennsylvania’s secretary of state, and a handful of county boards of elections, alleging they had run an unfair election in the state.
The Trump campaign is asking the court to issue an emergency order stopping election officials from certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s win in the state, and a permanent injunction requiring county election boards to invalidate ballots that were allowed to be “cured”.
“Curing” a ballot is a completely legal process; if a voter sends their mail ballot without a secrecy envelope or signature, an official calls to tell them they are allowed to vote by provisional ballot.
Trump has refused to concede defeat in the US presidential election, even though Biden declared victory on Saturday after US media networks projected him as the winner.
The Trump campaign has made unsubstantiated claims about widespread voter fraud and launched legal challenges in several key battleground states.
- Al Jazeera
09 November 21:47
The World Health Organization chief on Monday welcomed efforts to strengthen the Geneva-based body through reform and said it was looking forward to working closely with the administration of US President-elect Joe Biden.
WHO's funding must become more flexible and predictable to end a "major misalignment" between expectations and available resources, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said, citing reform efforts by France, Germany and the European Union.
"We still have a lot of work left to do, but we believe that we're on the right track," Tedros told health ministers as the annual meeting resumed of the WHO, which groups 194 countries.
09 November 20:07
US President Donald Trump on Monday said Defence Secretary Mark Esper had been "terminated" and that Christopher Miller, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, will be acting Secretary of Defense starting immediately.
"Mark Esper has been terminated," Trump said on Twitter. "I am pleased to announce that Christopher C. Miller, the highly respected Director of the National Counterterrorism Center (unanimously confirmed by the Senate), will be Acting Secretary of Defense, effective immediately."
09 November 19:45
Mexico president sees no beef with Biden, waits to send congratulations
Mexico's president on Monday reiterated he would not recognise the US presidential election winner until pending legal disputes are resolved, but said he had no problem with Joe Biden, who many world leaders have already have congratulated.
Biden clinched the presidency on Saturday, four days after the 3 November election.
The Republican incumbent, President Donald Trump, has launched an array of lawsuits to press claims of election fraud for which he has produced no evidence. State officials say they are not aware of any significant irregularities.
09 November 18:49
President Donald Trump was still refusing to concede his election loss on Monday, but Democrat Joe Biden plowed ahead anyway with the first meeting of a parallel coronavirus task force, initiating an awkward and potentially volatile transition period.
Traditionally, Trump would by now not only have accepted the results of Tuesday's election but started assisting the incoming administration before the 20 January handover.
Construction has already begun along Pennsylvania Avenue for the ceremonies.
However, the next weeks threaten to push the United States into unprecedented new tension after the already bitter election.
09 November 17:20
Melania Trump has urged Trump to concede the election to Joe Biden, CNN reports
First lady Melania Trump has urged President Donald Trump to acknowledge his loss to President-elect Joe Biden in the 2020 election, CNN reported Sunday.
According to CNN, the president's inner circle is split into factions who believe he should concede to Biden adn those urging him to continue disputing the result of his election.
09 November 17:11
What will a Biden administration mean for Africa? A journalist's take
US foreign policy over the last four years has fallen behind fast-changing dynamics in Africa and needs to be quickly rethought by the next administration.
09 November 17:04
For Cuba, any US president will be better than Trump
In the presidential election, Trump owed his big win in the US state of Florida in large part to his strident denunciation of leftist governments in Latin America, which resonated loudly and clearly with conservative Cuban-Americans in Miami who loathe the communist government in Havana.
But for people living in Cuba, which has been under Communist leadership for six decades, Trump's accusations of Biden's leftist leanings make them smile disbelievingly.
"I'm not the type to trust an American president, but given the situation, I prefer the other one over Trump," Pablo Zalvidar, a 57-year-old parking attendant, told AFP.
After a historic rapprochement at the end of 2014 and the policy of openness led by Barack Obama, Trump's arrival in the White House was like a cold shower for Cuba.
His reelection would have been "a disaster or an apocalyptic threat" for Cuba, said political expert Jorge Gomez Barata.
09 November 16:34
Concede or fight? What Trump's lawyers, family, and allies are telling him to do after losing to Biden
The issue of whether to concede has divided Trump's inner circle, with some advising him to accept loss with dignity.
President Donald Trump's refusal to accept that he lost the presidential election is dividing Trumpworld figures, who are fighting to either encourage him to concede, or to keep disputing the result.
09 November 15:21
Biden announces coronavirus team as US cases soar
US President-elect Joe Biden on Monday named the scientists who will lead his administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic, signaling his plans to prioritize Covid-19 from the outset.
The advisory board will be led by three co-chairs: epidemiologist and former Federal Drug Administration (FDA) commissioner David Kessler, former surgeon general Vivek Murthy, and Yale public health professor Marcella Nunez-Smith, according to a statement from the Biden transition team.
In addition, the board will have ten members, ranging from immunologists and epidemiologists to biodefense experts and leading public health officials.
The announcement came before US company Pfizer and Germany's BioNTech announced Monday that a vaccine they had jointly developed had so far proven 90 percent effective in preventing infections in ongoing Phase 3 trials - news that cheered scientists, politicians and markets.
Covid-19 has left more than 237 000 people dead in the US - the worst death toll globally - and is surging across the country, which last week voted out Donald Trump in a nailbiting poll.
- AFP
09 November 15:12
EXPLAINER | How and when will Trump leave office?
The US presidential election is not formally over. Electors - party loyalists who typically pledge to support the candidate who gets the most votes in their state - will convene on 14 December to formally cast their votes. The newly seated Congress accepts the results from the Electoral College on 6 January. If Biden wins the Electoral College vote, as expected, he will be sworn in at noon on 20 January — a date set in the Constitution.
09 November 15:11
Estonian interior minister to resign after calling Biden corrupt
Estonia's interior minister Mart Helme said on Monday he would resign after he called US President-elect Joe Biden and his son corrupt in a radio broadcast over the weekend.
Helme is a member of the populist, far-right Ekre party, which sits in a coalition with the Centre and Fatherland parties under Prime Minister Juri Ratas.
Estonia, a NATO and European Union member, relies on backing from the United States for its security from Russia.
09 November 12:39
Biden to launch Covid-19 task force, Trump plans rallies to protest election
President-elect Joe Biden will convene a coronavirus task force on Monday to examine the No. 1 problem confronting him when he takes office in January, while President Donald Trump pursues several long-shot gambits to hold on to his job.
Biden is due to meet with an advisory board co-chaired by former Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner David Kessler and Yale University Associate Professor Marcella Nunez-Smith to examine how best to tame a pandemic that has killed more than 237 000 Americans.
The Democratic former vice president will then give remarks in Wilmington, Delaware, about his plans for tackling Covid-19 and rebuilding the economy.
"Dealing with the coronavirus pandemic is one of the most important battles our administration will face, and I will be informed by science and by experts," Biden said in a statement on Monday.
Trump has frequently clashed with top health officials over the pandemic. Vice President Mike Pence is due to meet with the White House coronavirus task force on Monday for the first time since 20 October.
Trump has not acknowledged defeat and has launched an array of lawsuits to press claims of election fraud for which he has produced no evidence. State officials say they are not aware of any significant irregularities.
Trump has no public events scheduled for Monday, and has not spoken in public since Thursday. He plans to hold rallies to build support for his challenge to the election results, campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said.
Biden's advisers are moving ahead and considering candidates for top Cabinet posts. But the transition cannot shift into high gear until the U.S. General Services Administration, which oversees federal property, certifies the winner.
- Reuters
09 November 11:26
09 November 11:16
EU to 'intensify cooperation' with new US government, von der Leyen says
In a video statement, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the US and EU were "friends and allies" and said the election was a "moment of significance".