Was the 2024 presidential election close? It became clear that President-elect Donald Trump was on pace to win relatively early in the evening. Interactive maps of election results showed the entire country shifting right.
Washington — More than two weeks after Election Day 2024, the results in a handful of races for the U.S. House of Representatives are still outstanding. But enough races have been decided for CBS News to project that Republicans will hold onto control of the House with at least 218 seats, the number needed for a majority.
Vice President Kamala Harris‘s presidential campaign is still sending multiple emails per day pleading with supporters for funds, more than three weeks after Election Day. The emails, the most recent being from Tuesday night,
I was so angry, I wasn’t fit to be around. I apologize to all those who endured my outbursts of rage, which lasted for years,” Bill Clinton writes in his new book.
Kamala Harris’s admission that losing the election was a blow was cut from a clip shared by the Democrat’s official X account.
The statewide certification votes Tuesday in Nevada and New Mexico follow a vote Monday to certify the results in Arizona.
While smooth, election season in Arizona still isn't really over. The Gaggle discusses what still needs to be done to wrap up the 2024 election.
Turnout for the presidential election is not yet final, but it’s clear that fewer people voted in 2024 compared with 2020.
State legislative and Supreme Court races were not terribly decisive, while we saw setbacks for ranked-choice voting and minimum-wage increases.
Plus, special counsel Jack Smith files to drop all federal charges against Trump. And Biden pardons his final turkeys.
The drubbing Democrats took in Pennsylvania has prompted vows to rebound. But there are also lingering doubts about whether it might be leaving the ranks of swing states for a right-leaning existence more like Ohio’s.
The forecasts, like those from Decision Desk HQ, Nate Silver and 538, are now ubiquitous, but their accuracy is hard to measure.