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In a close US election, Donald Trump leads Kamala Harris. Can this change, though?


According to early predictions, Donald Trump, a Republican, is ahead of Kamala Harris in the US presidential election. Harris has won seven states, compared to the former president's fifteen. However, as the 2020 White House race shown, initial patterns can be deceptive.

We don't yet have a definitive answer to the question of who will win the US presidential election between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. However, since polling has ended in practically every state, preliminary results have been coming in.

What do the preliminary findings indicate?

Donald Trump leads Harris more than two hours into the counting. CNN reports that Harris has 145 Electoral College votes, while Trump has 211. To win the president, each of them needs 270 electoral votes.

The Associated Press reports that Harris has 99 electoral votes while Trump has 178.

The US media predicted that Trump would win in 15 states and Harris in seven as the preliminary results were released. The nation is divided into 50 states.

Ohio, Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia, Texas, Iowa, Kansas, Idaho, and Mississippi are among the states which Trump is predicted to win by the US media. He was elected president of these states in 2020.

It is anticipated that Harris will visit a number of states, including California, Colorado, Maryland, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Washington, DC, the capital of the United States.

The swing states are crucial in the hotly contested election. They are the secret to winning the US election.

Right now, Harris is trailing Trump by two and Trump by three. While the vice president leads in Pennsylvania and Michigan, the Republican candidate leads in Wisconsin, Georgia, and North Carolina. It's too early to declare which states will be the battleground.

Trump may appear to have the advantage for the time being, but this could change.

Chris Wallace of CNN claims that there have been "no surprises" or states where the parties have switched. "Every state that [Donald] Trump won tonight was one that he had won in 2020. Every state won by [Kamala] Harris was also won by [Joe] Biden in 2020. As of right now, no swing state has been switched.

Why early outcomes don't necessarily mean a winner
Vote counting regulations and peculiarities in a number of crucial states may make early vote returns in US battleground states a poor predictor of whether Harris or Trump will prevail, according to analysts.

In several states, Trump led on election night during the 2020 election's "red mirage," but when more Democratic voters' mail-in ballots were counted, Democrat Joe Biden overtook him in a "blue shift."

Trump used the change to support his unfounded allegations that the election was rigged, even though experts had correctly anticipated it would occur.

This week, it might occur once more, particularly in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. This week, particularly in North Carolina and Georgia, the opposite could potentially occur: a "blue mirage" that seems to indicate a solid outcome for Harris, only for a "red shift" to reverse the trend.


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