التصنيف: أخبار

  • ماذا قالت أمريكا عن وزير دفاع إسرائيل المقال وخليفته؟

    ماذا قالت أمريكا عن وزير دفاع إسرائيل المقال وخليفته؟

    علقت الولايات المتحدة على إقالة رئيس الوزراء الإسرائيلي بنيامين نتنياهو لوزير الدفاع يوآف غالانت وتعيين يسرائيل كاتس، وزير الخارجية الحالي، وزيرا للدفاع، فيما يحل جدعون ساعر محل كاتس كوزير للخارجية.
  • نائب وزير الزراعة: لائحة قانون حيازة الحيوانات الخطرة بمجلس الوزراء وتصدر قريبا


    قال مصطفى الصياد نائب وزير الزراعة واستصلاح الاراضى، إن اللائحة التنفيذية للقانون رقم (29) لسنة 2023 بشأن تنظيم حيازة الحيوانات الخطرة والكلاب وصلت مجلس الوزراء وسوف يتم اعتمادها وخروجها للنور فى القريب.


     


    جاء ذلك خلال اجتماع لجنة الإدارة المحلية بمجلس النواب برئاسة النائب أحمد السجيني، مساء اليوم، لمتابعة خطة الحكومة بشأن وضع رؤية للقضاء على ظاهرة انتشار الحيوانات الضالة بمعظم محافظات الجمهورية في ضوء الإستراتيجية الوطنية للقضاء على مرض السعار 2030، وذلك في ضوء القانون رقم (29) لسنة 2023، بإصدار قانون تنظيم حيازة الحيوانات الخطرة والكلاب.


     


    جاء ذلك ردا على سؤال المهندس أحمد السجيني، رئيس لجنة الإدارة المحلية بمجلس النواب، خلال الاجتماع، عن أسباب تأخر صدور اللائحة التنفيذية لقانون تنظيم حيازة الحيوانات الخطرة والكلاب.


     


    وقالت منى خليل، رئيس جمعية الرفق بالحيوان: إننا لمسنا خطوات جادة فى منع تسمم الكلاب، ولكن ليس بشكل كامل، موضحة أن لديها أسماء أطباء طلبت من الناس على صفحات السوشيال ميديا شراء سموم لقتل الكلاب، ورد السجينى، بأن الأهالي يهاجمون الأطباء البيطريين بسبب انتشار عقر الكلاب للمواطنين، وأن ما يقوم به الأطباء هو رد على الأهالي، “ولا نستطيع أن نمنع هذا إلا بخروج القانون واللائحة التنفيذية للنور وبدء التنفيذ”.


     


    وتابعت خليل: إننا تعاملنا بسرعة مع الشكاوى القادمة من محافظة المنوفية، وقمنا بالنزول والتعامل مع الكلاب الضالة هناك وتعقيمها، ولكن لدينا عائق بسبب عجز الأطباء البيطريين، وقد تحدثنا بهذا الشأن مع نقابة الأطباء البيطريين، موضحة أن الذئاب تنتشر مع ندرة الكلاب.




    وأكدت أن اقتراح أحد النواب بزيادة عدد الشلاتر هو حل غير علمى بشكل كافى، ويحتاج لأراضى كثيرة وموارد كثيرة غير متوفرة، والفلاتر أساسا موجودة لحالات معينة وليس للكل، والمفترض أن يتم تعقيم الكلب ثم رجوعه مرة أخرى إلى منطقته، كما أشارت إلى أن استراتيجية 2030 بشأن مواجهة السعار لم تنشر ولا أحد يعرف عنها شيئا.


     


    وقال النائب أحمد السجينى، رئيس اللجنة: الحكومة السابقة حكومة بليدة، والحكومة الجديدة نتمنى منها أن تكون مختلفة، فليس من المنطقي أن ننتظر سنة كامل لخروج لائحة تنفيذية لقانون من 27 مادة.


     


    وطالب النائب زكى عباس، بعمل شلاتر على الأطراف الصحراوية والمحافظات لتعقيم الكلاب الضارة وعدم تكاثرها، موضحا أن تعامل بعض المؤسسات الحكومية مع الكلاب سىء جدل.


     


    وقال النائب طلبة النحال: “إن الكلاب الضالة مع الوقت اكتسبت مهارات مختلفة وأصبحت أكثر شراسة وتمشى فى مجموعات، وأصبحت حالات العض من الكلاب الضالة فى القرى كبيرة، والموضوع مش بسيط، وجود الإنسان أهم من حقوق الحيوان”، ورد رئيس اللجنة: إن الرحمة للجميع إنسان وحيوان.


     


    وتحدث النائب أحمد الشيشينى، عن أنباء عن وجود ذئاب بالقرى الموجودة بدائرته، وقال إنه من أكثر الناس خوفا من الكلاب، ويسكن بمنطقة المقطم المقيم بها حاليا وفيها أعداد كبيرة من الكلاب التى انتشرت بشكل مخيف.


     

  • After months of buildup, news outlets finally have the chance to report on election results

    After months of buildup, news outlets finally have the chance to report on election results

    The final answer may or may not come on Tuesday, but news organizations that have spent months reporting on the presidential campaign between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump finally have the opportunity to report on actual results.

    Broadcast, cable news networks, digital news outlets’ sites and one streaming service — Amazon — all set aside Tuesday night to deliver the news from their own operations.

    Actual results will be a relief to news organizations that had weeks — and an excruciatingly long day of voting — to talk about an election campaign that polls have repeatedly shown to be remarkably tight. The first hint of what voters were thinking came shortly after 5 p.m. Eastern, when networks reported that exit polls showed voters were unhappy with the way the country was going.

    It’s still not clear whether that dissatisfaction will be blamed on Harris, the current vice president, or former President Trump, who was voted out of office in 2020, CNN’s Dana Bash said.

    Trying to draw meaning from anecdotal evidence

    Otherwise, networks were left showing pictures of polling places on Tuesday and trying to extract wisdom from anecdotal evidence.

    “Dixville Notch is a metaphor for the entire race,” CNN’s Alyssa Farah Griffin said, making efforts to draw meaning from the tiny New Hampshire community that reported its 3-3 vote for Harris and Trump in the early morning hours on Tuesday.

    MSNBC assigned reporter Jacob Soboroff to talk to voters waiting in line outside a polling place near Temple University in Philadelphia, where actor Paul Rudd was handing out water bottles. Soboroff was called on by one young voter to take a picture with herself and Rudd.

    On Fox News Channel, Harris surrogate Pete Buttigieg appeared for a contentious interview with “Fox & Friends” host Brian Kilmeade.

    “Is this an interview or a debate?” Buttigieg said at one point. “Can I at least finish the sentence?”

    Former NBC News anchor Brian Williams began a one-night appearance on Amazon to deliver results, and he already had one unexpected guest in the California studio where he was operating. Puck reporter Tara Palmeri was supposed to report from Trump headquarters in West Palm Beach, but was denied credentials to attend by the former president’s team.

    Trump campaign manager Chris LaCivita, in revealing the banishment, described her as a “gossip columnist” in a post on the social media site X. Palmeri told Williams that she had accurately reported some anxiety within the Trump camp about who was voting early.

    Amazon said Palmeri was replaced at Trump’s Florida headquarters by New York Post reporter Lydia Moynihan.

    Neither Axios or Politico would immediately confirm reports that some of their reporters were similarly banned, and the Trump campaign did not immediately return a call for comment.

    New York Times strike affects an election night fixture

    One notable election night media fixture — the Needle on The New York Times’ website — was endangered by a strike by technical workers at the newspaper.

    The newspaper said early Tuesday that it was unclear whether it would be able to include the feature on its website during election night coverage since it relies on computer systems maintained by engineers at the company, including some who went on strike early Monday.

    The Needle, as its name suggests, is a graphic that uses voting results and other calculations to point toward the likelihood of either presidential candidate winning.

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

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    First introduced in 2016, it became nightmare-inducing for supporters of Democrat Hillary Clinton, who the Times determined had an 85% percent chance of winning the election. Readers watched as the Needle moved from forecasting a “likely” Clinton victory at the beginning of election night, to “toss-up” by 10 p.m. Eastern to “leaning Trump” at midnight. Trump won the election.

    The Times said that “we will only publish a live version of the Needle if we are confident” that the computer systems it relies upon for data are stable.

    Some 650 members of the Times’ Tech Guild went on strike early Monday.

    ___

    David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder.

  • Ten states where abortion rights are on the ballot this election day | US elections 2024

    Americans in 10 US states are voting on Tuesday on whether to enshrine the right to abortion into their state constitutions.

    In some states, like Arizona and Florida, they have the opportunity to overturn bans that state legislatures passed after the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade in June 2022, doing away with the federal right to an abortion. In others, like Colorado and New York, they are voting on whether to boost protections for the procedure and make them harder to roll back in the event conservatives take power. And in one state – Nebraska – two competing measures will ask voters to choose between enshrining an existing 12-week ban or replacing it with more expansive abortion protections.

    Since Roe was overturned, seven states have held abortion-related ballot referendums, and abortion rights supporters have won all of them. The results of Tuesday’s measure will not be the final word; states that vote to overturn bans will see litigation or legislation before those bans are repealed. But taken together, the results will indicate how potent the issue remains after two years without Roe.

    Results will begin rolling in after 8pm ET, when the final polls close in Florida, Missouri and Maryland. However, it could take days for a complete tally of all of the votes.

    Arizona

    Abortion rights supporters in Arizona, a key battleground state in the presidential election, are vying to pass a measure that would enshrine the right to abortion until fetal viability, or about 24 weeks, in the state constitution. Abortion is currently banned in the state after 15 weeks.

    Colorado

    Colorado’s measure, which needs to garner 55% of the vote, would amend the state constitution to block the state government from denying, impeding or discriminating against individuals’ “right to abortion”. There is currently no gestational limit on the right to abortion in the state.

    Florida

    Florida’s measure would roll back the state’s six-week ban by adding the right to an abortion up until viability to the state’s constitution. It needs 60% of the vote to pass.

    Maryland

    Legislators, rather than citizens, initiated Maryland’s measure, which would amend the state constitution to confirm individuals’ “right to reproductive freedom, including but not limited to the ability to make and effectuate decisions to prevent, continue, or end the individual’s pregnancy”. There is currently no gestational limit on the right to abortion in the state.

    Missouri

    Voters will decide whether to overturn the state’s current, near-total abortion ban and establish a constitutional guarantee to the “fundamental right to reproductive freedom”, including abortion care until fetal viability.

    Montana

    Abortion in Montana is currently legal. If passed, the measure would amend the state constitution to explicitly include “a right to make and carry out decisions about one’s own pregnancy, including the right to abortion” up until fetal viability, or after viability to protect a patient’s life or health.

    Nebraska

    Nebraska is the lone state with two competing ballot measures. If both measures pass, the measure that garners the most votes would take effect.

    The first would enshrine the right to abortion up until viability into the state constitution.

    The second would enshrine the current 12-week ban.

    Nevada

    Nevada’s measure would amend the state constitution to protect the right to abortion up until viability, or after viability in cases where a patient’s health or life may be threatened.

    New York

    New York state legislators added a measure to the ballot to broaden the state’s anti-discrimination laws by adding, among other things, protections against discrimination on the basis of “sex, including sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes, and reproductive health”. It does not explicitly reference abortion, but advocates say its pregnancy-related language encompasses abortion protections. Abortion is protected in New York until fetal viability.

    South Dakota

    South Dakota’s measure is less sweeping than other abortion rights measures, because it would only protect the right to abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. Although this measure will appear on the ballot, there will be a trial over the validity of the signatures that were collected for it. Depending out the outcome of the trial, the measure – and any votes cast for it – could be invalidated.

  • Secondary Presidential Battlegrounds – 270toWin

    Secondary Presidential Battlegrounds – 270toWin

    While most of the focus has been on the seven incredibly competitive battleground states, these other locations – nine states and two congressional districts – are worth keeping an eye on. These are all rated as ‘Likely’ for Trump or Harris in the final Consensus Electoral Map. However, for the most part, polling margins are in the mid-to-high single digits. For more results, visit the Live Electoral College Map >.

    These are ordered by final poll closing time and state.

    All times Eastern (ET). Where states span multiple time zones, no winner will be projected before all polls have closed. Vote counts and race projections provided by Decision Desk HQ.

    7:00 PM Eastern

    Virginia – 13 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 49.2%, Trump 43.4% (D + 5.8%)

    7:30 PM Eastern

    Ohio – 17 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Trump Trump 52%, Harris 44.3% (R + 7.7%)

    8:00 PM Eastern

    Florida – 30 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Trump Trump 51.1%, Harris 44.9% (R + 6.2%)

    Maine – Two Statewide Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 50.3%, Trump 41.7% (D + 8.6%)

    Maine District 2 – One Electoral Vote





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Trump Trump 48.7%, Harris 42.7% (R + 6%)

    New Hampshire – Four Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 50.5%, Trump 45.5% (D + 5%)

    Iowa – 6 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Trump Trump 50%, Harris 45.3% (R + 4.7%)

    Minnesota – 10 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 49.8%, Trump 43.6% (D + 6.2%)

    Nebraska District 2 – One Electoral Vote





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 53%, Trump 43% (D + 10%)

    New Mexico – Five Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Harris Harris 49.8%, Trump 43.8% (D + 6%)

    Texas – 40 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Likely Trump Trump 51.8%, Harris 44.4% (R + 7.4%)

  • نائب بالشيوخ: الموقف المصري تجاه فلسطين واضح بالأفعال وليس الخطب الرنانة

    نائب بالشيوخ: الموقف المصري تجاه فلسطين واضح بالأفعال وليس الخطب الرنانة


    أكد الدكتور جمال أبو الفتوح عضو مجلس الشيوخ، أن العلاقة بين مصر وغزة علاقة تاريخية تستند إلى مقومات غير قابلة للاهتزاز، ولا تؤثر على متانتها رؤى أشخاص قد تختلف أجنداتهم في مرحلة ما، وهذا ما جعل مصر الداعم الأول للشعب الفلسطيني منذ اندلاع الحرب في السابع من أكتوبر العام الماضي وحتى هذه اللحظة.


    ولفت إلى أن كافة الشائعات التي ترغب في توتر العلاقات بين الجانبين مصيرها الفشل، لأن رد الدولة المصرية على كل شائعة تهدف لتحقيق وقيعة مع الأشقاء في غزة يكون بالأفعال التي تُتَرجم على أرض الواقع من تحركات على الصعيد السياسي والإغاثي والإنساني أيضا، على مدار أكثر من عام.


    وأضاف أبوالفتوح، أن كل من يرغب في حدوث وقيعة بين مصر والشعب الفلسطيني الشقيق روجوا عبر وسائل إعلام مغرضة باستقبال ميناء الإسكندرية سفينة ألمانية تحمل مواد عسكرية لصالح الاحتلال، في محاولة من العناصر والأبواق المناهضة للدولة المصرية لتشويه الدور المصري التاريخي والراسخ في دعم القضية الفلسطينية ليست من السابع من أكتوبر فقط بل من عقود ماضية، فقد دفعت مصر الشهداء والجرحى من أبنائها من أجل دعم القضية ومواجهة الاحتلال الإسرائيلي الغاشم على الأراضي الفلسطينية، كما تقود مصر حرب سياسية ودبلوماسية الآن في المحافل الدولية من أجل وقف مخطط التهجير القسري ووقف المجازر الدامية التي تحدث يوميا في القطاع وسط صمت من المجتمع الدولي.


    وأشار عضو مجلس الشيوخ، إلى أن موقف مصر مما يحدث في غزة وجرائم الإبادة التي يتعرض لها الشعب الفلسطيني، واضح و صريح فلم تتخذ مصر دور حيادي لحظة واحدة مع القضية الفلسطينية، بل تسعى إلى نصرتها ودعمها، وهو ما دفع إسرائيل لإطلاق الأكاذيب والشائعات من أجل الانتقام من الموقف المصري الداعم الشعب الفلسطيني، فقد زعمت من قبل بأن تهريب السلاح إلى القطاع يحدث من خلال مصر، كما زعمت أيضا غلق معبر رفح من الجانب المصري، وروجت لمخطط التهجير القسري من أجل تحقيق أطماعها الاستيطانية على حساب آلاف المدنيين الأبرياء، لكن القاهرة كانت حريصة على الرد على كافة هذه المزاعم بالأدلة والبراهين التى كشفت الوجه القبيح للاحتلال أمام الرأي العام العربي


    وأوضح الدكتور جمال أبوالفتوح، أن مصر امتلكت الحصة الأكبر في حصة المساعدات الإنسانية العابرة إلى القطاع، وسط ظروف الحرب الاستثنائية، فقد ظلت شاحنات الإغاثة مرابطة على الحدود أيام عديدة، حتى تمكنت من دخول تلك المساعدات التي كانت محملة بكافة الاحتياجات الغذائية والمعيشية لتخفيف المعاناة عن مئات الآلاف من النازحين، في ظل ظروف معيشية صعبة للغاية، تبرهن جريمة هذا الاحتلال الذي ضرب بكافة المواثيق الدولية واتفاقيات حقوق الإنسان عرض الحائط وسط دعم غربي قوي كشف عن ازدواجية المعايير لدى الغرب، مشيراً إلى أن الحرب الحالية في غزة هي نتيجة سنوات من الممارسات الإسرائيلية الهادفة إلى ترسيخ الاحتلال غير القانوني، فنحن بحاجة إلى معالجة جذور الأزمة من خلال إحياء وتنفيذ “حل الدولتين” لتجنب احتمالات اشتعال المنطقة، التي باتت على وشك الدخول في حرب إقليمية.

  • Rudy Giuliani ordered to appear in court after missing deadline to turn over Mercedes, other assets

    Rudy Giuliani ordered to appear in court after missing deadline to turn over Mercedes, other assets

    A judge has ordered Rudy Giuliani to appear in a New York courtroom to explain why he missed a deadline to surrender his belongings — including a Mercedes that appeared to be the same car he was spotted in Tuesday — as part of a $148 million defamation judgment.

    U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman issued the order late Monday after lawyers for Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss — two former Georgia election workers who were awarded the massive judgement — reported to the court that they went to Giuliani’s Manhattan apartment last week to see what assets were there, but that it had been cleared out.

    Liman had set an Oct. 29 deadline for Giuliani to surrender many of his possessions to representatives for Freeman and Moss, but none of the items has been turned over yet, lawyers for the former election workers said Monday. The judge ordered Giuliani and his lawyers to appear in court on Thursday.

    Those possessions include his $5 million Upper East Side apartment, a 1980 Mercedes once owned by movie star Lauren Bacall, and a variety of other belongings — from his television to a shirt signed by New York Yankees legend Joe DiMaggio to 26 luxury watches.

    On Tuesday, media reports showed Giuliani in the passenger seat of what appeared to be a 1980 Mercedes, with another man driving, at a polling place in Palm Beach, Florida, where Donald Trump cast his ballot. It could not be immediately confirmed if it was the same car he was supposed to turn over.

    Aaron Nathan, a lawyer for Freeman and Moss, pointed out the reports of Giuliani in the Mercedes to the judge in a court filing Tuesday.

    “It is clear that Mr. Giuliani is flouting his obligations under the Court’s Turnover and Receivership Order,” Nathan wrote.

    Michael Ragusa, head of Giuliani’s security, sent a statement to The Associated Press referencing the 1980 Mercedes.

    “Mayor Giuliani, is an 80-year-old man with a bad knee and 9/11-related lung disease, he relies on this vehicle as his primary means of transportation in Florida, where there is no mass transit system like New York City’s,” Ragusa wrote. “The way he is being pushed toward poverty by those targeting him — after all he has done for this country — is appalling and it is clearly politically motivated.”

    Giuliani’s spokesperson, Ted Goodman, added that Giuliani’s lawyers have “requested documentation to transfer over the title of the vehicle, and haven’t heard back from opposing counsel.”

    The judge originally scheduled a status conference by phone for Thursday, but changed it to an in-person hearing and specifically ordered Giuliani to appear in person in response to the report by Freeman and Moss’ attorneys.

    Goodman said Giuliani has made his possessions available to Freeman and Moss. He did not directly answer questions about why no assets have been turned over so far.

    “Opposing counsel, acting either negligently or deliberately in a deceptive manner, are simply attempting to further bully and intimidate Mayor Giuliani until he is rendered penniless and homeless,” Goodman said in a statement. “This is just another way that they’ve weaponized our once-sacred justice system. It should concern each and every American.”

    Goodman added that Giuliani has put “a few items” in storage over the past year and “anything else removed was related to his two livestream programs that stream each and every weeknight across his social media platforms.”

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

    News outlets globally count on the AP for accurate U.S. election results. Since 1848, the AP has been calling races up and down the ballot. Support us. Donate to the AP.

    Lawyers for Giuliani did not return email messages seeking comment Monday night or Tuesday morning.

    On Tuesday afternoon, Liman rejected a request made earlier in the day by Giuliani’s lawyer, Kenneth Caruso, to either postpone the in-person hearing to next week or hold it by phone Thursday as originally planned. Caruso said in a court filing that Giuliani had a “contractual commitment” to perform a live radio broadcast on Thursday and Friday evenings.

    “In order to keep this commitment, he needs to be in his condo in Palm Beach, where he has his broadcasting equipment,” Caruso wrote, referring to Giuliani’s property in Florida. “We note that broadcasts, such as those described above, currently provide Mr. Giuliani’s only source of earned income.”

    Liman turned down the request, saying in a ruling posted on the court case docket that “no good cause has been provided.”

    Giuliani, the former New York City mayor and longtime ally of Trump, was found liable for defamation for falsely accusing Freeman and Moss of ballot fraud during the 2020 election. Giuliani accused them of sneaking in ballots in suitcases, counting ballots multiple times and tampering with voting machines, as he pushed Trump’s unsubstantiated election fraud allegations.

    Freeman and Moss said the lies led to death threats against them that made them fear for their lives. A jury awarded them $148 million last year, and they have been seeking to take possession of many of Giuliani’s assets in the court case in New York.

    Nathan said in court documents that Giuliani and his lawyers have refused to answer basic questions about the location of most of the valuables subject to the court order.

    On Thursday, lawyers for the women were given access to Giuliani’s New York apartment in order to assess, along with a moving company representative, the transportation and storage needs for the property meant to be turned over.

    Nathan wrote that the residence was already “substantially empty” when the group arrived and that they were told most of the contents of the apartment had been moved out about four weeks prior.

    That, Nathan said, includes the “vast majority” of the valuables known to be stored there, including art, sports memorabilia and expensive furniture.

    Giuliani’s lawyers have argued — so far unsuccessfully — that Freeman and Moss should not be allowed to obtain and sell his belongings while his appeal is pending in a federal court in Washington.

  • Tens of millions vote in US election as Harris-Trump contest heads toward nail-biting finish | US elections 2024

    Tens of millions of voters went to the polls in the United States on Tuesday, see-sawing between anxiety and hope, to send one of the closest and most consequential presidential elections hurtling towards an uncertain finish.

    The Democrat Kamala Harris and her Republican opponent, Donald Trump, appeared locked in a knife-edge contest with hardly any daylight between the pair in national opinion polls that have barely budged in weeks.

    As the first polls closed in Kentucky and Indiana on Tuesday evening, exit polls suggested concerns over the state of the economy and the future of US democracy weighed heavily on voters’ minds as they cast their ballots.

    According to the AP Votecast survey, four in 10 voters named the economy and jobs as the most important problem facing the country, a potentially hopeful sign for Trump given that Republicans generally receive higher marks on their handling of the economy. But roughly half of voters cited the fate of democracy, which has become a focal point of Harris’ campaign, as their largest concern this year.

    But election experts often warn against overanalyzing the findings of the earliest exit polls. Voters will get their first clearer sense of the outcome at 7pm ET, when Florida and Georgia start reporting results.

    From coast to coast, in sprawling cities and small towns, in churches and school gyms, people waited patiently in line to play their part in the world’s most powerful democracy and choose between two sharply different visions for America. They mostly encountered a smooth process, with isolated reports of hiccups including long queues, technical issues and ballot printing errors.

    Harris, 60, was among more than 82 million people who voted early, having mailed her ballot to California. From her vice-presidential residence in Washington DC, now secured by 8ft-high metal fences, she conducted phone interviews with radio stations in battleground states. Harris then took part in a phone bank event at the Democratic National Committee headquarters.

    People queue outside a polling station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday. Photograph: David Muse/EPA

    Trump, 78, voted on Tuesday near his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, and said he was feeling “very confident”. Wearing a red “Make America great again” cap, he told reporters: “It looks like Republicans have shown up in force.” The former president said he had not prepared a speech about the outcome, adding: “I’m not a Democrat. I’m able to make a speech on very short notice.”

    Trump has been told by some advisers that he should prematurely declare victory on election night if he is sufficiently ahead of Harris in battleground states such as Pennsylvania, according to people close to him. Meanwhile the New York Times reported that Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, who has spent at least $119m in support of Trump, would watch the results with him at Mar-a-Lago.

    After billions of dollars in spending and months of frenetic campaigning in seven crucial swing states – Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, Georgia and North Carolina – the candidates appeared deadlocked. Recent polling has been unable to discern a clear pattern or advantage for either Harris or Trump in this electoral battleground, though most experts agree that whoever wins the Rust belt state of Pennsylvania is likely to have a clear advantage.

    Robert Brady, the Democratic party chair in Philadelphia, the biggest city in Pennsylvania, said turnout at polling stations was “extremely high” and that “is great for us”. But elsewhere in the state Tiana Peters, a 39-year-old Democrat from Allentown, voted for Trump. “The last four years, nothing really good happened,” she said. “Giving away free money to the people that can’t afford houses, financially that doesn’t work, you know.”

    Kamala Harris greets volunteers as she prepares to phone bank at the DNC headquarters on election day. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

    It is the swing states that will decide the election because, under the complex American political system, the result is decided not by the national popular vote but an electoral college in which each state’s number of electors is weighed roughly by the size of its population.

    Each candidate needs 270 votes in the electoral college to clinch victory, and the battleground is formed of those states where polls indicate a state could go either way. Democrats have won the popular vote in seven of the past eight presidential elections but lost out to George W Bush and Trump in the electoral college.

    The result may not be quickly known. With polling so tight, full results in the crucial swing states are unlikely to be available on Tuesday night and may not even emerge on Wednesday, leaving the US on tenterhooks as to who may emerge as America’s next president.

    That will only fuel jitters in foreign capitals where the election is being watched closely. Harris would probably follow Joe Biden’s foreign policy playbook, focusing on alliances and maintaining the defence of Ukraine, where victory for Trump’s “America first” ethos would boost rightwing populists in Europe and elsewhere.

    Tuesday’s election brought the curtain down on a remarkable and historic election campaign that deeply divided American society and upped the stress levels of many of its citizens amid warnings of civil unrest, especially in a scenario where Harris wins and Trump contests the result.

    Harris put together a whirlwind campaign in just over 100 days after 81-year-old Biden stepped aside. She is bidding to become the first woman, first Black woman and first woman of south Asian descent to be elected president but, unlike Hillary Clinton in 2008, she downplayed the historic nature of her candidacy.

    She centred her campaign on the autocratic threat that Trump represents. In her final big signature event, Harris staged a rally of 75,000 supporters on the Ellipse in Washington – the spot where Trump helped encourage his supporters to attack the US Capitol on 6 January 2021.

    “On day one, if elected, Donald Trump would walk into that office with an enemies list. When elected, I will walk in with a to-do list full of priorities on what I will get done for the American people,” Harris told the crowd.

    Harris’s campaign has tried to represent a page turning on the Trump era and threat of his return to the White House. She has acknowledged that calling Trump a fascist was a fair reflection of his political beliefs and the intentions of his movement, while insisting that she represents a choice that will serve all sides of America’s deeply fractured political landscape.

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    Donald Trump and his wife Melania Trump depart after casting their votes in Palm Beach, Florida. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    The vice-president has also emphasised reproductive freedom in the first presidential election since the supreme court, with three Trump appointees, ended the constitutional right to abortion. Opinion polls suggest a record gender gap, with men backing Trump and women supporting Harris.

    Trump, meanwhile, would be the oldest president ever elected. He would also be the first defeated president in 132 years to win another term in the White House, and the first person convicted of a crime to take over the Oval Office.

    He ran a campaign fuelled by a deep sense of grievance, both personal, at his legal travails, and the perception among many of his supporters of an ailing America that is under threat from the Democrats.

    That sense of victimhood has been fueled by lies and conspiracy theories that have baselessly painted Biden and Harris as far-left figures who have wrecked the American economy with high inflation and an obsession with identity politics.

    The former president told supporters “I am your retribution” and threatened to prosecute political foes, journalists and others. He also suggested turning the US military against what he calls “the enemy from within”.

    Trump put immigration and border security at the heart of his campaign pitch, painting a picture of America as overrun with crime caused by illegal immigration with language that has often veered into outright racism and fearmongering. He has referred to undocumented immigrants as “animals” with “bad genes” who are “poisoning the blood of our country”.

    Read more of the Guardian’s 2024 US election coverage

    During the campaign, Trump vowed to replace thousands of federal workers with loyalists, impose sweeping tariffs on allies and foes alike and stage the biggest deportation operation in US history.

    The huge divisions between the two campaigns and the language used by candidates – especially Trump and his allies – have led to widespread fears of violence or unrest as voting day plays out and especially as the count goes on. In the run-up to election day, ballot drop boxes used for early voting were destroyed in several US states.

    Jocelyn Benson, the Michigan secretary of state, told the Washington Post newspaper: “There is the potential for small flare-ups throughout our state and other states – little fires everywhere. Collectively they could become a massive firestorm that is more difficult to contain because the embers have been burning throughout the nation.”

    At the same time, however, it was Trump himself who was the subject of two assassination attempts during the campaign. At a rally in Pennsylvania, an assassin’s bullet grazed his ear and at a golf course in Florida, a gunman lay in wait for an ambush, only to be foiled by an eagle-eyed Secret Service agent before he could open fire. Neither shooter seemed coherently politically motivated or definitively aligned with one side or another.

    Tuesday would not decide the presidency alone. All 435 seats in the House of Representatives were up for grabs, along with 34 of the 100 seats in the Senate. Thirteen state and territorial governorships and numerous other state and local elections were also taking place. Ten states including Arizona, Colorado and Florida had abortion-related measures on the ballot.

    Additional reporting by Sam Levine in Allentown, Pennsylvania and Hugo Lowell in West Palm Beach, Florida

  • The Seven Presidential Battlegrounds – 270toWin

    The Seven Presidential Battlegrounds – 270toWin

    Seven states – worth 93 electoral votes in 2024 – have dominated this presidential election cycle seemingly from the beginning. In the final Consensus Electoral Map, six of these seven states remain toss-ups. 

    The polls have largely agreed as well, with neither candidate separated by more than 2% in any of these seven states. That said, keep in mind that polling errors are often correlated. Given that all of these states are within a normal polling error, it is quite possible that either Harris or Trump could end up winning most or all of them.

    On this page you will find live results for these battleground states. We’ve divided them into three geographic groups which – conveniently – also closely corresponds with when the polls close in those states. For more results, visit the Live Electoral College Map >.

    All times Eastern (ET). Where states span multiple time zones, no winner will be projected before all polls have closed. Vote counts and race projections provided by Decision Desk HQ.

    Sun Belt – East

    Georgia – 16 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Trump 48.7%, Harris 47.5% (R + 1.2%)

    Polls close at 7:00 PM ET.

    North Carolina – 16 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Trump 48.6%, Harris 47.3% (R + 1.3%)

    Polls close at 7:30 PM ET.

    Rust Belt

    Pennsylvania – 19 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Trump 48.2%, Harris 48.2% (TIE)

    Polls close at 8:00 PM ET.

    Michigan – 15 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Harris 48.6%, Trump 46.8% (D + 1.8%)

    Polls close at 8:00 PM ET, except 9:00 PM ET for a portion of the Upper Peninsula that observes Central Time.

    Wisconsin – 10 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Harris 48.8%, Trump 47.7% (D + 1.1%)

    Polls close at 9:00 PM ET.

    Sun Belt – West

    Arizona – 11 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Leans Trump Trump 48.5%, Harris 46.8% (R + 1.7%)

    Polls close at 9:00 PM ET.

    Nevada – 6 Electoral Votes





    Consensus Ranking Polling Average
    Toss-up Trump 48.2%, Harris 47.6% (R + 0.6%)

    Polls close at 10:00 PM ET.

  • كامالا هاريس توجه رسالة للناخبين في اللحظات الأخيرة يوم الاقتراع

    كامالا هاريس توجه رسالة للناخبين في اللحظات الأخيرة يوم الاقتراع

    توقفت نائب الرئيس الأمريكي، كامالا هاريس في مقر اللجنة الوطنية للحزب الديمقراطي في العاصمة واشنطن، الثلاثاء، لتشكر أولئك الذين دعموا حملتها.