Tag: U.S. Elections

  • US election results: Trump edges closer ever to victory over Harris

    US election results: Trump edges closer ever to victory over Harris

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump wins the key swing state of Pennsylvania, with its 19 electoral votes. U.S. broadcasters Fox News, CNN and NBC project based on voter surveys and initial vote counts. This puts Trump close to the 270 Electoral College votes needed to secure a victory in the presidential election.

    Trump had previously secured the swing states of North Carolina and Georgia, giving him a strong lead over his Democratic opponent Kamala Harris.

    The conservative broadcaster Fox News had already declared Trump the overall winner of the U.S. presidential election, but other networks and U.S. news agency AP have not done so. With its 19 electors, the populous state of Pennsylvania is one of the most significant swing states.

    It played a special role in the election as an overall victory without Pennsylvania is hard to achieve for both candidates. To crown it all, Trump needed only a few more electoral college votes to win the election overall.

    A candidate needs a majority of the 538 electors or at least 270 to win. In the 2016 election, Trump was able to narrowly prevail in Pennsylvania. In 2020, Democrat Joe Biden also triumphed with only a very slim margin in the state.

    Republican Donald Trump claimed victory in the 2024 presidential contest after Fox News projected that he had defeated Democrat Kamala Harris, which would cap a stunning political comeback four years after he left the White House.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports winner of the 2024 US presidential election is yet to be decided officially, although some major battleground states have been called for Republican Donald Trump and he seems to be closing on victory.

    As its stands, 50 of 56 races have been called and Trump has polled a total of 70,092,526 popular votes (51.1%) and 267 electoral votes compared to the 65,002,530 popular votes (47.4%) and 224 electoral polled by Democrat candidate Kamala Harris.

    “America has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate,” he said early on Wednesday to a roaring crowd of supporters at the Palm Beach County Convention Center, flanked by his vice presidential running mate, Senator JD Vance, Republican leaders and members of Trump’s family.

    He also spent several minutes praising Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, who pumped some 120 million dollars into backing Trump’s campaign. Trump has said he will appoint Musk to lead a government efficiency commission.

    Other news outlets had yet to call the race for Trump, but he appeared on the verge of winning after capturing the battleground states of Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Georgia and holding leads in the other four, according to Edison Research.

    Harris did not speak to her supporters, who had gathered at her alma mater Howard University. Her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, briefly addressed the crowd after midnight, saying Harris would speak publicly on Wednesday.

    “We still have votes to count,” he said.

    The former president was showing strength across broad swaths of the country, improving on his 2020 performance everywhere from rural areas to urban centers.

    Republicans won a U.S. Senate majority after flipping Democratic seats in West Virginia and Ohio.

    Neither party appeared to have an edge in the fight for control of the House of Representatives where Republicans currently hold a narrow majority.

    Trump went into Election Day with a 50-50 chance of reclaiming the White House, a remarkable turnaround from Jan. 6, 2021, when many pundits pronounced his political career to be over.

    That day, a mob of his supporters stormed Congress in a violent attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

    Trump picked up more support from Hispanics, traditionally Democratic voters, and among lower-income households that have keenly felt the sting of price rises since the last presidential election in 2020, according to exit polls from Edison.

    Trump won 45 per cent of Hispanic voters nationwide, trailing Harris with 53 per cent but up 13 percentage points from 2020.

    About 31 per cent of voters said the economy was their top issue, and they voted for Trump by a 79 per cent-to-20 per cent margin, according to exit polls.

    Some 45 per cent of voters across the country said their family’s financial situation was worse off today than four years ago, and they favored Trump 80 per cent to 17 per cent.

    Global investors were increasingly pricing in a Trump win late on Tuesday.

    U.S. stock futures and the dollar pushed higher, while Treasury yields climbed and bitcoin rose – all flagged by analysts and investors as trades that favour a Trump victory.

    No matter who won the election, history was in the making. Trump, 78, the only president to be impeached twice and the first former president to be criminally convicted, would also become the first president to win non-consecutive terms in more than a century and would be the oldest presidential candidate ever elected.

    If elected, Harris, 60, the first female vice president, would become the first woman, Black woman and South Asian American to win the election.

    Trump was earning a bigger share of the vote than he did four years ago in nearly every corner of the country.

    By 12:30 a.m. ET, officials had nearly completed their count of ballots in more than 1,600 counties – about half the country – and Trump’s share was up about 2 percentage points compared to 2020, reflecting a broad if not especially deep shift in Americans’ support for the president they ousted four years ago.

    He improved his numbers in suburban counties, rural regions and even some large cities that are historically bastions of Democratic support; in high-income counties and low-income ones; and in places where unemployment was comparatively high and in places where it is now at record lows.

    Harris had banked on big margins among urban and suburban voters, but her support in those places was running well behind President Joe Biden’s in the 2020 election.

    Nearly three-quarters of voters said American democracy is under threat, according to the exit polls, underscoring the depth of polarisation in a nation where divisions have only grown starker during a fiercely competitive race.

    Trump employed increasingly apocalyptic rhetoric while stoking unfounded fears that the election system cannot be trusted.

    Harris warned that a second Trump term would threaten the underpinnings of American democracy.

    Hours before polls closed, Trump claimed on his Truth Social site without evidence that there was “a lot of talk about massive CHEATING” in Philadelphia, echoing his false claims in 2020 that fraud had occurred in large, Democratic-dominated cities.

    In a subsequent post, he also asserted there was fraud in Detroit.

    “I don’t respond to nonsense,” Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey told Reuters.

    A Philadelphia city commissioner, Seth Bluestein, replied on X, “There is absolutely no truth to this allegation.”

    Trump voted earlier near his home in Palm Beach, Florida.

    “If I lose an election, if it’s a fair election, I’m gonna be the first one to acknowledge it,” Trump told reporters.

    Millions of Americans waited in orderly lines to cast ballots, with only sporadic disruptions reported across a handful of states, including several non-credible bomb threats  that the FBI said appeared to originate from Russian email domains.

    Tuesday’s vote capped a dizzying race churned by unprecedented events, including two assassination attempts against Trump, Biden’s surprise withdrawal and Harris’ rapid rise.

    Harris campaign says she won’t speak to supporters until tomorrow

    The campaign of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has said that the vice president won’t address supporters on election night, as the path to the White House narrowed for her.

    “We still have votes to count. We still have states that have not been called yet,’’ Harris campaign co-chair Cedric Richmond said in the early hours of Wednesday.

    “We will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted.

    “That every voice has spoken. So you won’t hear from the vice president tonight. But you will hear from her tomorrow,’’ he added.

    As the last day of voting got underway on Tuesday, Harris had said she would have dinner with family at her Washington residence before joining an election watch party at nearby Howard University.

    The historically black college she attended.

    Former U.S. president Donald Trump appeared to be getting closer to a return to the White House, after U.S. broadcasters called the battleground states of North Carolina and Georgia for the Republican.

  • Former UK PM booted out of live U.S. election show

    Former UK PM booted out of live U.S. election show

    Boris Johnson has been “fired for banging on about his book” during a guest appearance on Channel 4’s coverage of the U.S. election, according to the programme’s co-host Krishnan Guru-Murthy.

    The former UK prime minister was told off for holding up his memoir and plugging it just minutes into the live programme titled “America Decides: U.S. Presidential Election.”

    Channel 4 newsreader Guru-Murthy told Johnson to “put it away” and “stop it, enough” as he twice referenced his new book and attempted to hold it up to viewers.

    Guru-Murthy described the former prime minister’s actions as “so cheap”.

    Johnson retorted: “There’s absolutely nothing you can do to stop me… I’m allowed to plug my book.”

    Later during the panel discussion, Johnson said he met with former U.S. president and Republican nominee Donald Trump after his attempted assassination in July.

    “In case I failed to mention this, I am promoting my book Unleashed, and I had a talk with him about Ukraine,” he said.

    When asked about following in Trump’s footsteps regarding a political comeback if he was to win the presidential election, Johnson said: “The answer is obviously contained in Unleashed where you’ll find the full discussion of this subject.”

    Co-host Emily Maitlis told him: “We are not all going to read your book, so just tell us, do you want to have a political comeback…. You can’t actually answer a single question.”

    Johnson responded: “By the way Emily I’ve answered all your questions all night. Currently I am blissfully engaged promoting my book Unleashed, available in all good book stores.”

    Later in the programme, Johnson was replaced on the Channel 4 panel by Michael Cohen – who served as a lawyer to former president Trump.

    Guru-Murphy told viewers: “Boris Johnson has been fired for banging on about his book.”

    It was not clear whether Johnson’s exit from the programme had been planned or if he had departed early.

    Johnson, 60, has been promoting his new memoir titled Unleashed after it was released last month.

    The 784-page book looks back on Johnson’s time as prime minister – from 2019 to 2022 – including Brexit and the Covid pandemic.

    Channel 4 newsreader Guru-Murthy is at the helm of the channel’s first overnight U.S. election programme since 1992 alongside former “Newsnight” presenter Maitlis.

    Political pundits, and a number of famous faces including Johnson, joined the hosts in the Washington DC studio as the American public decides whether Democratic nominee Kamala Harris or Trump becomes president.

    Guests on the programme include Republican supporter an reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner, and Stormy Daniels, the woman at the centre of Trump’s hush money trial following an affair between the two.

    A representative for Channel 4 has been contacted for comment.

  • BREAKING: Harris, Trump tied in first officially declared US election results

    BREAKING: Harris, Trump tied in first officially declared US election results

    Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have tied with three votes each in the tiny New Hampshire township of Dixville Notch, kicking off Election Day in one of the first places in the country to report its presidential preference.

    The unincorporated township, located along the US-Canada border in New Hampshire’s northern tip, opened and closed its poll just after midnight ET in a tradition that dates back to 1960. Four Republicans and two undeclared voters participated.

    While Dixville Notch isn’t always predictive of the eventual winner – or even the state’s pick – its annual production, despite a dwindling population, is a success story for local leaders and a reason to smile for political junkies eager for an early taste of the day’s events.

    By tradition, all eligible voters gather at the now-dormant Balsams Hotel in Dixville Notch to cast their secret ballots once polls open at midnight. Once every ballot is cast, votes are tallied and results announced – hours before anywhere else, making it a destination for national reporters, who often outnumber the voters.

    Les Otten, one of the township’s voters and the lead developer for the Balsams, called the early release of the results “a civics lesson for the country,” adding that “if we can help people get out and understand that voting is an important part of their right as an American citizen, that’s perhaps the key to what we’re doing.”

    Otten said he expects to break ground on the redevelopment project next summer. In the meantime, he said, “as long as we’re here and we’re property owners and we have, you know, our toothbrush in our bathrooms, we might as well exercise our right to vote.”

    Nearby Millsfield and Hart’s Location, which is tucked in the White Mountains, first offered midnight voting before Dixville Notch but haven’t participated continuously and aren’t conducting it this year. A fictionalized version of the three neighbors was featured in an episode of Aaron Sorkin’s “West Wing” dubbed “Hartsfield’s Landing.”

    Dixville Notch voters have supported the Democratic nominee the last two presidential elections, with the township in 2020 unanimously casting five votes for President Joe Biden and with Hillary Clinton in 2016 winning four of seven votes — two went to Trump and one to Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson.

    In January, four registered Republican voters and two independents participated in the GOP primary, casting six unanimous votes for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

    The 75-year-old Otten, who said he has been “a Republican ever since I was seven years old,” told CNN before Tuesday’s vote that he would cast his ballot for Harris.

    “Nowhere in the Pledge of Allegiance does it say anything about pledging your allegiance to a person,” Otten said. “And I think at the end of the day, Trump has made it clear that you need to pledge allegiance to him, and he alone can fix this, and that is as anti-democratic as I can understand.”

    The voters also cast their votes in the country’s most competitive governor’s race between former one-term Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte and Democratic nominee Joyce Craig, the former mayor of Manchester, to succeed retiring Republican Gov. Chris Sununu.

    Election: Amid heightened security, fears for violence, U.S. voting begins

    Voters in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, went to the polls early Tuesday morning, marking the official start of Election Day voting for the 2024 U.S. presidential election. Six registered voters of the tiny town in northeastern U.S. cast their ballots at midnight, following a tradition that dates back decades ago. Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and Republican candidate Donald Trump are tied in the town in a 3-3 vote.

    Amid heightened security for fears of violence and chaos, the vast majority of polling stations across the country opens on Tuesday morning and will remain open until the evening. Local officials are taking elaborate measures to fortify election-related sites, including plans for snipers on a rooftop to protect a key vote-counting headquarters. Panic buttons for election workers and surveillance drones buzzing overhead, The Washington Post reported.

    Tens of millions of voters across the country had already casted their ballots early, either by voting in person at polling stations or by mail. According to data from the University of Florida’s Election Lab, as of Monday night, more than 82 million voters had already cast their ballots.

    This election is widely regarded as one of the most divisive in American history. Harris and Trump have repeatedly warned against potentially catastrophic consequences inflicted on the country if the other is elected. Voters hold vastly different views on key issues such as the economy, immigration, and abortion rights.

    According to an annual survey conducted by the American Psychological Association, 77 per cent of U.S. adults said the future of the nation was a significant source of stress in their lives. Additionally, 74 per cent said they were worried that the election results could lead to violence.

    “I will hope that whoever wins the presidential election will handle it gracefully, and whoever doesn’t win, likewise, will handle it gracefully.’’

    Annmarie Pintal, one of the just six voters registered to vote in Dixville Notch, told Xinhua.

    “We need unity. We need to come together on the common ground, and, be willing to set aside our differences,’’ said Scott Maxwell, another voter in the small town.

    Trump insists on result on election night at final rally

    The Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump has once again set false expectations
    regarding the vote count for the U.S. election, insisting on a result on election night. “We want the answer tonight,’’ the 78-year-old said at his final rally in Grand Rapids in the highly contested swing state of Michigan.

    Trump had already stirred up sentiment in previous days with unsubstantiated allegations of electoral fraud. The Republican is running against Democrat Kamala Harris, and it is shaping up to be a close race. It is considered unlikely that the election result will be determined within a few hours after the polling stations close. Postal votes, in particular, delay the counting process in some states.

    Following the 2020 presidential election, Trump declared himself the winner on election night and called for a stop to the vote count when he was temporarily ahead of his then-challenger Joe Biden. He has refused to acknowledge his election defeat in 2020 to Biden to this day. There are fears that Trump might repeat this strategy.

    U.S. intelligence agencies say Russia increasing cyber election attacks

    Top U.S. government intelligence officials intensified their warnings on Monday about foreign election interference – especially from Russia. The concern, from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), follows warnings on Friday about the interference.

    The three agencies said they have “been observing foreign adversaries, particularly Russia, conducting additional influence operations intended to undermine public confidence in the integrity of U.S. elections and stoke divisions among Americans.”

    They said these efforts will intensify throughout Tuesday – election day – and afterwards, adding they will be focused on the seven key swing states: Arizona, Nevada, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and North Carolina.

    U.S. voters are choosing whether to send former Republican president Donald Trump or Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris to the White House.

    “Russia is the most active threat,” the joint statement said. “Influence actors” the group said were linked to Russia are creating fake videos and stories to undermine the election’s legitimacy, make voters afraid of the process and suggest that people with opposite political views are using violence against each other.

    “These efforts risk inciting violence, including against election officials,” the agencies said. “We anticipate Russian actors will release additional manufactured content with these themes through election day and in the days and weeks after polls close.”

    The intelligence officials said Russian-influenced operators had recently posted false articles that said U.S. officials were trying to influence the elections through ballot stuffing and cyberattacks. These bad actors “also manufactured and amplified a recent video that falsely depicted an interview with an individual claiming election fraud in Arizona… to favor Vice President Kamala Harris,” the statement said.

    “The Arizona Secretary of State has already refuted the video’s claim as false,” it added.

    Iran has launched “maliciouis cyber activities” to negatively impact Trump, the statement continued.

    The Tehran government is also trying to influence the election through fake videos and posts intended to stoke violence. The intelligence officials said Iran remained determined to avenge the death of Qassem Soleimani, who on the orders of Trump,  was killed in Iraq in a U.S. airstrike in January 2020.

    U.S. election 2024: Harris or Trump will inherit a mixed legacy

    Amid discontent and division, with opinion polls showing nearly two-third voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction under President Joe Biden, Americans head to the polls on Tuesday.

    While the United States economy is the envy of the industrialized world, emerging from COVID shutdowns with strong job growth and wage increases, many Americans complain those gains were gobbled up by high grocery and housing prices.

    Biden’s promise of a return to a more humane immigration regime than under Republican former President Donald Trump soon collided with the reality of a spike in illegal border crossings.

    The Supreme Court upended the legal landscape around abortion rights by overturning Roe v. Wade, inflaming one of the most divisive issues in American politics.

    And despite Biden’s pledge that America would serve as a stabilizing force in the world, overseas conflicts have overshadowed his presidency.

    Whoever triumphs in the election Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris will inherit the legacy of a Biden administration that made good on some promises, saw others swept off-course by events, and others still only partially fulfilled.

  • Harris races against Trump to become U.S. first female president

    Harris races against Trump to become U.S. first female president

    A presidential election unlike any other in U.S. history enters its last full day on Monday. This is as Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, and their campaigns scramble to get supporters to the polls in a contest each portrays as an existential moment for America.

    Even after the astonishing blur of events of the last few months, the electorate is divided down the middle, in the seven battleground states expected to decide the winner on Tuesday.  The closeness of the contest means it could take days for a winner to emerge.

    Trump, a 78-year-old Republican, survived two assassination attempts, one by millimeters, just weeks after a jury in New York – the city whose tabloids first elevated him to national fame and notoriety – made him the first former U.S. president to be convicted of a felony.

    Harris, 60, was catapulted to the top of the Democratic ticket in July – giving her a chance to become the first woman to hold the world’s most powerful job.

    This was after President Joe Biden, 81, had a disastrous debate performance and three weeks later dropped his reelection bid under pressure from his party.

    For all of that turmoil, the contours of the race have changed little. Polls show Harris and Trump running neck and neck nationally and in the battleground states.

    More than 77 million voters have already cast ballots, but the next two days will provide a critical test of whether Vice President Harris’ or former President Trump’s campaign does the better job of driving supporters to the polls.

    Voters, both Democrats and Republicans, have broken century-old records in the last two presidential elections, a sign of the passion that Trump stirs in both political parties.

    In the final days of this campaign, both sides are flooding social media sites and TV and radio stations with a last round of ad campaigns, and racing to knock on doors and make calls.

    Harris’ campaign team believes the sheer size of its voter mobilisation efforts is making a difference and says its volunteers knocked on hundreds of thousands of doors in each of the battleground states this weekend.

    “We are feeling very good about where we are right now,” campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon told reporters.

    The campaign says its internal data shows that undecided voters are breaking in their favour, particularly women in the battleground states.

    The campaign says  they see an increase in early voting among core parts of their coalition, including young voters and voters of colour.

    Trump’s campaign has its own in-house canvassing operation but has effectively outsourced most of the work to outside super PACs, allied political groups that can raise and spend unlimited sums of money.

    They have been more focused on contacting “low propensity” voters, or voters that often do not go to the polls, instead of appealing to middle-of-the-road voters who can flip to either side.

    Many in this category are Trump supporters, but they are not normally reliable voters.

    By cherry-picking the voters, they want to contact, Trump and his team say they are sending door knockers to places where it makes a difference and being smart about spending.

    Trump and his allies, who falsely claim that his 2020 defeat was the result of fraud, have spent months laying the groundwork to again challenge the result if he loses.

    He has promised “retribution,” spoken of prosecuting his political rivals and described Democrats as the ‘”enemy within.”

    On Sunday, Trump complained about gaps in the bullet-proof glass surrounding him as he spoke at a rally and mused that an assassin would have to shoot through the news media to get him, adding, “I don’t mind that so much.”

    Harris has cast Trump as a danger to democracy but sounded optimistic at a Detroit church on Sunday.

    “As I travel, I see Americans from so-called red states to so-called blue states who are ready to bend the arc of history toward justice,” Harris said.

    “And the great thing about living in a democracy, as long as we can hold on to it, is that we have the power, each of us, to answer that question.”

    Voters responding to a late-October Reuters/Ipsos poll ranked threats to democracy as the second-biggest problem facing the U.S. today, just behind the economy.

    Trump believes concerns about the economy and high prices, especially for food and rent, will carry him to the White House.

    “We’re going to cut your taxes, end inflation, slash your prices, raise your wages and bring thousands of factories back to America,” Trump said on Sunday at a midday rally in Lititz, Pennsylvania.

    His final day of campaigning on Monday will include stops in three of the seven battleground states expected to determine the winner.

    He will visit Raleigh, North Carolina; Reading and Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

    He then plans to return to Palm Beach, Florida, to vote and await election results.

    Harris plans to spend Monday campaigning in Pennsylvania, starting her day in Allentown, one of the most competitive parts of the state, before heading on to Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

    Pennsylvania is the biggest prize among the battleground states, offering 19 of the 270 Electoral College votes a candidate needs to win the presidency.

    Nonpartisan U.S. election analysts calculate Harris needs to win about 45 electoral votes in the seven swing states to win the White House, while Trump would need about 51, when accounting for the states they are forecast to win easily.

  • U.S. Decides: Trump, Harris run neck and neck in fresh pre-election poll

    U.S. Decides: Trump, Harris run neck and neck in fresh pre-election poll

    U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and Democrat candidate Kamala Harris are running neck and neck ahead of the presidential election, a fresh Leger poll released by the New York Post showed.

    Both candidates have 49 per cent support ahead of the Tuesday vote, while the other 2 per cent of respondents said they would vote for someone else.

    Trump and Harris are equally expected to improve Americans’ quality of life, at 44 per cent each.

    However, the Republican candidate took advantage of his Democrat rival in terms of the clarity of his economic strategy plan, at 45 per cent against 42 per cent.

    The poll was conducted from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3 among 950 likely voters, with the margin of error not exceeding 3 points.

    Owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, the New York Post endorsed Trump for President in late October.

  • U.S. Election: Authorities raise alarm of Russian interference

    U.S. Election: Authorities raise alarm of Russian interference

    Just days before the U.S. presidential election, intelligence agencies in Washington are warning of targeted disinformation from Russia.

    The agencies blamed Russia for a video that “falsely depicted individuals claiming to be from Haiti and voting illegally in multiple counties in Georgia.”

    Another fabricated video falsely accused “an individual associated with the Democratic presidential ticket of taking a bribe from a US entertainer.”

    The agencies did not elaborate in their statement. But US media said the video that began circulating late this week suggested Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband received a 500,000-dollar-bribe from the performer Sean “Diddy” Combs.

    In the joint statement, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency blamed “Russian influence actors” for the videos.

    These instances were part of a “broader effort” by Moscow “to raise unfounded questions about the integrity of the U.S. election and stoke divisions among Americans,” the agencies said.

    Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who is responsible for elections in the swing state, said the video about Georgia “is false and is an example of targeted disinformation we’ve seen in this and other elections.

    It is likely foreign interference attempting to sow discord and chaos on the eve of the 2024 presidential election.”

    Raffensperger called on X owner Elon Musk and the leaders of other social media platforms to remove the video.

    The clip was originally posted by an anonymous account that had previously been reported to have spread disinformation of suspected Russian origin. The video has since been deleted.

  • U.S. Election: Republicans lose Pennsylvania voting case

    U.S. Election: Republicans lose Pennsylvania voting case

    The U.S. Supreme Court has handed Republicans a loss in a case concerning the rules for postal voting in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, just days ahead of the presidential election.

    The justices rejected a request not to count provisional ballots used in the state when a voter’s mail-in ballot is flagged as potentially defective.

    These provisional ballots are kept separately and counted only after verification.

    The Republicans had asked for these votes not be counted.

    This could have potentially invalidated thousands of absentee ballots, which often tend to favour Democratic voters.

    The court’s decision allows these votes to be counted for the time being, but the Supreme Court could still revisit the issue later.

    Further legal disputes are possible in the coming days.

    There are expectations that fights over the validity of votes will continue after the Nov. 5 election, especially in states where the margin between the winner and loser could be only thousands of votes.

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has already raised baseless allegations of vote manipulation after his election defeat in 2020 and is now casting doubt on the integrity of the upcoming election.

    The Supreme Court’s decision has particular significance in Pennsylvania, a critical battleground state in the election campaign.

    With its 19 electors, the most populous of the seven so-called swing states could be decisive for the outcome of the election.

  • From the DNC: Lessons for Nigerian political parties – By Dakuku Peterside

    From the DNC: Lessons for Nigerian political parties – By Dakuku Peterside

    Nigerians’ profound interest in US elections is no mere coincidence. The roots of this fascination lie deep in the historical and structural connections between the two countries’ political systems. Nigeria’s democracy, modelled closely after the US presidential-style system, naturally invites comparisons and draws parallels with American political practices. This connection is further deepened by the increasingly globalised nature of our world, where political developments in one nation can reverberate across continents, influencing governance, policies, and even public opinion in far-flung regions. In Nigeria, this is particularly evident as US political dynamics, especially in the current digital age where social media amplifies voices and ideas, significantly impact the local political landscape.

    The strong economic and diplomatic ties that bind Nigeria and the United States further underscore the importance of closely observing events like the Democratic National Convention (DNC) and its counterpart, the Republican National Convention (RNC). These events are not just spectacles of democracy; they are pivotal in shaping US foreign policy, which invariably has significant implications for Nigeria. As the US navigates its complex political terrain, the decisions and policies that emerge from these conventions often ripple through its foreign relations, including with nations like Nigeria. In this context, the lessons that Nigerian political parties can draw from the DNC are not just valuable, but they are essential for the maturation and evolution of Nigeria’s democratic processes. These lessons have the potential to reshape the political landscape and inspire positive change in Nigeria.

    Political parties are the cornerstone of any functioning democracy. They serve as the vital platforms through which individual political aspirations are translated into collective action. This process is not just about enhancing electoral competitiveness, but also about ensuring that diverse interests within the society are represented and fostering a culture of political engagement among the populace. These functions are the bedrock upon which accountability and responsiveness in governance are built. For a developing democracy like Nigeria, where democratic institutions are still in the process of solidification, the institutionalisation of party structures is not just important—it is crucial.

    However, Nigeria faces significant challenges in this regard. The political landscape is often marred by a lack of effective party structures, which hinder parties’ ability to stimulate meaningful public dialogue or empower citizens to participate actively in the political process. This shortfall weakens the democratic fabric of the nation, leading to a disconnection between the government and the governed and often resulting in unresponsive governance to the populace’s needs and aspirations. It is urgent that these challenges are addressed, and it is the responsibility of all stakeholders in Nigerian politics to work towards a more inclusive and responsive system.

    Many Nigerians find themselves drawn to the Democratic Party of the United States for various reasons. These reasons range from the party’s historic nomination of a woman of colour, which resonates deeply in a country like Nigeria with its complex tapestry of ethnic and gender dynamics, to a general scepticism towards figures like Donald Trump, whose policies and rhetoric have often been perceived as divisive. There are also religious sentiments at play and an alignment with the broader policies and values that the Democratic Party espouses, particularly in areas such as social justice, healthcare, and immigration. This connection to the Democratic Party underscores why the DNC  is relevant to Nigeria’s political evolution. The convention is not merely a gathering of like-minded individuals; it is a platform where the party’s ideals, strategies, and future directions are showcased to the world. For Nigerian political parties, observing and learning from the DNC offers a unique opportunity to glean insights that can be adapted to strengthen their democratic processes.

    One of the most remarkable moments of the DNC  was President Joe Biden’s decision to step aside in the 2024 race, passing the torch to Vice President Kamala Harris. This decision was not just a political manoeuvre but a powerful statement about leadership and prioritising national interest over personal ambition. This act of selflessness and commitment to the greater good starkly contrasts the behaviour of much of Nigeria’s political elite, where prioritising personal and group interests over national ones is often the norm.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has been vocal in his criticism of Nigeria’s leadership, describing it as plagued by self-centeredness—a significant impediment to the nation’s development. In Nigeria, political elites often wield power through political patronage and economic dominance, manipulating public opinion to align their interests with those of the country. This manipulation creates a dangerous dynamic where policies reflect the interests of the elite rather than the nation’s true priorities, leading to a disconnect between the government and the people. In this context, few Nigerian political leaders are willing to sacrifice their ambitions, even when they conflict with the common good. Biden’s decision to step aside offers a powerful example of what it means to lead with integrity and a focus on the nation’s collective well-being.

    The DNC also highlighted the importance of unity and inclusivity in the political sphere. Despite internal differences and varying perspectives, all significant DNC members rallied behind Kamala Harris, presenting a united front. This unity was notable not just for its existence but for the way it transcended the divisions that often characterise political gatherings. There was no emphasis on Harris’s gender or race, no factionalism between “technocrats” and “professional” politicians, and no divisive rhetoric around religious affiliations. This starkly contrasts Nigeria’s political elite, who frequently exploit the country’s rich diversity;ethnic, religious, gender,  and social status—to advance their agendas. This exploitation often leads to feelings of exclusion and marginalisation among various groups, weakening the social fabric and undermining the potential for a unified nation.

    Another critical lesson from the DNC convention is the importance of consistency in policy positions. Vice President Kamala , in her address, clearly articulated her stance on a range of issues, including healthcare, housing, abortion rights, foreign policy, and the economy. The Party’s leading figures maintained a consistent and coordinated stance on these issues, united by a shared vision and policy goals. This consistency is crucial in a functioning democracy, as it provides voters with a clear understanding of what the party stands for and what they can expect if it comes into power.

    In stark contrast, Nigerian political parties often lack well-defined ideological beliefs and are instead defined by the personalities that dominate them. This absence of a coherent philosophy leads to frequent shifts in party allegiance, resulting in internal conflicts and inefficiencies in governance. Rather than focusing on meaningful policy dialogue, Nigerian political parties often operate within a patron-client framework, where loyalty is bought and sold and where policies are shaped not by the needs of the people but by the whims of influential individuals. This system stifles democratic processes and undermines effective governance, making it difficult for the country to move forward in a cohesive and coordinated manner.

    The DNC and RNC conventions also underscored the importance of respecting past leaders and celebrating the nation’s history and heroes. Both conventions paid homage to past presidents, civil rights leaders, and other figures who have shaped American history. This respect for tradition and the achievements of those who came before is a hallmark of a mature democracy. It reflects a commitment to continuity and recognition that the past provides a foundation for the future.

    In Nigeria, however, the narrative is often quite different. Successive leaders frequently seek to undermine their predecessors, showing little respect for the accomplishments of those who came before them. This attitude weakens the nation’s institutional memory and hampers efforts to build on previous successes. Current Nigerian political leaders often want to be seen and treated as demigods, believing their contributions are unparalleled and their legacies should overshadow those of their predecessors. This mindset stifles political progress and continuity, as each new administration needs to start from scratch rather than build on previous governments’ work.

    Finally, the DNC convention showcased a strong commitment to the peaceful power transfer to a new and younger generation of leaders. This was not just a rhetorical commitment; it was evident in how the convention provided a platform for young leaders to speak, presenting themselves as the party’s future. This is reminiscent of Obama’s 2004 DNC speech, which propelled him to national prominence and made his candidacy viable. The DNC’s approach to leadership transition reflects an understanding that the nation’s future depends on empowering the next generation and providing them with the tools and opportunities they need to lead.

    In Nigeria, however, the situation is quite different. Despite a youthful electorate,older politicians continue to dominate the major political parties. Patronage systems, which fuel entrenched interests, control these parties, preventing young people from playing significant roles beyond being tools for violence during elections. The failure to meaningfully involve young people in the political process deprives the country of fresh ideas and energy and perpetuates a cycle of stagnation and underdevelopment.

    Ultimately , the DNC offers a wealth of lessons that Nigerian political parties would do well to heed. These lessons are not merely theoretical; they are practical steps that, if implemented, could lead to a more vibrant, responsive, and effective political system in Nigeria. By adopting these practices, Nigerian political parties can play a pivotal role in the consolidation of democracy, ensuring that the nation’s political system is not only resilient but also reflective of the will and aspirations of its people.

  • US presidential election: Harris will beat Trump – By Tiko Okoye

    US presidential election: Harris will beat Trump – By Tiko Okoye

    By Tiko Okoye

    Several polls suggest that the economy and immigration are the major issues voters are concerned with – areas where Donald Trump seemingly has a competitive edge. Maybe, and maybe not. But even if they are, Trump hardly helps himself and GOP down-ballot candidates nationwide by his inability to stay on message, as he spends every waking hour whining about Kamala Harris’s ‘AI-induced’ larger crowd sizes and ancestry – just as he did in the birther controversy involving then-candidate Barack Obama.

    Let’s take the economy. An informed analysis would readily reveal that – except arguably for the Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon administrations – the US economy tends to go into a deep recession whenever the GOP occupy the White House and control Congress. This is because they consistently grant massive tax rebates to their wealthy campaign donors, and not only does their trickle-down economic policy never pan out, but they end up ballooning the national debt – a paradox for a party that preaches frugality and ‘small government’ – leaving any incoming Dem administration with the onerous and unpleasant task of cleaning up their mess! On the other hand, Harris, a product of a working family, has been harping about rebuilding the middle class as the way to economically empower majority of Americans to live out the American dream. Majority of American voters prefer the Harris plan.

    As for immigration, commentators tend to forget that the border situation worsened rather than improved during Trump’s four years in office, and that he couldn’t even build the wall he had bragged. Besides, Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) painstakingly crystallised a bipartisan immigration bill reputed to be the first major overhaul of asylum and immigration law in more than 10 years. But it was rejected after Trump and GOP House leadership brought enormous pressure to bear on GOP senators to make a volte face, simply because Trump wanted to make immigration a major campaign issue. The character difference between Biden and Trump is so striking. Biden says, “I love this job, but I love my country more.” Trump clearly loves being president again far more than he loves his country, and American voters are now much wiser and won’t fall again for cheap stunts.    

    Truth is that the fault with the Biden administration is the messenger, not the message. Despite the booming economy, working-class Americans were feeling the pinch at the grocery stores. And while Biden was finding it near-impossible to connect with hard-pressed Americans on right messaging, GOP strategists successfully scripted a compelling narrative with their “too-old-and-too-senile-to-be-president” trolls. Which is very ironic considering that Biden is only three years older than Trump and the latter is notorious for his ranting and muddled-up identification of people, places and events, but his every misstep is conspiratorially attributed to “Trump is just being Trump”! 

    A new messenger is on the block, even though the message is practically the same. The Harris team has broken the traditional mould of Democrats always playing defence – a losing strategy exemplified by Michelle Obama’s campaign slogan of “When they go low, we go high.” This inability or incapacity to effectively return tit-for-tat has always allowed the well-oiled GOP propaganda machinery to ominously stereotype and label Democratic candidates. But not Harris and her folksy, do-me-I-do-you running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. The result? A flummoxed and flabbergasted Team Trump is still searching for ways to effectively handle the Kamala-mania phenomenon! 

    With national polls revealing that Harris is leading by 4-6 points, and several pollsters now putting her ahead in as many as seven of eight swing states, there can be no doubting that the Trump campaign is in need of life support – and even this may be coming too late. With less than 10 weeks to go, Republicans and their foremost strategists are beginning to worry that Trump may already be out of runway. Two of Trump’s notable pollsters, Tony Fabrizio and Travis Tunis, who had earlier espoused that Harris’s “honeymoon with American voters” would be a short-lived affair have been forced to eat humble pie by reporting that “No one should be surprised to see Harris get an extended but still temporary 2 to 3-point bump post-DNC.” I make bold to declare that the bump will be more like 4 to 6 points, that there’s nothing ‘temporary’ with the Harris lead, and that it will extend all the way to November 5. 

    That the current scenario is eerily similar to that of 2016 is of little comfort to Team Trump. Yes, there’s a female contender who, like Hilary Clinton, is surging in the polls. But things are markedly different this time around. First, Trump now has a past record in office to be decomposed and can no longer claim to be the outsider coming to drain the Washington DC swamp. He is a convicted sex offender and fraudster while Harris is a former California attorney general who was tough on crime. Trump is fossilised in the past, spewing pessimism and hollering about vengeance and retribution and being a dictator as well as demarketing America as another shithole country. Meanwhile, Harris is preaching freedom, joy and optimism about a brighter future. The choice cannot be more striking. 

    Virtually all editions of the newspapers published nationwide the morning after the Democratic National Convention ended carried screaming headlines that chorused: “A New Way Forward!”  Those still doubting the credentials of Harris should just think of the way and manner she seamlessly grooved into the position of a change agent; a candidate who is a senior partner in a much-maligned incumbent administration is successfully rebranding herself as “similar in many ways but equally dissimilar in several key ways.” This is a stroke of genius – a trait she also exhibited in her choice of running mate when everyone else – including Trump, Republicans, Democrats and this writer – was betting on her picking Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro because of the pricey 19 electoral votes at stake in the swing state. 

    Harris’s momentum has seen her outraising Trump in fresh donations. Last month alone, she raised $204 million, dwarfing Trump’s $48 million, bringing the total amount she has raised within such a short period of time to about $500 million! Many have described Harris as the leader of a political movement, not just a political party, as her big tent now houses Democrats, Independents and Republicans who are disenchanted with Trump.

    If the race were strictly based on a one-man-one-vote format, Harris would be winning by a landslide. The only reason why several analysts and pundits are still calling it a very tight race is because POTUS is elected by an Electoral College that is heavily skewed in favour of GOP-leaning rural mid-western states at the expense of Democratic-leaning populous and wealthy states on the eastern and western coasts. Trump is hoping that his MAGA supporters would upset the applecart.  

    And ever since the GOP super-majority in the Supreme Court, created by Trump when was 45th POTUS, upended the over-50-year Roe v Wade decision, pro-choice has been a rallying cry in a nation where female voters outnumber their male counterparts. It has seen candidates running on Democratic pro-choice tickets defeat their GOP opponents in deep-red states such as Louisiana, Ohio and Tennessee – to mention a few; and every proposed legislation restricting reproductive rights has been defeated in various referendums. It must be worrisome to Trump and GOP down-ballot candidates that referendums are scheduled to hold on the same subject in several states on the same day presidential election is to be conducted, including swing states, when it is known that Americans are not split-voters. 

    It’s also pertinent to note that while Trump was in the White House, his mannerisms and utterances caused the GOP to lose the Presidency and Senate in 2020 and saw a much-touted red wave go up on smoke in the 2022 mid-term elections. Trump has never been a majority-candidate nor a winner, and history will keep repeating itself as long as he hos presence or shadow looms large in any election. 

    Trump and GOP aficionados must be ruing the missed opportunity to nip Harris’s gravitas in the bud. Harris contested a state-wide election for the very first time in 2010, and was struggling to shed the same San Francisco far-left liberal label that Trump has resuscitated to no effect. Back then, officials of the Republican National Committee (RNC) foresaw the threat a diamond-in-the-rough Democrat like Harris could pose in the future, and commenced a counter-strike against her. 

    The gambit was codenamed “Killing Hercules in the crib” in their dirty tricks playbook, a reference to an ancient Greek folklore in which Hera, the wife of Zeus, the mythical king of the gods, knew that Hercules (original Greek version is Herakles) was her husband’s illegitimate son with a mortal female and tried every way possible to kill him as soon as he was born. The plan centred around a brutal testimonial of the mother of a slain police officer who criticised Harris as a far-left liberal who refused to seek the death penalty for the gang member who killed her son. 

    The moral of the story is that there’s no killing the beetle. If Republicans couldn’t do it when she was cutting her teeth in politics, they won’t be able to stop her ‘Big Mo’ going forward or kill a Hercules who has since overgrown his crib. America has surely had enough of the chaos as well as the race-baiting, narcissistic, misogynistic attitudes as well as the mischief-making, misogynistic, disruptive and corrosive proclivities of Trump in their polity. It’s time to finally retire him from national politics and give the surviving rump of the GOP rebuild their party.  

    Most Americans are ready to witness another African-American – and a female to boot – break the invisible glass ceiling to become the 47th POTUS. As for Trump, it will finally be good riddance to bad rubbish and a nightmarish memory!

     

    Ichie Okoye, a Boston University Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow, investment banker, microfinance expert, newspaper columnist and public affairs analyst, wrote in from Abuja

  • Far-right turns, the West mask of civility falls off – By Owei Lakemfa

    Far-right turns, the West mask of civility falls off – By Owei Lakemfa

    THE CNN American Presidential Debate showed humanity is in a catch-22 situation while the European high speed far-right turns on the cliffs, threaten to plunge humankind into an uncertain world. The far-right turns have been taken in countries like Switzerland, Hungary, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Serbia, France and to some extent, Germany.

    The only light visible at the end of the European tunnel is the British elections in which the Labour Party is set to end rudderless Tory rule. The British Conservative Party rule has been so chaotic that it has in the last 14 years produced five Prime Ministers: David Cameroon, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. Despite this welcome change, it is difficult, to distinguish the migration policies of the main British parties. They follow the emerging pattern in most of Europe where the policies of the far-right, right-wing, centrist, liberal, labour and left-wing parties on migration and commitment to a common humanity are blurred.

    In fact, some European governments have lost all sense of humanity in dealing with the issue of migration as they deliberately ensure that migrants are drowned in the seas, or they do the drowning themselves.

    The British Broadcasting Corporation, BBC, in its documentary of Monday, June 17, 2024 titled ‘Dead Calm: Killing in the Med?’ provided irrefutable evidence of Greece deliberately forcing migrants to their death in the seas or intentionally drowning them.

    The BBC, which analysed 15 such cases, reported that: “In five of the incidents, migrants said they were thrown directly into the sea by the Greek authorities. In four of those cases they explained how they had landed on Greek islands but were hunted down. In several other incidents, migrants said they had been put onto inflatable rafts without motors which then deflated, or appeared to have been punctured.”

    In one of the cases, a Camerounian man, and his fellow travellers, Didier Martial Kouamou Nana and Sidy Keita from Cameroun and Cote d’Ivoire, were hunted down by Greek authorities after they landed in September 2021 on the island of Samos.

    They were beaten and thrown into the sea without life jackets. The first two drowned while the survivor managed to swim to shore.

    A Somali migrant who was caught in March 2021 by the Greek army on arrival on the island of Chios, was handed over to the Greek coastguard. The latter zip-tied his hands behind his back and tossed him into the water. Luckily, one of his arms broke free and he swarm to safety. But the other three victims, tossed into the waters, died.

    One of the most heart-wrenching cases the BBC verified, occurred in September 2022 when a boat carrying 85 migrants had its motor cut out near the Greek island of Rhodes. The Greek coastguard which responded to their May Day call, loaded them onto a boat, then put them in life rafts. Survivor Mohamed said the raft he and his family were given had not had its valve properly closed, so they began to sink. He said: “We immediately began to sink, they saw that… They heard us all screaming, and yet they still left us.” Seven or eight children had died before the Turkish coastguard arrived.

    One year before the BBC report, the most criminal case against Greece occurred on June 14, 2023 off south-western Greece. A fishing trawler crammed with over 700 migrants sent a distress call the morning before. The Greeks merely sent out an helicopter to circle the ship. It was only at 11pm, a Greek coastguard boat arrive. Three hours later, the ship sank claiming over 600 souls.

    Survivors claimed the ship capsized when the Greeks tried to tow it while the Greek Government claimed the vessel refused assistance.

    Italy might be worse than Greece. While the latter ensures that distressed migrants at sea die out of deliberate neglect, Italy backs its actions by law. Its Piantedosi Act of February 24, 2023 makes it a criminal act for any vessel already having rescued migrants on board to rescue other distressed migrants at sea even if they were seen drowning.

    As we might know, the policy of the current British government is to round up alleged illegal migrants, fly them to Rwanda and dump them in camps.

    Given these official policies and acts, physical attacks on migrants in some European cities and a consensus towards a far-right swing, Europe might be losing its soul.

    In the case of the USA, not a few were alarmed by the lacklustre performance of a clearly tired, slow and uninspiring 82-year-old President Joseph ‘Joe’ Robinette Biden in the June 27, 2024 CNN American Presidential Debate. After 36 years in the Senate, eight years as Vice President and four years as President, Biden should have given way to a younger, more energetic and mentally alert Democratic Presidential candidate. But a caucus, desperate to cling on to power, has pushed him to the point where four months before the Tuesday, November 5 Presidential election, questions are being asked whether Biden is mentally and physically fit to run.

    It is not that some of us who are worried are Democratic Party or Biden supporters. We are just concerned that the road is being cleared for the return of his predecessor, Donald Trump, a mercurial character convicted on sundry cases, including “hush money” paid to porn actress, Stormy Daniels. We are worried that a narcissist adult who does not seem capable of distinguishing between truth and falsehood and, openly tried to carry out a coup against the American state, may be sworn in next January as the President of ‘God’s Own Country’.

    But it is debatable whether Trump would have been worse than Biden in the on-going genocide in the Palestine. Biden poured $12.5b aid into Israel even when it was obvious that what is afoot is genocide against the Palestinians. To collectively punish the Palestinian populace, he stopped US aid to the UN Peace and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees.

    As the Palestinian casualties rose, Biden said : “I have no notion that the Palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed.” So for him, the issue is not the massacres, but that the figures might not be high or high enough. Thrice, the Biden Presidency vetoed the UN Security Council, UNSC, resolutions calling for a humanitarian ceasefire in the Palestinian War. Finally, as worldwide protests mounted, he submitted a ceasefire agreement to the UNSC to which he claimed Israel had agreed. It turned out that this was false.

    The far-right swing in Europe, and the threatened Trump return might mean that the West is defining its own humanity and that its mask of civility has pulled off.