United States elections 2024: Donald Trump Wins

If Trump wants to make America great again he needs to drop the Zionists and work for peace in the Middle East. He’ll get 2 billion Muslims, consisting of 50+ countries on the side of America.

Now that he’s in power he can dump the Zionists.
 

European leaders congratulate Trump​


As Europe wakes up to the news that Donald Trump is likely to win the US election, here’s how some leaders have been reacting:

  • French President Emmanuel Macron says he's "ready to work together" with Trump for a second time
  • Meanwhile, Ukraine’s President Volodymr Zelenksy congratulates Trump and praises his commitment to "peace through strength" - which he says will "bring a just peace in Ukraine closer"
  • Mark Rutte, Nato's secretary general, echoes Zelensky's sentiment and says Trump's leadership will be "key" amid "a growing number of challenges globally"
  • Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni praises her country’s "unshakeable alliance" with the US and says it's a bond that will "strengthen even further" with Trump
  • Petr Fiala, the Czech prime minister, says he wants "to ensure that the relations between our countries remain at the highest level ... and that we continue to develop them for the benefit of our citizens"
  • We're yet to hear reaction from Russian President Vladimir Putin
 
Donald Trump will be America’s 47th president, CNN projected Wednesday, after mounting the most momentous comeback in political history that will hand him massive, disruptive power at home and will send shockwaves around the world.

Four years after leaving Washington as a pariah, following his attempt to overturn the 2020 election to stay in office, Trump’s victory defied two assassination attempts, two presidential impeachments, his criminal conviction and many other criminal charges.

Trump vowed at his Mar-a-Lago resort early Wednesday to “heal” the nation, to fix its borders and to deliver a strong and prosperous economy after millions of his voters turned to him amid frustration over high prices for food and housing and embraced his plans for a crackdown on undocumented migrants.
 
Trump’s new mandate will raise fresh fears that he plans to follow through on his belief that presidents enjoy almost unlimited authority.

He vowed on the campaign trail to use a new White House term to enact “retribution” and has openly talked about using America’s governing institutions, and even the military, to punish his foes. He has pledged to launch a mass deportation of undocumented, and even some legal, migrants that could set off a showdown with the courts.
 

Drilling away​

Trump has vowed to increase US production of fossil fuels by easing the permitting process for drilling on federal land and would encourage new natural gas pipelines. He has said he would reauthorise oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.

Whether the oil industry follows through and raises production at a time when oil and gas prices are relatively low remains to be seen.

He has said he will again pull the United States out of the Paris Climate Accords, a framework for reducing global greenhouse gas emissions, and would support increased nuclear energy production.

He would also roll back Democratic President Joe Biden’s electric-vehicle mandates and other policies aimed at reducing auto emissions.

He has argued that the US needs to be able to boost energy production to be competitive in developing artificial intelligence systems, which consume large amounts of power
 

Tax relief​

Along with his trade and energy agendas, Trump has promised to slash federal regulations that he says limit job creation. He has pledged to keep in place a broad 2017 tax cut that he signed while in office, and his economic team has discussed a further round of individual and corporate tax cuts beyond those enacted in his first term.

Trump has pledged to reduce the corporate tax rate from 21pc to 15pc for companies that make their products in the US.

He has said he would seek legislation to end the taxation of tips and overtime wages to aid waiters and other service workers. He has pledged not to tax or cut Social Security benefits.

Trump also has said that as president he would pressure the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates — but would stop short of demanding it.

Most, if not all, of his tax proposals would require congressional action. Budget analysts have warned that the bevy of tax cuts would balloon the federal debt.
 

Doing away with diversity programs​

Trump has pledged to require US colleges and universities to “defend American tradition and Western civilisation” and to purge them of diversity programs. He said he would direct the Justice Department to pursue civil rights cases against schools that engage in racial discrimination.

At K-12 schools, Trump would support programs allowing parents to use public funds for private or religious instruction.

Trump also wants to abolish the federal Department of Education, and leave states in control of schooling.
 
If Trump wants to make America great again he needs to drop the Zionists and work for peace in the Middle East. He’ll get 2 billion Muslims, consisting of 50+ countries on the side of America.

Now that he’s in power he can dump the Zionists.

This Trump administration is more pro Israel than Biden’s.
 

A push to end wars​

Trump has been critical of US support for Ukraine in its war with Russia, and has said he could end the war in 24 hours if elected — although he has not said how he would achieve this. He has suggested Ukraine may have to yield some of its territory if a peace deal is to be struck, an idea Ukraine has consistently rejected.

Trump has also said that under his presidency the US would fundamentally rethink “Nato’s purpose and Nato’s mission.”

He has backed Israel in its fight against Hamas in Gaza but has urged it to wrap up its offensive. Trump can be expected to continue the Biden administration’s policy of arming Israel.

At the same time, he is likely to push for historic normalisation of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia, an effort he made during his 2017-2021 presidency and which Biden has also pursued.

Trump has said if he becomes president, he will “stop the suffering and destruction in Lebanon,” but has not said how he will achieve that.

He has suggested building an “iron dome” — a massive missile-defense shield similar to Israel’s — over the entire continental United States.

Trump has also floated sending armed forces into Mexico to battle drug cartels and using the US Navy to form a blockade of that country to stop the smuggling of fentanyl and its precursors.
 
The election is close.

NC and PA is the major different, If Harris win both and Harris would have won the election without even taking Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Wisconsin and Arizona. The vote that separate Trump and Harris is 350k between the 2 states (165k in PA and 190k in NC), that's less than the vote of a medium size county in any one of the state, you are talking about 2.8% swing of all the vote in these 2 states. That's very close as 2.8% is nothing

The reason why the count is quick is because they change the method of counting, not because Trump won in a land slide, in fact, those 2 states would still count as a toss up and will be 2028 battleground states.
No, it wasn’t for several reasons:

Donald Trump has a lead of more than 5 million votes nationally. Trump is going to win the popular vote, and that’s something very few pundits predicted;

New York was called very early, but it was actually a big story. Right now, Kamala Harris has a lead of less than 12 percent in that state. No one expected the margin to be that close;

New Jersey shouldn’t have been close either, but it was. Trump trails Kamala Harris by less than 5 points;

Everyone was saying that whoever won Pennsylvania would win the election, and that’s exactly what happened. But Trump wasn’t supposed to win by almost 200,000 votes;

The poll that came out just before the election that showed Kamala Harris with a 3-point lead in Iowa? Well, with 95 percent of the vote, Trump is up almost 14 points;

After Kamala Harris put Tim Walz on the ticket, Minnesota was supposed to be a cakewalk for the Democrats. Instead, they are winning by less than 5 points;

The margin of victory in Nevada is larger than the margin of victory in Minnesota. Right now, Trump is ahead by 4.7 points in that state;
 

Investigating enemies, aiding allies​

Trump has pledged at times to use federal law enforcement agencies to investigate his political foes, including election officials, lawyers and party donors.

Along that line, Trump has said he will consider appointing a special prosecutor to probe Biden, though he has not specified the grounds for such an investigation.

And he has said he would consider firing a US attorney who did not follow his directives — which would constitute a break with the longstanding US policy of an independent federal law enforcement apparatus.

Trump has said he will consider pardoning all of those who have been convicted of crimes in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

In addition to criminal investigations, he has suggested using the government’s regulatory powers to punish those he views as critics, such as television networks.
 
Making Kamala the VP was the problem. They needed a black woman to get votes for Biden but the chances of a black woman winning an election was never there. The mistake was there at the time of choosing her as the VP candidate.

She got almost 50% of the vote. It was a close race.
 

Purging the federal bureaucracy​

Trump would seek to decimate what he terms the “deep state” – career federal employees he says are clandestinely pursuing their own agendas – through an executive order that would reclassify thousands of workers to enable them to be fired. That would likely be challenged in court.

He would set up an independent government efficiency panel headed by billionaire supporter Elon Musk to root out waste in the federal government. He has not detailed how the body would function. The government already has watchdogs such as the Office of Management and Budget, and investigators general at federal agencies.

Trump would crack down on federal whistleblowers, who are typically shielded by law, and would institute an independent body to “monitor” US intelligence agencies.
 
No, it wasn’t for several reasons:

Donald Trump has a lead of more than 5 million votes nationally. Trump is going to win the popular vote, and that’s something very few pundits predicted;

New York was called very early, but it was actually a big story. Right now, Kamala Harris has a lead of less than 12 percent in that state. No one expected the margin to be that close;

New Jersey shouldn’t have been close either, but it was. Trump trails Kamala Harris by less than 5 points;

Everyone was saying that whoever won Pennsylvania would win the election, and that’s exactly what happened. But Trump wasn’t supposed to win by almost 200,000 votes;

The poll that came out just before the election that showed Kamala Harris with a 3-point lead in Iowa? Well, with 95 percent of the vote, Trump is up almost 14 points;

After Kamala Harris put Tim Walz on the ticket, Minnesota was supposed to be a cakewalk for the Democrats. Instead, they are winning by less than 5 points;

The margin of victory in Nevada is larger than the margin of victory in Minnesota. Right now, Trump is ahead by 4.7 points in that state;
Again, US election does not count on popular vote.

It's a fact that PA and NC dictate the table here, again, as I show you, the change is 2.8%. She could have lose the popular vote by 10 million and lose all the other swing states, yet if she got 165k more in PA and 190k more in NC, she would have been President. That is a fact dude.....you can't argue with that

and 2.8% swing is very close for presidency.......
 

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