Donald Trump claimed his place Wednesday as America’s 45th president, an astonishing victory for the celebrity businessman and political novice who capitalized on voters’ economic anxieties, took advantage of racial tensions and overcame a string of sexual assault allegations on his way to the White House.
His triumph over Hillary Clinton, not declared until well after midnight, will end eight years of Democratic dominance of the White House and threatens to undo major achievements of President Barack Obama. Trump has pledged to act quickly to repeal Obama’s landmark health care law, revoke America’s nuclear agreement with Iran and rewrite important trade deals with other countries, particularly Mexico and Canada.
As he claimed victory, Trump urged Americans to “come together as one united people” after a deeply divisive campaign.
He said he had spoken by phone with Clinton and they had exchanged congratulations on a hard-fought race. Trump, who spent much of the campaign urging his supporters on as they chanted “lock her up,” said the nation owed her “a major debt of gratitude” for her years of public service.
The Republican blasted through Democrats’ longstanding firewall, carrying Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, states that hadn’t voted for a GOP presidential candidate since the 1980s. He needed to win nearly all of the competitive battleground states, and he did just that, claiming Florida, Ohio, North Carolina and others.
Global stock markets and U.S. stock futures plunged, reflecting investor concern over what a Trump presidency might mean for the economy and trade.
A New York real estate developer who lives in a sparking Manhattan high-rise, Trump forged a striking connection with white, working class Americans who feel left behind in a changing economy and diversifying country. He cast immigration, both from Latin America and the Middle East, as the root of the problems plaguing many Americans and taped into fears of terrorism emanating at home and abroad.
Trump will take office with Congress expected to be fully under Republican control. GOP Senate candidates fended off Democratic challengers in key states and appeared poised to keep the majority. Republicans also maintained their grip on the House.
Senate control means Trump will have great leeway in appointing Supreme Court justices, which could mean a shift to the right that would last for decades.
Trump upended years of political convention on his way to the White House, leveling harshly personal insults on his rivals, deeming Mexican immigrants rapists and murderers, and vowing to temporarily suspend Muslim immigration to the U.S. He never released his tax returns, breaking with decades of campaign tradition, and eschewed the kind of robust data and field efforts that helped Obama win two terms in the White House, relying instead on his large, free-wheeling rallies to energize supporters. His campaign was frequently in chaos, and he cycled through three campaign managers this year.
His final campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, touted the team’s accomplishments as the final results rolled in, writing on Twitter that “rally crowds matter” and “we expanded the map.”
Clinton spent months warning voters that Trump was unfit and unqualified to be president. But the former senator and secretary of state struggled to articulate a clear rationale for her own candidacy.
The mood at Clinton’s party grew bleak as the night wore out, with some supporters leaving, others crying and hugging each other. Top campaign aides stopped returning calls and texts, as Clinton and her family hunkered down in a luxury hotel watching the returns.
At 2 a.m., Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta told the crowd to head home for the night. “We’re still counting votes and every vote should count,” he said. But she later conceded.
Trump will inherit an anxious nation, deeply divided by economic and educational opportunities, race and culture.
Exit polls underscored the fractures: Women nationwide supported Clinton by a double-digit margin, while men were significantly more likely to back Trump. More than half of white voters backed the Republican, while nearly 9 in 10 blacks and two-thirds of Hispanics voted for the Democrat.
Doug Ratliff, a 67-year-old businessman from Richlands, Virginia, said Trump’s election was one of the happiest days of his life.
“This county has had no hope,” said Ratliff, who owns strip malls in an area badly beaten by the collapse of the coal industry. “Things will change. I know he’s not going to be perfect. But he’s got a heart. And he gives people hope.”
Trump has pledged to usher in a series of sweeping changes to U.S. domestic and foreign policy: repealing Obama’s signature health care law, though he has been vague on what he could replace it with; building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, and suspending immigration from countries with terrorism ties. He’s also praised Russian President Vladimir Putin and spoken of building a better relationship with Moscow, worrying some in his own party who fear he’ll go easy on Putin’s provocations.
The Republican Party’s tortured relationship with its nominee was evident right up to the end. Former President George W. Bush and wife Laura Bush declined to back Trump, instead selecting “none of the above” when they voted for president, according to spokesman Freddy Ford.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, a reluctant Trump supporter, called the businessman earlier in the evening to congratulate him, according to a Ryan spokeswoman.
Democrats, as well as some Republicans, expected Trump’s unconventional candidacy would damage down-ballot races and even flip some reliably red states in the presidential race. But Trump held on to Republican territory, including in Georgia and Utah, where Clinton’s campaign confidently invested resources.
Clinton asked voters to keep the White House in her party’s hands for a third straight term. She cast herself as heir to President Obama’s legacy and pledged to make good on his unfinished agenda, including passing immigration legislation, tightening restrictions on guns and tweaking his health care law.
But she struggled throughout the race with persistent questions about her honesty and trustworthiness. Those troubles flared anew late in the race, when FBI Director James Comey announced a review of new emails from her tenure at the State Department. On Sunday, just two days before Election Day, Comey said there was nothing in the material to warrant criminal charges against Clinton.
(AP)
7 Responses
YAY! YAY! YAY!
BORUCH HASHEM! THANK YOU HASHEM and THANK YOU JULIAN ASSANGE, Hashem’s messenger! WIKILEAKS DESERVES A MEDAL! Hopefully Donald Trump will show his hakaras hatov to him for bringing about this historic victory – perhaps by granting him asylum in the US embassy.
With all the rigging, fraud, theft, repeated dead votes, bribes and the massive amount of money Hillary spent against Trump, and nonetheless for Trump to win IN A LANDSLIDE is a huge miracle. Most Americans are not that corrupt after all and see the truth for what it is. Mainstream media propaganda controlled by George Tzoros, as well as James Comey’s exonerating the biggest criminal and dropping all charges, got lots of Democrats switching to Trump.
9% lead for Hillary; 1%-2% lead for Hillary; ties, hah??? Haven’t I told you all along that Hillary’s teeny-weeny rallies are best proof that MSMP are liars and according to real media Trump is winning in a landslide? Yet you gullibly preferred to accept MSM propaganda who didn’t accomplish a thing with their lies except to make the wise ones switch to Trump. Hopefully, you’ve learned a good lesson. מלאך רע יענה אמן Even the bad angel said Amen that justice and truth prevailed. The world is not hefker. You can’t fool all the people all the time.
Mainstream propaganda media got their nice compensation, now they can slaughter the machsheifa witch as she deserves. Hope Trump will put her behind bars as soon as he takes the reigns. And hopefully Trump will dump all the rigged voting machines once and for all and install new and trustworthy ones to return the confidence in the American people.
After 30 years that America has been sinking deeper and deeper, it’s time to rebuild America and bring the level back up to make America great again. Trump and Putin, be’ezras Hashem Yisborech, will put the world back on the right track to flourish again, hopefully with Moshiach ben Dovid very soon.
What a biased liberal article this is, missing no chances to praise obama’s ‘accomplishments’ that Trump theatens to undo. It scorns his personal life, his campaign, and basically the entire free American population.
Hey let’s keep things here in perspective:
After 30 years that America has been sinking deeper and deeper (20 of which were presided over by republican presidents), (and after close to 2,000 years of galus) it’s time to rebuild America and bring the level back up to make America great again. (it’s time to rebuild klal yisroel through torah mitzvos and masim tovim) Trump and Putin, (Our teshuva, tefila, tzedaka, tefila, zechus avos and havtachas hanevi’im) be’ezras Hashem Yisborech, will put the world back on the right track to flourish again, hopefully with Moshiach ben Dovid very soon.
The President-elect will be in court in a couple of weeks for fraud, what an honor for the country.
say good bye to all the government programs that support boro park lakewood etc.
the only way trump brings moshiach is by instigating milchemes gog omogog
Couldn’t YWN find a better article to post, rather than this garbage from AP? All it does is blast trump and praise Obama and Hillary.