TRUMP WINS !!!!!!!!!!
Trump wins presidency in stunning victory by Hunter Walker and Dylan Stableford
NEW YORK — Donald J. Trump will be the 45th president of the United
States, the Associated Press projected Wednesday. He will be the first
person to hold the office despite having no prior political or military
experience.
The AP officially called the race for Trump at 2:31 a.m. ET.
The Republican nominee’s victory over Hillary Clinton marks a stunning
upset that neither the polls nor the pundits saw coming. But Trump,
defiant to the end, insisted he would win despite burning bridges with
key voting groups and even many Republicans. In winning, Trump upended
almost every norm of American politics and apparently changed the shape
of the Republican Party.
He spent the final three weeks of his
once-unlikely White House bid railing against a “rigged” election,
alleging without evidence that voter fraud would be widespread. Trump
even hinted at the idea of not conceding the race if he lost, jokingly
promising to accept the results of the election “if I win.”
But
the brash billionaire also predicted that he would shock the
establishment and said his campaign would be “Brexit Plus Plus,” a
reference to Britain’s exit from the European Union, which also was not
forecast in the polls. And in the end, to borrow one of Trump’s favorite
expressions, he did indeed exceed expectations “big league.”
“They all told it wrong from day number one,” Michael Cohen, a longtime
Trump adviser and Trump Organization attorney, told Yahoo News.
“America is going to see the change that it deeply needs and they’re going to have a leader a real leader,” Cohen added.
Trump spent the night huddled with family and friends, watching the
returns inside the Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan, where one Trump
campaign source initially said some allies expected him to lose and were
simply hoping he would outperform Mitt Romney’s showing in the 2012
presidential race. But as the night wore on, the Trump team became more
optimistic and began to think the celebrity businessman had a chance,
based on razor-thin margins in battleground states. After Ohio was
called for Trump, the same source predicted that even the Democrats
might also be changing their assessments of Trump’s chances.
Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, described a jubilant
atmosphere in his war room in a text to Yahoo News before Trump was
projected the winner.
“Absolutely buoyant. We can smell the win,” Conway said.
The crowd that waited to see Trump speak in a ballroom at the Hilton
cheered each time a state was called for him. (Unsurprisingly, the
television monitors at the event were showing Fox News, the cable news
network favored by conservatives on which Trump had appeared often.)
“I had hoped for this,” a second Trump campaign source said. “I knew
there was a chance for this, but I gave it a 30 percent chance. I
thought we would come up just short.”
Polls had widely shown
Trump to be an underdog against Clinton, the Democratic nominee who
faced a series of questions over her use of a private email server and
how her family foundation interacted with the State Department during
her tenure as secretary of state. But those polls were apparently wrong.
Shortly before 2 a.m., Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta appeared
on stage at the Javits Center in Manhattan, telling Clinton’s supporters
that the candidate would not be appearing.
“We’re not going to have anything more to say tonight,” Podesta told the crowd. “We’ll have more to say tomorrow.”
Podesta added: “We are so proud of you, and we are so proud of her.”
Clinton had enjoyed a double-digit lead over Trump in national polls
following the presidential debates, but she saw that cushion evaporate
after FBI Director James Comey set off a political firestorm 10 days
before Election Day. Comey said newly discovered emails related to the
investigation were being reviewed, and Trump started predicting that she
would be indicted. On Sunday, Comey said a review of those emails did
not change his position that Clinton should not face criminal
prosecution.
The results indicated that Trump outperformed
expectations among working-class whites, forming a coalition of states
that few thought possible when the campaign began. Meanwhile, Clinton
under performed among college-educated and young white women.
In
the end, Clinton failed to overcome the showman, who gobbled up
thousands of hours of free airtime on cable news by making a series of
controversial and improbable promises, like a pledge to build a wall
along the southern border of the U.S. and a promise to “shut down”
Muslim immigration. Trump also stayed in the spotlight by fighting a
series of feuds and raging against the media. And despite Clinton’s
strong performance in the presidential debates, in which she goaded
Trump into gaffes and kept the focus squarely on his shortcomings, she
could not translate those performances into votes.
Trump’s
election is already sending shock waves through the political system
because it signals a repudiation of establishment politicians that, to
many voters, the Clintons represent. The property magnate and former
“Celebrity Apprentice” host, one of the most unconventional major-party
candidates in U.S. history, had vowed to “drain the swamp” of
Washington, D.C. He derided many of the leaders he’ll likely now need to
work with, such as House Speaker Paul Ryan and many other congressional
Republicans.
It also remains to be seen if president-elect Trump
will be able to heal the country’s sharp political divisions, some of
which were sparked by his campaign.
But the Queens, N.Y.-born Trump, 70, will have to face all of those challenges and more when he is inaugurated in January.
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