2020 AMERICAN ELECTION RESULTS BY STATE TRUMP VS LOSER LIBERAL SLEEPY (SLOPPY JOE) BIDEN.
WELL CNN FINALLY CALLED PENNSYLVANIA FOR BIDEN. TO THE CHEERS OF WASHINGTON DEMOCRATS AND LIBERALS. THAT PREMATURALLY GIVES BIDEN 273 TO TRUMP 214. CNN IS ON A CLOUD SINCE THERE SLEEPY-SLOPPY JOE BIDEN IS FOR A BRIEF FEW HOURSOR OR DAYS. THE ELECTED PRESIDENT.
ARIZONA - 11 - UNDER REVUE
GEORGIA - 16 - UNDER REVUE
NEVADA - 6 - UNDER REVUE
NORTH CAROLINA - 15 - UNDER REVUE
PENNSYLVANIA 20 - UNDER REVUE - IM STILL SAYING TRUMP IN A WHILE TO BE PRESIDENT. THE LIBERAL CHEERS WILL BE TEARS AGAIN. LIKE VAN JONES-HE CRYED BECAUSE CLINTON LOST TO TRUMP. NOW HE CRYS BECAUSE HE GOT HIS PUPPET IN. OR SO HE THINKS.
Trump refuses to accept defeat: ‘This election is far from over’-Despite his election loss being projected by all major networks, US leader insists Biden is ‘rushing to falsely pose as the winner’-By AP and TOI STAFF-NOV 7,20
US President Donald Trump refused to concede defeat in the US presidential election Saturday night.Trump said Joe Biden was “rushing to falsely pose as the winner” after television networks and other major outlets declared the Democrat’s victory.“We all know why Joe Biden is rushing to falsely pose as the winner, and why his media allies are trying so hard to help him: they don’t want the truth to be exposed,” Trump said.“The simple fact is this election is far from over.”Trump underlined that states had not yet certified the results, and his campaign has launched multiple legal challenges.However, near-complete results issued by each state showed an insurmountable lead for Biden, allowing network news channels to call the overall result, as they do every election.Biden won the White House, US media said, as an insurmountable lead in Pennsylvania took Biden, 77, over the top in the state-by-state count that decides the presidency.“America, I’m honored that you have chosen me to lead our great country,” Biden said in a statement.US President Donald Trump speaks during election night in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, early on November 4, 2020. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP)“The work ahead of us will be hard, but I promise you this: I will be a president for all Americans — whether you voted for me or not. I will keep the faith that you have placed in me.”For Biden, who got more than 74 million votes, a record, the triumph after a tense contest conducted during a global coronavirus pandemic was the crowning achievement of his half-century in US politics, including eight years as deputy to the first Black US president, Barack Obama.The result condemned 74-year-old Trump — who made frantic attempts to claim fraud and stop the vote count — to becoming the first one-term president since George H. W. Bush at the start of the 1990s.The Republican’s marathon press conferences, tweeting and raucous campaign rallies have made him a perpetual, noisy presence at home and abroad over the last four years.But ever since the night after Tuesday’s election, when he prematurely claimed victory, Trump has been inhabiting a world increasingly disconnected from the reality of his approaching downfall.Earlier Saturday, he left the White House for the first time since Election Day to play golf, tweeting: “I WON THIS ELECTION, BY A LOT!”And in an extraordinary White House address to the nation on Thursday — with Biden’s lead in the partial results already consolidating rapidly — he claimed “they are trying to steal the election.”Despite Trump’s protests, the returns from vote counting offices around the country kept coming all week, with no credible reports of irregularities.And when US television networks declared that Biden had taken an insurmountable lead in Pennsylvania, that put the Democrat over the magic number of 270 electoral college votes. Trump had no way back.
KAMALA HARRIS TO BECOME FIRST FEMALE VICE PRESIDENT-After days of nail-biting count, Biden elected 46th US president-All major outlets say former VP unseats Donald Trump after winning Pennsylvania, ending four days of waiting for vote-tallying in 4 key states; Trump vows to contest the result-By AP and TOI STAFF-Today, 6:43 pm
WASHINGTON — Democrat Joe Biden defeated President Donald Trump to become the 46th president of the United States on Saturday, according to projections by AP, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, The New York Times and ABC News, positioning himself to lead a nation gripped by a historic pandemic and a confluence of economic and social turmoil.His victory came after four days of uncertainty as election officials sorted through a surge of mail-in votes that delayed the processing of some ballots. Biden crossed 270 Electoral College votes with a win in Pennsylvania.Trump vowed to contest the result, charging illegalities in the vote count, and declaring that “this election is far from over.”Biden, 77, staked his candidacy less on any distinctive political ideology than on galvanizing a broad coalition of voters around the notion that Trump posed an existential threat to American democracy. The strategy proved effective, resulting in pivotal victories in Michigan and Wisconsin as well as Pennsylvania, onetime Democratic bastions that had flipped to Trump in 2016.In a statement, the president-elect said it was time for America to “unite” and to “heal.”“With the campaign over, it’s time to put the anger and the harsh rhetoric behind us and come together as a nation,” he said.“We are the United States of America,” he wrote. “And there’s nothing we can’t do, if we do it together.”Biden made no mention of his opponent, President Donald Trump, who has not conceded the race.Biden was on track to win the national popular vote by more than 4 million, a margin that could grow as ballots continue to be counted.Trump seized on delays in processing the vote in some states to falsely allege voter fraud and argue that his rival was trying to seize power — an extraordinary charge by a sitting president trying to sow doubt about a bedrock democratic process.As the vote count played out, Biden tried to ease tensions and project an image of presidential leadership, hitting notes of unity that were seemingly aimed at cooling the temperature of a heated, divided nation.“We have to remember the purpose of our politics isn’t total unrelenting, unending warfare,” Biden said Friday night in Delaware. “No, the purpose of our politics, the work of our nation, isn’t to fan the flames of conflict, but to solve problems, to guarantee justice, to give everybody a fair shot.”Kamala Harris also made history as the first Black woman to become vice president, an achievement that comes as the U.S. faces a reckoning on racial justice. The California senator, who is also the first person of South Asian descent elected to the vice presidency, will become the highest-ranking woman ever to serve in government, four years after Trump defeated Hillary Clinton.US Democratic vice presidential nominee and Senator from California, Kamala Harris gestures as she speaks during the vice presidential debate in Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah on October 7, 2020, in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP)-Trump is the first incumbent president to lose reelection since Republican George H.W. Bush in 1992. It was unclear whether Trump would publicly concede.Americans showed deep interest in the presidential race. A record 103 million voted early this year, opting to avoid waiting in long lines at polling locations during a pandemic. With counting continuing in some states, Biden had already received more than 74 million votes, more than any presidential candidate before him.More than 236,000 Americans have died during the coronavirus pandemic, nearly 10 million have been infected and millions of jobs have been lost. The final days of the campaign played out against the backdrop of a surge in confirmed cases in nearly every state, including battlegrounds such as Wisconsin that swung to Biden.The pandemic will soon be Biden’s to tame, and he campaigned pledging a big government response, akin to what Franklin D. Roosevelt oversaw with the New Deal during the Depression of the 1930s. But Senate Republicans fought back several Democratic challengers and looked to retain a fragile majority that could serve as a check on such Biden ambition.The 2020 campaign was a referendum on Trump’s handling of the pandemic, which has shuttered schools across the nation, disrupted businesses and raised questions about the feasibility of family gatherings heading into the holidays.The fast spread of the coronavirus transformed political rallies from standard campaign fare to gatherings that were potential public health emergencies. It also contributed to an unprecedented shift to voting early and by mail and prompted Biden to dramatically scale back his travel and events to comply with restrictions. Trump defied calls for caution and ultimately contracted the disease himself. He was saddled throughout the year by negative assessments from the public of his handling of the pandemic.Biden also drew a sharp contrast to Trump through a summer of unrest over the police killings of Black Americans including Breonna Taylor in Kentucky and George Floyd in Minneapolis. Their deaths sparked the largest racial protest movement since the civil rights era. Biden responded by acknowledging the racism that pervades American life, while Trump emphasized his support of police and pivoted to a “law and order” message that resonated with his largely white base.A Republican election challenger at right watches over election inspectors as they examine a ballot as votes are counted into the early morning hours at the central counting board in Detroit, Novembe 4, 2020. (David Goldman/AP)-The president’s most ardent backers never wavered and may remain loyal to him and his supporters in Congress after Trump has departed the White House.The third president to be impeached, though acquitted in the Senate, Trump will leave office having left an indelible imprint in a tenure defined by the shattering of White House norms and a day-to-day whirlwind of turnover, partisan divide and the ever-present threat via his Twitter account.Biden, born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and raised in Delaware, was one of the youngest candidates ever elected to the Senate. Before he took office, his wife and daughter were killed, and his two sons badly injured in a 1972 car crash.Supporters of US President Donald Trump wave Israeli and US national flags and carry placards in support, on the day of the US presidential election, in Carmiel, northern Israel, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. (AP/Ariel Schalit)-Commuting every night on a train from Washington back to Wilmington, Biden fashioned an everyman political persona to go along with powerful Senate positions, including chairman of the Senate Judiciary and Foreign Relations Committees. Some aspects of his record drew critical scrutiny from fellow Democrats, including his support for the 1994 crime bill, his vote for the 2003 Iraq War and his management of the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court hearings.Biden’s 1988 presidential campaign was done in by plagiarism allegations, and his next bid in 2008 ended quietly. But later that year, he was tapped to be Barack Obama’s running mate and he became an influential vice president, steering the administration’s outreach to both Capitol Hill and Iraq.While his reputation was burnished by his time in office and his deep friendship with Obama, Biden stood aside for Clinton and opted not to run in 2016 after his adult son Beau died of brain cancer the year before.Trump’s tenure pushed Biden to make one more run as he declared that “the very soul of the nation is at stake.”
EXPLAINER-Why AP called Pennsylvania, and thus the presidential race, for Joe Biden-News agency, like CNN, Fox and MSNBC, determined that the remaining ballots left to be counted would not allow Trump to catch up-By BRIAN SLODYSKO-NOV 7,20-Today, 6:39 pm
Four years ago, President Donald Trump breached the Democrats’ “blue wall,” narrowly winning Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin — a trio of Great Lakes states that had long served as a bulwark against Republican presidential candidates.On Saturday, Democrat Joe Biden captured it back — and also won the presidency — after The Associated Press declared the former vice president the winner of his native Pennsylvania at 11:25 a.m. EST.The AP called the race for Biden, who held a 30,952-vote lead after it determined that the remaining ballots left to be counted would not allow Trump to catch up. The news agency has already declared Biden the winner in both Michigan and Wisconsin.Under Pennsylvania law, a recount is automatic when the margin between two candidates in a statewide race is less than 0.5 percentage points. Biden’s lead over Trump was on track to stay outside of that margin as final votes are counted.There are roughly 62,000 mail ballots remaining to be counted. Biden has won the overwhelming majority of mail ballots cast in the state.Biden’s win in Pennsylvania was a dramatic, though not unexpected, turn after Trump jumped out to an early Election Day lead of 675,000 votes and prematurely declared he had won the state.Over coming days, as local elections officials tabulated more ballots, Trump’s lead dropped sharply, with Biden winning roughly 75 percent of the mail-in vote between Wednesday and Friday, according to an analysis by the AP.Another reason the late-breaking mail vote broke Biden’s way: Under state law, elections officials are not allowed to process mail-in ballots until Election Day.Biden, who was born in Scranton, claims favorite-son status in the state and has long played up the idea that he was Pennsylvania’s “third senator” during his decades representing neighboring Delaware. He’s also campaigned extensively in the state from his home in Delaware.
Radical left?’ Try again. On Israel, VP-elect Harris may be to right of Biden-First resolution Senator Harris sponsored effectively condemned Obama abstention on anti-settlement UN resolution; still, ex-aide now says she’s lockstep with Biden on Israel-By JACOB MAGID-NOV 7,20
NEW YORK — From the moment Kamala Harris was introduced as the vice presidential nominee for the Democratic Party in August, US President Donald Trump and the Republican Party launched a campaign attempting to brand her as a “radical” politician who would pull Joe Biden to the far left.In picking Harris, Trump told his supporters at a September rally, Biden had struck an “unholy alliance with the most extreme and dangerous elements of the radical left.”“You know who’s further left than crazy Bernie?” he continued, comparing Harris to Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.The 77-year-old Biden, elected the 46th president of the United States after four days of vote counting on Saturday, has described himself as a “transition” candidate, and in picking Harris, placed her rather squarely at the front of the line to serve as his successor.On certain issues, Harris may indeed outflank the president-elect, but Israel is definitely not one of them.In fact, the vice president elect’s record on the Jewish state indicates that she may be even more hawkish than Biden, who has sought throughout the campaign to differentiate himself from the progressive wing of the Democratic party.JNF over J Street-Harris has only been on the national stage since 2017, but the stances she has taken in her three years as Senator place her rather squarely in the traditional pro-Israel camp of her party.The first resolution she co-sponsored as a senator was one effectively condemning the Obama-Biden administration’s decision to abstain on a UN Security Council resolution condemning Israeli settlements in the West Bank.Harris highlighted the co-sponsorship in a 2017 speech at AIPAC’s policy policy conference, saying it would help “combat anti-Israel bias at the United Nations and reaffirm that the United States seeks a just, secure and sustainable two-state solution.”“So having grown up in the Bay Area, I fondly remember those Jewish National Fund boxes that we would use to collect donations to plant trees for Israel,” she said later on in the speech referencing JNF, whose sister group in Israel KKL-JNF has been embroiled in legal battles to evict Palestinian families from their homes in East Jerusalem.That address was just one of three times Harris spoke at AIPAC, which has fallen out of favor with a growing number of Democrats. More of them tend to prefer the progressive lobby J Street, which believes pressuring the parties is necessary to start peace talks.More than half of Senate Democrats receive endorsements from J Street. Harris was not among them. Her only association with the group was in November 2017, when she was one of 17 local and federal politicians on the host committee of a party thrown by J Street’s Los Angeles chapter. Biden, on the other hand has spoken at J Street conferences several times and addressed the group at a fundraiser in September.Careful critic-While considering him a close friend, Biden has not shied away from criticizing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and has joked about not agreeing with “a damn thing” the premier says. Harris on the other hand has yet to publicly spar with Netanyahu, who several democratic candidates went as far as to call him a “racist.”Asked about the prime minister’s plans earlier this year to annex large parts of the West Bank, Harris told Pod Saves America last year that she is “completely opposed” to the move and would “express that opposition.” However, she avoided calling out Netanyahu by name.Pressed on what kind of diplomatic pressure she would support exerting on Israel to advance peace talks, Harris declined to give specifics.“Well, there are a number of things. But it has to be about opening a channel of communication that is honest and not informed by a lack of information or a lack of historical perspective or a lack of concern. And I think that all of those are concerns that we should have about the current administration,” she said.Democratic US Vice Presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris prepares to board her airplane at the Orlando International Airport after speaking at an early voting mobilization event at the Central Florida Fairgrounds on October 19, 2020 in Orlando, Florida (Octavio Jones/Getty Images/AFP)-Harris did however pen an open letter to Trump, warning that annexation could cause “serious conflict, the further breakdown of security cooperation with Palestinian security forces, and the disruption of peaceful relations between Israel and her neighbors, Jordan and Egypt.”She met with Netanyahu in 2017 in the most recent of three trips she’s made to Israel. She was slated to meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas as well, but Ramallah canceled the meeting hours after the Trump administration threatened to close the diplomatic mission of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Washington.In a statement given last week to the Arab American News site, Harris vowed that a Biden-Harris administration would reopen that PLO mission along with the US consulate in East Jerusalem in addition to taking “immediate steps to restore economic and humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people and address the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza.”Still, she has not gone as far as to label Israel as responsible in any way for that humanitarian situation.Democratic presidential candidate, 2nd from left, Joe Biden, and his wife Jill Biden, left, join Democratic vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris, 2nd from right, and her husband Doug Emhoff, during the fourth day of the Democratic National Convention, in Wilmington, Delaware, Aug. 20, 2020. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)-Asked in 2019 by the New York Times “whether Israel meets international standards of human rights?” Harris responded, “overall yes” while adding, “I think Israel as a country is dedicated to being a democracy and is one of our closest friends in that region, and that we should understand the shared values and priorities that we have as a democracy, and conduct foreign policy in a way that is consistent with understanding the alignment between the American people and the people of Israel.”She did offer a slightly more critical response when speaking to the American Jewish Committee later that month. “Let me be clear: I support the people of Israel. And I’m unambiguous about that. I’m supporting the people of Israel does not mean, it should not be translated to supporting whoever happens to be in elected office at that moment,” Harris said, refraining from identifying Netanyahu by name.“And so, my support of Israel is strong and it is sincere. There is also no question that we must speak out when human rights abuses occur. We must work with our friend, which is Israel, to do those things that we collectively know are in the best interest of human rights and democracy because it is that shared commitment to democracy from which the relationship was born and so we have to hold on to that,” she added.Still, her former communication’s director told McClatchy last year that Harris’s “support for Israel is central to who she is.”Jerusalem Syndrom-In June 2017, Harris voted for a unanimously passed resolution marking the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Six-Day War. The resolution expressed support for 1995 legislation that deems Jerusalem as the “undivided capital of Israel.” Palestinians view East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.During her trip to Israel that year, Harris visited East Jerusalem’s Al-Quds University and met with a group of female students. Halie Soifer, who served as Harris’s national security adviser at the time and accompanied her on that trip told The Times of Israel that the students shared their experiences about growing up in the midst of a conflict and dealing with a West Bank security barrier that runs through their university, which had an impression on Harris.“She encouraged [the students] to be leaders in their communities and they were inspired by her,” said Soifer, who now heads the Jewish Democratic Council of America.While being an ardent supporter of the two-state solution, Harris has also adopted a favorite talking point of Netanyahu on the matter, telling the Jewish News of California in 2016 that lasting peace requires the Palestinians to recognize Israel as a “Jewish state.”Progressive Bonafides-Harris has diverged from Washington’s pro-Israel lobby at times. Citing free speech concerns, she voted against the Israel Anti-Boycott Act that would have criminalized boycotting the Jewish state.“Senator Harris strongly supports security assistance to strengthen Israel’s ability to defend itself,” her office said last year. “She has traveled to Israel where she saw the importance of US-Israeli security cooperation firsthand. She opposed [the act] out of concern that it could limit Americans’ First Amendment rights.”While Harris was not in the Senate to vote on it in 2015, she has supported the Iran nuclear deal and aligned herself closely with Biden’s position on the Obama-brokered multilateral agreement, which the Netanyahu government has aggressively opposed.At last month’s vice presidential debate, Harris criticized the Trump administration’s decision two years ago to pull out of the nuclear deal, saying it “has put in a position where we are less safe because they’re building up what might end up being a significant nuclear arsenal.”“It was a solution, imperfect though it may be, and it involved many partners not just the United States and Iran,” she told Democratic Majority For Israel last year. Then, while still a presidential candidate, she vowed to re-enter the deal while “extending the sunset provisions, including [on] ballistic missile testing and also increasing oversight.”Two peas in a pod-Despite Harris’s seemingly more cautious approach on Israel, her former aide Soifer insisted that the vice president-elect is “squarely aligned” with Biden on the Jewish state.“The only difference between the two is the amount of time Joe Biden as been working on this issue,” Soifer maintained.The former national security adviser pointed out that even before they became running-mates, Biden and Harris were among a handful of candidates who opposed conditioning or cutting US military aid to Israel.“What truly unites them on this issue is that they see the relationship as being beyond this current political moment,” Soifer said. “Trump has very much personalized and politicized the relationship, and that’s not how a Biden-Harris administration will confront the issue.”
BIDEN TOTAL - 253 + 20 = 273 (FALSE WIN)
DONALD TRUMP - 214
2020 PRESIDENT DONALD J TRUMP 271 ELECTORAL VOTES.(AFTER ALL THE LIBERAL STALLING,CRYING AND THERAPY GETTING ALREADY. AND TRUMP IS NOT DECLARED WINNER YET) (D-5 USA ELECTION) SAT NOV 07,20
The United States of America is a federal republic[1] consisting of 50 states, a federal district (Washington, D.C., the capital city of the United States), five major territories, and various minor islands.[2][3] The 48 contiguous states and Washington, D.C., are in North America between Canada and Mexico, while Alaska is in the far northwestern part of North America and Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific. Territories of the United States are scattered throughout the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea.States possess a number of powers and rights under the United States Constitution, such as regulating intrastate commerce, running elections, creating local governments, and ratifying constitutional amendments. Each state has its own constitution, grounded in republican principles, and government, consisting of three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial.[4] All states and their residents are represented in the federal Congress, a bicameral legislature consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives. Each state is represented by two senators, while representatives are distributed among the states in proportion to the most recent constitutionally mandated decennial census.[5] Additionally, each state is entitled to select a number of electors to vote in the Electoral College, the body that elects the president of the United States, equal to the total of representatives and senators in Congress from that state.[6] Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1 of the Constitution grants to Congress the authority to admit new states into the Union. Since the establishment of the United States in 1776, the number of states has expanded from the original 13 to the current total of 50, and each new state is admitted on an equal footing with the existing states.[7] As provided by Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, Congress exercises "exclusive jurisdiction" over the federal district, which is not part of any state. Prior to passage of the 1973 District of Columbia Home Rule Act, which devolved certain Congressional powers to an elected mayor and council, the district did not have an elected local government. Even so, Congress retains the right to review and overturn laws created by the council and intervene in local affairs.[8] As it is not a state, the district does not have representation in the Senate. However, since 1971, its residents have been represented in the House of Representatives by a non-voting delegate.[9] Additionally, since 1961, following ratification of the 23rd Amendment, the district has been entitled to select three electors to vote in the Electoral College.
Number of electoral votes for each state
Alabama - 9 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Alaska - 3 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Arizona - 11 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING) -
Arkansas - 6 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
California - 55 electoral votes - BIDEN
Colorado - 9 electoral votes - BIDEN
Connecticut - 7 electoral votes - BIDEN
Delaware - 3 electoral votes - BIDEN
District of Columbia - 3 electoral votes - BIDEN
Florida - 29 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Georgia - 16 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING)
Hawaii - 4 electoral votes - BIDEN
Idaho - 4 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Illinois - 20 electoral votes - BIDEN
Indiana - 11 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Iowa - 6 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Kansas - 6 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Kentucky - 8 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Louisiana - 8 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Maine - 4 electoral votes - BIDEN
Maryland - 10 electoral votes - BIDEN
Massachusetts - 11 electoral votes - BIDEN
Michigan - 16 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING) - BIDEN
Minnesota - 10 electoral votes - BIDEN
Mississippi - 6 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Missouri - 10 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Montana - 3 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Nebraska - 5 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Nevada - 6 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING)
New Hampshire - 4 electoral votes - BIDEN
New Jersey - 14 electoral votes - BIDEN
New Mexico - 5 electoral votes - BIDEN
New York - 29 electoral votes - BIDEN
North Carolina - 15 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING)
North Dakota - 3 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Ohio - 18 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Oklahoma - 7 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Oregon - 7 electoral votes - BIDEN
Pennsylvania - 20 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING)
Rhode Island - 4 electoral votes - BIDEN
South Carolina - 9 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
South Dakota - 3 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Tennessee - 11 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Texas - 38 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Utah - 6 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Vermont - 3 electoral votes - BIDEN
Virginia - 13 electoral votes - BIDEN
Washington - 12 electoral votes - BIDEN
West Virginia - 5 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
Wisconsin - 10 electoral votes - (LIBERAL CRY BABY STALLING) - BIDEN
Wyoming - 3 electoral votes - DONALD TRUMP
TOTALS FOR PRESIDENT 2020
DONALD J TRUMP - 214
LOSER LIBERAL BIDEN - 253
WITH 5 STATES TO COME - TRUMP LEADING IN 4 OF THEM (LIBERALS FLOCK TO THERAPY ALREADY) (CRY ROOMS ETC) THAT WAS TUESDAY NIGHT ELECTION NIGHT.