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Expectations showed that Trump and Biden shared the top states in the race for the White House, with initial estimates indicating that Trump would win Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Oklahoma and West Virginia. Additionally, the results indicated that he won four additional states, which are Louisiana, Wyoming, and North and South Dakota. Unsurprisingly, the president of the United States won Alabama, Arkansas and Mississippi, the three southern states that are a traditional stronghold of Republicans.
For his part, Biden won Vermont and Virginia, the traditionally Democratic states of Illinois and Rhode Island, and Colorado and New York, which is also a traditional Democratic stronghold. But in Florida, a state in which Trump should win his bid by 270 electoral votes, Biden was 50.3 percent ahead of 48.7 percent, with almost 90 percent of the votes counted. Biden still has multiple avenues to get 270 electoral votes without Florida, even though he spent a lot of time and money trying to change the outcome of the state that supported Trump in 2016.