Throughout Election Night, this page will be updated with Electoral College vote totals and tracking the results of the state-by-state poll closings.
Throughout Election Night, this page will be updated with Electoral College vote totals and tracking the results of the state-by-state poll closings.
As the 8:00 hour hit and a wide group of eastern state’s polls closed, the television networks began calling some projections in new parts of the nation.
Massachusetts (11 electoral votes), Maryland (10 votes), New Jersey (14 electoral votes), and Delaware (3 electoral votes), Rhode Island (4 electoral votes) and the nation’s capital (3 electoral votes) added 38 new votes to Clinton’s total.
These key swing states had their polls close early in the evening (by 8 pm) but the vote totals kept see-sawing back and forth and individual counties reported their totals and as the numbers were calculated.
These states that could be key to the victory of either candidate was too close to call.
In several of the southern states, the television networks projected that Donald Trump won the states of Tennessee (11 electoral votes) and Mississippi (6 electoral votes). Trump also was projected to win in Alabama (9 electoral votes) and South Carolina (9 electoral votes). None of these wins for Trump were seen as particularly surprising.
As the night wore on, and the Plains states polls closed, television networks projected early voting results that awarded the states of North Dakota (3 electoral votes), South Dakota (3 electoral votes), Nebraska (3 electoral votes), Wyoming (3 electoral votes), and Kansas (6 electoral votes).
Trump jumped up to a big lead in the Electoral College with an expected win in the states of Texas. That state has 38 electoral votes to award. Trump was also the projected winner in Arkansas (6 electoral votes).
Hillary Clinton took the Electoral College lead late in the night but it was due to the entirely expected win in the state of California. It’s 55 electoral votes pushed her into the lead at the time. The television networks also projected that Hawaii would add its 4 Electoral College votes to her total. This was another expected outcome.
Trump: 238 Electoral College votes
Clinton: 215 Electoral College votes
As the night stretched into the early hours of the next day, there were still states that had not counted all of their votes and so there was not yet a clear winner.
Pennsylvania, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Maine, New Hampshire, Utah, and Arizona were still too close to call. The polls in Alaska had also not yet been reported.
In a state result that newsmakers had been watching all night, Donald Trump won the state of Wisconsin in the very early hours of the morning. This win flipped a state that has been reliably Democrat in presidential elections and in other races for many years. It was a signal to the surprising results that the Trump campaign had achieved on election night.
10 Electoral College votes
Soon after Donald Trump was announced the projected winner in Wisconsin, the television media and other news outlets began announcing that he was the winner of the election.
While there were very tight races still to call–notably in Michigan (16 electoral votes) and New Hampshire (4 votes)–the math was continuing to not add up for Hillary Clinton. Trump exceeded the minimum of 270 Electoral College votes needed to be the winner and take on the title of president-elect.
Secretary Clinton soon called to concede the race to Trump and congratulate his victory. Both candidates appeared in the very early hours to speak to their supporters.
After Trump was declared the winner, he claimed the states of Alaska (3 electoral votes) and Arizona (11 electoral votes) and Utah (6 electoral votes).
A week after Election Night, the final results in New Hampshire have been double-checked and approved. Hillary Clinton was awarded this state’s 4 electoral votes.
This added to her overall total in the Electoral College, but has not changed the outcome of the election itself. Donald Trump remains over the minimum number of votes needed to win the presidency, though Clinton continues to hold a slight lead in the popular vote totals.
NOTE: There are still outstanding totals in the last state, Michigan. Thought this will not change the outcome of the election either.
Green Party candidate Jill Stein called for official recounts in the states of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania today.
The Clinton campaign did not push for this result, but they stated that as long as recounts are occurring, then they will send a lawyer as a representative.
On Monday, December 19, the members of the Electoral College cast their final votes, certifying the 2016 presidential election. Donald Trump received 304 votes. Hillary Clinton received 227 votes. A few “faithless electors” did not cast their official ballots for either Trump or Clinton–as the results of their state votes indicated. But it only totaled as 7 votes cast for other candidates, including Rand Paul, John Kasich, or other people.
In the end, Donald Trump officially has received well over the 270 minimum number of Electoral College votes to claim the election win.
Data update: The Electoral College cast their official ballots for the election on Monday, December 19. Vote totals for Trump and Clinton are now updated.