US Election 2024
Kamala Harris, Democratic Candidate

TRUMP WINS

270 to win
Kamala Harris of the Democrat party has 226 electoral college votes.
Kamala Harris, Democratic Candidate
Donald Trump of the Republican party has 312 electoral college votes.
Donald Trump, Republican Candidate

Kamala Harris of the Democrat party has 74,470,806 votes (48.3%)

Donald Trump of the Republican party has 76,972,815 votes (49.9%)

0 results to go
Donald Trump, Republican Candidate

Summary

  1. Republicans flocking to Florida as they sense victorypublished at 06:32 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Gary O'Donoghue
    Reporting from Trump's watch party

    We heard that Mike Johnson, the House speaker, got on a plane and is on his way here from his own count because he think this is the way it's going.

    I have no doubt that other Republicans are flocking in this direction too, the ones that are not already here.

    So, people sense a potential victory, they sense success and they want to be part of it. Of course they already have the projected gain in the senate which, for them, will be a significant step forward.

  2. Stage is being set for a major speech at Trump's watch partypublished at 06:24 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Gary O'Donoghue
    Reporting from Trump's watch party

    A worker prepares the stage during the election night event with former US President Donald Trump, not pictured, at the Palm Beach Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Florida, US, on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024. The 2024 presidential campaign was marked by two assassination attempts, a candidate switch, divisive rhetoric and warnings about the fate of democracy. Photographer: Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesImage source, Getty Images

    I remember in 2016, at Hilary Clinton's supposed victory party in New York, when the air goes from the room and in that moment everyone suddenly realises it isn't the story they were hoping for. The smiles and dancing ends up in tears and people stream home incredibly upset.

    Here in Florida tonight, you have the absolute opposite. You've got people anticipating the former president, perhaps future 47th president, coming here and making some kind of speech very shortly.

    They have been prepping the stage for that and the secret service has been on the move, as has the motorcade and we understand that either him or JD Vance or both of them are in the building.

    Tap the watch live button at the top of the page to follow along.

  3. Republicans to take control of the Senate - projectionpublished at 06:13 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November
    Breaking

    The Republican Party is set to take control of the Senate, according to a projection from the BBC's US partner CBS.

    There are still lots of races being counted, but it looks clear that the Democrats will lose their effective majority of just one.

    The Democrats were hoping to take a Republican seat to limit the expected damage in West Virginia but, according to a projection, have failed to unseat Ted Cruz in Texas, which was one of the party's key targets.

    Hemicycle chart showing the US Senate as it stands at 06:11 GMT (01:11 EST) with 40 Democrats, 1 Independents (sit with Democrats), 8 Awaiting results, 51 Republicans. 51 seats are needed for a majority.
  4. Analysis

    If this goes Trump's way, it will be an extraordinary political achievementpublished at 06:11 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Gary O'Donoghue
    Reporting from Trump's watch party

    It will be interesting see the nature of speeches Donald Trump and JD Vance give and what exactly they will claim and say about the votes still to be counted.

    It's worth thinking about, if this is going the way we think it's going - Donald Trump's way, then we really have to think about the scale of what that achievement would amount to.

    This is a man who is 78 years old, facing four criminal cases (one he has been convicted in and is due to be sentenced in three weeks time), a whole bunch of civil cases, insulted a whole string of demographics and countless scandals over the last eight years.

    Getting back into the White House for a second term is an extraordinary and mind-blowing achievement in political terms.

  5. Good morning to our UK readers. Here's what you've missedpublished at 06:06 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Nadine Yousif
    Reporting from Washington, DC

    It's now after 01:00 in the eastern US, meaning morning has dawned for our readers in the UK.

    If you're across the pond and just waking up, here's a quick recap of what you missed overnight:

    • North Carolina and Georgia have been called for Donald Trump. The remaining five battleground states have yet to be called
    • The mood among Trump supporters is increasingly joyous, and has become muted among Harris supporters
    • The other states that have been called have fallen in line with historic voting patterns, with Harris wining Democratic strongholds like California and Trump wining reliable Republican states like Texas
    • In the Senate races, Republican Ted Cruz of Texas has managed to hold onto his seat, while Republican Bernie Moreno has unseated the incumbent Democratic candidate Sherrod Brown
    • In Florida, a ballot measure to enshrine a constitutional right to abortion before foetal viability did not pass, failing to get the 60% of votes needed
  6. Final polls close, with Democrats nervous and Republicans excitedpublished at 06:01 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Sam Hancock
    Live page editor

    Well, there we have it. All polls in this year’s US presidential election have now closed - the last to do so were in Alaska and Hawaii.

    If you’ve been following the action through the night, you’ll know that the current projections have Republican Donald Trump on 246 electoral college votes and Democrat Kamala Harris on 187. A candidate needs 270 to win the White House.

    So far, two swing states have been projected - North Carolina and Georgia - and both have gone to Trump. There are five more battlegrounds still to be called, though early projections suggest Trump is ahead in all of them. Remember, these are the areas that experts believe can plausibly be won by either Harris or Trump, and so will likely decide the result.

    We have reporters on the ground across the US who are bringing us regular updates from watch parties. Democratic donors and strategists are telling the BBC's Ione Wells, in Michigan, that they're feeling "very pessimistic". Meanwhile, Nada Tawfik reports there being a sense of "excitement and purpose" among Trump’s camp in Florida.

  7. Donald Trump expected to arrive soon at Florida watch partypublished at 05:58 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November
    Breaking

    Supporters react as Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump's motorcade passes by a bridge near Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, FloridaImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Supporters greet Donald Trump's motorcade in Florida as it drives by on way to his campaign watch party

    Donald Trump is expected to arrive shortly at his campaign watch party in West Palm Beach, Florida, where he is expected to speak.

    Among those in the room are Elon Musk, who has campaigned heavily for Trump, as well as political allies Robert F Kennedy Jr and Tulsi Gabbard.

    Our correspondents are reporting that supporters have started also to gather outside, hoping to catch a glimpse of Trump's motorcade as he makes his way in.

    Stay with us as we bring you the latest from inside the room.

  8. Postpublished at 05:57 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Result card showing that Harris is projected to win 5 electoral college votes in New Mexico. The locator map on the card shows New Mexico is in the southwestern region of the United States, large and roughly square, bordering Mexico to the south.
  9. Supporters leave Harris's watch partypublished at 05:52 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Holly Honderich
    Reporting from Kamala Harris's watch party in Washington, DC

    Supporters leave a watch partyImage source, Holly Honderich / BBC

    About 30 minutes ago, this field in the centre of Howard University was packed with Kamala Harris supporters ready to celebrate.

    But with the projected calls out of North Carolina and Georgia, the venue for Harris’s election night party suddenly feels a lot less like a celebration.

    Hundreds of supporters are streaming out, most now declining to speak to media as the probability of a Harris win seems to have slipped away.

    Harris is also not expected to speak at her own watch party.

  10. Harris will not speak tonightpublished at 05:50 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Cai Pigliucci
    Reporting from Washington DC

    People leave Harris's watch partyImage source, Reuters

    The crowd has all but disappeared here at Harris HQ after it was just announced by a senior member of the campaign that Harris will not be appearing tonight.

    The mood has steadily lowered as two swing states were called for Trump on the big screen, and now it’s nearly empty in here.

    The party-like atmosphere from a few hours ago has turned sour as Harris’ chances have dimmed in mere hours.

  11. Trump supporters celebrate crucial swing state winspublished at 05:50 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Images are coming in of jubilant Donald Trump supporters, celebrating in parts of the US as their pick for president pulls ahead in the projected results.

    Some are wearing Maga (Make America Great Again - Trump's campaign slogan) caps, others are shrouded in the American flag.

    Here's a look:

    A line of supporters, all wearing red caps, cheer with one man raising his fist in the airImage source, Reuters
    A man wearing a Maga cap and drinking a beverage smilesImage source, Reuters
    A woman, shrouded in the American flag, looks onImage source, Getty Images
    A woman, wearing a red top raises her hands in the air at a Trump watch partyImage source, Reuters
  12. It is pretty grim right now - Democrat fundraiser tells BBCpublished at 05:47 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Media caption,

    Watch: Democratic strategist Lindy Li says Joe Biden should not have begun an election bid

    Let's check in with the atmosphere with the Kamala Harris HQ in Washington DC where Lindy Li, who is a Philadelphia-based Democratic fundraiser, tells the BBC that it is "pretty grim right now".

    "People are getting increasingly anxious, but there is still a pathway. I am still holding on to that, but this is not the night we wanted."

    Li lists three points which have given her concern, including the economy and levels of inflation, immigration issues and Joe Biden only giving Kamala Harris 107 days to campaign.

    "It's not over until it is over," Li adds.

  13. This race is tilting towards Trumppublished at 05:42 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Anthony Zurcher 'the quick take' banner

    By Anthony Zurcher, North America correspondent

    The US presidential election is far from decided, but the playing field appears to be steadily tilting toward Donald Trump.

    The Republican has now won the swing state of Georgia, following his projected victory in North Carolina.

    The electoral map is beginning to look more like 2016, when Trump won, than 2020, when he lost.

    Across the US, in counties that have reported their results, the former president is making modest but noticeable headway.

    Kamala Harris is largely matching Joe Biden’s totals in the urban and suburban counties, but so far it has not been enough for her to close the gap with the former president.

    Map showing the results of the 2024 Presidential election. Democrat Kamala Harris has won 182 electoral votes from 14 states. Republican Donald Trump has won 246 electoral votes from 25 states. There are 110 votes left to declare with 270 needed to win.
  14. Postpublished at 05:37 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November
    Breaking

    Result card showing that Trump is projected to win 16 electoral college votes in Georgia. The locator map on the card shows Georgia is in the southeastern region of the United States, large, with a short east coast coastline.

    Watch the moment it was projected below:

    Media caption,

    Trump projected to win in Georgia

  15. Trump supporters gather to catch a glimpse of his motorcadepublished at 05:31 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Kayla Epstein
    Reporting from Florida

    A woman in glasses and a red 'USA' cap smiles for the cameraImage source, BBC News
    Image caption,

    Brenda Murua was bouncing with excitement at the possibility of glimpsing Trump's motorcade

    As results continue to come in, more and more of Trump’s supporters are gathering outside the convention centre in West Palm Beach, Florida, where he will hold his election night party.

    A large crowd is lining the boulevard waiting for a possible glimpse of Trump’s motorcade. Police have partially shut down the roads, a sign Trump might be coming through soon.

    Brenda Murua, 50, was one of the supporters waiting on the sidewalk. She was bouncing with excitement as she watched results come in. She had been there for over an hour.

    "I was like oh, I have to be here to support him!" Murua said. "I can wait longer, as long as he wins."

  16. Moods shift at Harris's watch partypublished at 05:22 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Holly Honderich
    Reporting from Kamala Harris's watch party in Washington, DC

    A woman checks her phone as she leans against a man, both of whom look pensiveImage source, Reuters

    As the first swing states are called for Donald Trump, the energy at Howard University has begun to shift.

    After hours of apparent optimism, dancing and singing to Usher, Kendrick Lamar and Beyoncé, the supporters gathered at Harris’s election night party are starting to show their nerves.

    "I know there are a lot of worries with the numbers right now," said Howard student Jordan Newsom soon after North Carolina was projected for Trump. But Newsom said his fellow supporters were doing their best to keep the mood up.

    "The best we can do is unite and keep the faith amongst ourselves."

    Women watch with worried looksImage source, Reuters
  17. North Carolina voter says she doesn't know if she 'can live through another Trump era'published at 05:19 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Brandon Drenon
    Reporting from North Carolina

    The Democratic North Carolina watch party in Raleigh has ended.

    The music has stopped. Bartenders are packing up their things.

    The fraction of the crowd that remains is carrying mixed emotions, glad to see three major Democratic candidates win here - governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general - but dejected by Kamala Harris’s apparent defeat in the state.

    “It’s hard. I’m sad,” Saira Estrada tells me.

    “I don’t know if I can live through another Trump era.”

  18. Postpublished at 05:11 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November
    Breaking

    Result card showing that Harris is projected to win 13 electoral college votes in Virginia. The locator map on the card shows Virginia is in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, medium-sized and shaped like a wedge, with a coastline along the east coast and narrowing as it stretches inland.
  19. Republicans on the verge of taking the Senatepublished at 05:09 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    Anthony Zurcher 'the quick take' banner

    By Anthony Zurcher, North America correspondent

    With incumbent Senator Sherrod Brown defeated in Ohio, Democratic odds of retaining control of the Senate are dwindling.

    The party has lost two seats, with a third – Jon Tester in Montana – at great risk. Without a Democratic pick-up somewhere else, the chamber will flip to the Republicans.

    At this point, it’s hard to find a race where Democrats have much hope.

    Florida and Texas, the two races that were remotely competitive, are already off the table. Independent Dan Osborne narrowly trails incumbent Republican Deb Fischer in Nebraska with 69% reporting. It’s not even clear, however, whether Osborne would join with Democrats in the Senate if he prevails.

    And if Donald Trump wins the presidency, with Vice-President JD Vance casting a tie-breaking vote in the Senate, it won’t matter what happens in Nebraska.

    It is shaping up to be a very good night for Republicans.

  20. Republicans flip Ohio Senate seat - projectionpublished at 05:07 Greenwich Mean Time 6 November

    The Republicans are on course to take Ohio from the Democrats, dealing a hammer blow to the party's chances of holding on to their fragile majority in the Senate.

    CBS has projected Bernie Moreno will unseat Sherrod Brown, a veteran senator who has represented the state in the Senate since 2007 and who drew his main support base from organised labour.

    The race is believed to have been the most expensive in Senate history.

    Brown has told supporters the result is a "disappointment but not a failure", adding "I'm not giving up on our fight for workers and I know you won't either".

    The win is projected to be the second Republican pickup in the Senate races tonight after they took West Virginia.

    That means that, as it stands, the party is on course to take control of the Senate - unless the Democrats can flip a state.