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Her running mate, Kamala Harris, has been elected the first black citizen and the first American citizen of Indian descent to be elected vice president of the United States.
The countdown has lasted four days since last Tuesday’s US presidential election. The election, held amid a coronavirus epidemic, saw a record number of early voting, delaying the count in several states.
Presidential and incumbent Republican candidates Donald Trump and Joe Biden won as expected in states where vote counting ended early.
So the answer to the question of who is the president is to look at the voting results of some states that are considered battlegrounds.
These days, the world is watching the vote count in Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Alaska, along with Pennsylvania.
Previously, Trump was ahead in Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina and Alaska, but the picture changed on Friday after the postal count began. Biden edged out Trump in Pennsylvania and Georgia.
In Georgia, where 99 percent of the votes were counted on Friday, the two candidates counted due to a narrow margin.
Meanwhile, Trump called for the vote counting to be halted as the election results leaned toward Biden, relying on early voting. He alleged vote rigging without any evidence. His supporters also went to court to demand an end to the counting of votes in Pennsylvania.
In a global debate, Biden scored a wide margin of victory over Trump in Pennsylvania on Saturday, garnering 20 electoral votes. Biden has already garnered 253 votes, more than the 260 needed for the presidency. He now has 263 electoral votes.
Former President Barack Obama’s vice president was Joe Biden before he became the Democratic presidential candidate. He is also the oldest senator from Delaware.
Biden has always said in his election campaign that the “soul of the nation” is now in crisis and will work to heal the wounds of President Trump’s administration.
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