Trump wins White House

By ZEKE MILLER, MICHELLE L PRICE, WILL WEISSERT and JILL COLVIN Associated Press

Donald Trump was elected the 47th president of the United States on Wednesday, an extraordinary comeback for a former president who refused to accept defeat four years ago, sparked a violent insurrection at the US Capitol, was convicted of felony charges and survived two assassination attempts.

With a win in Wisconsin, Trump cleared the 270 electoral votes needed to clinch the presidency.

The victory validates his bare-knuckle approach to politics. He attacked his Democratic rival, Kamala Harris, in deeply personal – often misogynistic and racist – terms as he pushed an apocalyptic picture of a country overrun by violent migrants. The coarse rhetoric, paired with an image of hypermasculinity, resonated with angry voters – particularly men – in a deeply polarized nation.

"We've been through so much together, and today you showed up in record numbers to deliver a victory," Trump told throngs of his cheering supporters in Florida. "This was something special and we're going to pay you back."

As president, he's vowed to pursue an agenda centered on dramatically reshaping the federal government and pursuing retribution against his perceived enemies. Speaking to his supporters Wednesday morning, Trump claimed he had won "an unprecedented and powerful mandate."

The results cap a historically tumultuous and competitive election season that included two assassination attempts targeting Trump and a shift to a new Democratic nominee just a month before the party's convention. Trump will inherit a range of challenges when he assumes office on Jan 20, including heightened political polarization and global crises that are testing America's influence abroad.

His win against Harris, the first woman of color to lead a major party ticket, marks the second time he has defeated a female rival in a general election. Harris, the current vice president, rose to the top of the ticket after President Joe Biden exited the race amid alarm about his advanced age. Despite an initial surge of energy around her campaign, she struggled during a compressed timeline to convince disillusioned voters that she represented a break from an unpopular administration.

Harris has not publicly spoken since the race was called. Her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, said she would speak Wednesday. "You will hear from her tomorrow. She will be back here tomorrow."

Trump is the first former president to return to power since Grover Cleveland regained the White House in the 1892 election. He is the first person convicted of a felony to be elected president and, at 78, is the oldest person elected to the office. His vice president, 40-year-old Ohio Sen. JD Vance, will become the highest-ranking member of the millennial generation in the US government.

Congratulations started pouring in from world leaders even before Trump's victory was announced.

There will be far fewer checks on Trump when he returns to the White House. He has plans to swiftly enact a sweeping agenda that would transform nearly every aspect of American government. His GOP critics in Congress have largely been defeated or retired. Federal courts are now filled with judges he appointed. The US Supreme Court, which includes three Trump-appointed justices, issued a ruling earlier this year affording presidents broad immunity from prosecution.

Trump's language and behavior during the campaign sparked growing warnings from Democrats and some Republicans about shocks to democracy that his return to power would bring. He repeatedly praised strongman leaders, warned that he would deploy the military to target political opponents he labeled the "enemy from within," threatened to take action against news organizations for unfavorable coverage and suggested suspending the Constitution.

Some who served in his first White House, including Vice President Mike Pence and John Kelly, Trump's longest-serving chief of staff, either declined to endorse him or issued dire public warnings about his return to the presidency.

While Harris focused much of her initial message around themes of joy, Trump channeled a powerful sense of anger and resentment among voters.

He seized on frustrations over high prices and fears about crime and migrants who illegally entered the country on Biden's watch. He also highlighted wars in the Middle East and Russia's invasion of Ukraine to cast Democrats as presiding over – and encouraging – a world in chaos.

It was a formula Trump perfected in 2016, when he cast himself as the only person who could fix the country's problems, often borrowing language from dictators.

"In 2016, I declared I am your voice. Today I add: I am your warrior. I am your justice. And for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution," he said in March 2023.

This campaign often veered into the absurd, with Trump amplifying bizarre and disproven rumors that migrants were stealing and eating pet cats and dogs in an Ohio town. At one point, he kicked off a rally with a detailed story about the legendary golfer Arnold Palmer in which he praised his genitalia.

But perhaps the defining moment came in July when a gunman opened fire at a Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. A bullet grazed Trump's ear and killed one of his supporters. His face streaked with blood, Trump stood and raised his fist in the air, shouting "Fight! Fight! Fight!" Weeks later, a second assassination attempt was thwarted after a Secret Service agent spotted the barrel of a gun poking through the greenery while Trump was playing golf.

Trump's return to the White House seemed unlikely when he left Washington in early 2021 as a diminished figure whose lies about his defeat sparked a violent insurrection at the US Capitol. He was so isolated at the time that few outside of his family bothered to attend the send-off he organized for himself at Andrews Air Force Base, complete with a 21-gun salute.

Democrats who controlled the US House quickly impeached him for his role in the insurrection, making him the only president to be impeached twice. He was acquitted by the US Senate, where many Republicans argued that he no longer posed a threat because he had left office.

But from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Trump – aided by some elected Republicans – worked to maintain his political relevance. Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the California Republican who at the time led his party in the US House, visited Trump soon after he left office, essentially validating his continued role in the party.

As the 2022 midterm election approached, Trump used the power of his endorsement to assert himself as the unquestioned leader of the party. His preferred candidates almost always won their primaries, but some went on to defeat in elections that Republicans viewed as within their grasp. Those disappointing results were driven in part by a backlash to the US Supreme Court ruling that revoked a woman's constitutional right to an abortion, a decision that was aided by Trump-appointed justices. The midterm election prompted questions within the GOP about whether Trump should remain the party's leader.

But if Trump's future was in doubt, that changed in 2023 when he faced a wave of state and federal indictments for his role in the insurrection, his handling of classified information and election interference. He used the charges to portray himself as the victim of an overreaching government, an argument that resonated with a GOP base that was increasingly skeptical – if not outright hostile – to institutions and established power structures.

Florida Gov Ron DeSantis, who challenged Trump for the Republican nomination, lamented that the indictments "sucked out all the oxygen" from this year's GOP primary. Trump easily captured his party's nomination without ever participating in a debate against DeSantis or other GOP candidates.

With Trump dominating the Republican contest, a New York jury found him guilty in May of 34 felony charges in a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election through a hush money payment to a porn actor who said the two had sex. He faces sentencing later this month, though his victory poses serious questions about whether he will ever face punishment.

He has also been found liable in two other New York civil cases: one for inflating his assets and another for sexually abusing advice columnist E Jean Carroll in 1996.

Trump is subject to additional criminal charges in an election-interference case in Georgia that has become bogged down. On the federal level, he's been indicted for his role in trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election and improperly handling classified material. When he becomes president on Jan. 20, Trump could appoint an attorney general who would erase the federal charges.

As he prepares to return to the White House, Trump has vowed to swiftly enact a radical agenda that would transform nearly every aspect of American government. That includes plans to launch the largest deportation effort in the nation's history, to use the Justice Department to punish his enemies, to dramatically expand the use of tariffs and to again pursue a zero-sum approach to foreign policy that threatens to upend longstanding foreign alliances, including the NATO pact.

When he arrived in Washington 2017, Trump knew little about the levers of federal power. His agenda was stymied by Congress and the courts, as well as senior staff members who took it upon themselves to serve as guardrails.

This time, Trump has said he would surround himself with loyalists who will enact his agenda, no questions asked, and who will arrive with hundreds of draft executive orders, legislative proposals and in-depth policy papers in hand.


Comments

GodSpeed says...

Burn in hell democrats.

Posted 6 November 2024, 9:52 a.m. Suggest removal

Sickened says...

That's exactly what Trump is saying under his breath.

Posted 6 November 2024, 1:14 p.m. Suggest removal

tell_it_like_it_is says...

WW3 here we come...

Posted 6 November 2024, 1:14 p.m. Suggest removal

bahamianson says...

Comical, congrats Big -O, congrats.

Posted 6 November 2024, 1:23 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnQ says...

How are you going to spin this landslide Charlie Harper?

Posted 6 November 2024, 1:25 p.m. Suggest removal

TalRussell says...

**Starting tomorrow Thurs November 7.** -- Listeners' 96.9FM Guardian Talk Radio -- A must tunein -- it's **Snake Story Spoke Time"** -- Live from the White House with show guest -- The Prez -- DJT. 12PM (precisely) to 2PM.

Posted 6 November 2024, 1:43 p.m. Suggest removal

hrysippus says...

The real estate business in this country has prospered like never before in the history of our country under a Democratic administration. This prosperity has not only enriched some few Bahamians but has also added huge amounts to the governments income through direct taxes like the Stamp tax and VAT on property sales, but also indirect taxes paid by the new ex-pat owners. It will be very interesting to see if the real estate market continues to thrive as it has been doing, under the new Republican administration. Time will tell.

Posted 6 November 2024, 2:18 p.m. Suggest removal

quavaduff says...

Thanks for noting this. It is a historical fact that the US economy does better under Democratic administrations. tRump will be a disaster having personally gone bankrupt 6 times.

Posted 7 November 2024, 8:55 a.m. Suggest removal

LastManStanding says...

Bahamians are so hypocritical when it comes to American politics; nearly every commenter here will agree that Bahamian price controls are an archaic form of government interference into private commerce that belongs in the past century, but because the blue(TM) candidate wants to implement them that shit is golden. Cumula was out of her league with nonsensical economic ideas such as price controls, unrealized capital gains tax, and more. She would have been an absolute disaster for the United States, and we would've only benefited from an influx of expats seeking to get out like what happened with Biden. The fact that the Dems even put her up as a candidate showed that they treated this cycle as a wash and were just looking to get it over as quickly as possible. No one with an iota of economic or political knowledge ever took her seriously.

Posted 6 November 2024, 2:35 p.m. Suggest removal

quavaduff says...

But you can get behind a person that has gone bankrupt 6 times, sells sneakers and bibles to his "suckers", has 34 felonies, has been judged, by a judge to be a rapist, calls Puerto Ricans garbage, calls those in the military "losers and suckers" .... your misogyny is showing, at the very least but most of all your ignorance and hatred of strong women.

Posted 7 November 2024, 8:59 a.m. Suggest removal

LastManStanding says...

Let me put this really simply so your orangutan brains could understand: literally nobody was on Harris's run. Why did she pull out of the running for the 2020 Dem nomination; because she had literally no support. If sloth is the cardinal sin of the GOP, then pride is the one of the Dems. Your team literally did the same exact shit as 2016 when you rigged the primaries for Clinton because you desperately need muh stronk wahmen President and are surprised when you get a 2016 (no, worse) result. If Cumula was such a strong candidate why couldn't she go through a primary like everyone else? Biden was no more cognitively deficient at the time he pulled out than he was when they started (or even in 2020). Oh thats right, because everyone in the Dem power structure knew she had literally zero chance of making it through them.

You have no idea who I am or what I stand for. Neither Trunk nor Cumula are shining beacons of moral integrity. It doesn't make a whole lot of difference in the big picture at the end of the day which one goes in because they are both beholden to the same power structure. America is on a decline to turn into a third world nation, and Trunk will only delay that by a little bit while Cumula would have accelerated the collapse. People like Trunk and Cumula are just indicative of a greater societal problem in the United States, much like our politicians are indicative of the societal problems that we have here.

Posted 7 November 2024, 2:21 p.m. Suggest removal

LastManStanding says...

Too many people live in social media echo chambers separated from actual on the ground reality. The actual reality is that many people are suffering and at best are living paycheque to paycheque. The Biden admin could've cooked up all the fake job reports they wanted, that doesn't change the actual on the ground reality of what people are feeling on a day to day basis, which is why the results are what they are.

Posted 6 November 2024, 2:38 p.m. Suggest removal

hrysippus says...

LostMonStanding, you been watching FOXYNEWS again, haven't you?

Posted 6 November 2024, 4:16 p.m. Suggest removal

quavaduff says...

he/she certainly has ...LOL

Posted 7 November 2024, 8:59 a.m. Suggest removal

LastManStanding says...

Funny you can't disprove anything I say, the numbers speak for themselves. Your team got overwhelmingly rejected in the best result for a GOP candidate since the days of the Bushes. You literally even lost the popular vote, which nobody (not even myself) expected would happen. You people live in a delusional bubble.

Posted 7 November 2024, 2:25 p.m. Suggest removal

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