Trumpâs Arizona victory follows candidate Joe Bidenâs upset win in the state in 2020, a 0.3-percent squeaker that marked the first time since Bill Clintonâs 1996 win that The Grand Canyon State had voted for a Democratic presidential candidate. In 2016, Trump won Arizona by 3.5 percentage points.
Polls presaged the former presidentâs Arizona win. The FiveThirtyEight poll aggregate had Trump leading by 2.2 percentage points on Nov. 4.
Maricopa County, where 62 percent of the stateâs 7.4 million residents, and more than half its 4.367 million voters, live, proved pivotal. Trump won the Phoenix-area vote CC to CC percent, according to the Maricopa County Elections Department.
Trump fared better in the key county than in 2016 when he won it with less than 48 percent and in 2020 when he lost it with 47.65 percent, becoming the first GOP presidential candidate to lose Maricopa County in 72 years.
As in Nevada, winning the Latino vote drives Arizona campaigns, especially in Maricopa County where one-third of voters are Hispanic, compared to less than 19 percent nationally.
While many media declared Trump the winner of Arizonaâs 11 Electoral College votes in the preceding days, the AP withheld doing so until all mail-in ballots had been counted. Reported results had not changed much for more than a day by late-afternoon Nov. 8.
On Nov. 7, the Arizona Secretary of Stateâs office added tens of thousands of votes to the tally, but said there were hundreds of thousands of ballots left to count, including nearly 500,000 in Maricopa County. Therefore, the presidential race and the U.S. Senate contest between Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) and Kari Lake remained too close to call by late afternoon Nov. 8.
At 5 p.m. ESTâ2 p.m. PSTâon Nov. 8, those numbers, largely frozen for more than a day, had Trump with 1.4 million votes, 52.5 percent of the total tally, to Harrisâs 1.2 million votes, or 46.5 percent.
Despite the president-electâs 161,000 vote lead, a significant 6 percentage point advantage, since most Arizona voters cast ballots by mail, and counting typically takes days. the AP withheld the call until it was mathematically impossible for Harris to overcome Trumpâs lead.
Trump also dominated Harris in the popular vote with the vice president receiving around 10 million less votes than Biden did in 2020…
Additionally, as Modernity.news’ Steve Watson reports, CNNâs data analyst Harry Enten did a deep dive into the gains president Trump made with specific demographics in the election, highlighting how crushing they were for Democrats.
The numbers are truly astounding, and incredibly bad for the party of âjoy.â
Enter pointed out that Trump made the greatest improvements over a previous presidential election performance from the same party since 1992.
âWhen was the last time a party gained in so many different places?â Enten asked, explaining that âYou have to go all the way to back to 1992 when Bill Clinton improved on Michael Dukakisâ performance in 49 states, plus the District of Columbia.â
âDonald Trumpâs performance on Tuesday was the best for a Republican presidential candidate in exit poll history,â Enten further urged, adding âHe literally goes all the way back through history and breaks history.âÂ
Enten pointed to how Trump improved his partyâs election performance in 49 states and Washington, D.C. over the 2020 election, with Washington state the single one where he didnât do better.
âYou know, I think the breadth of the improvement that Donald Trump had â Holy Toledo!â Enten declared.
Trump's mandate:
1. More states (49 + DC) swung in his direction vs. last election than anyone since 1992.
2. Best GOP showing w/ age 18-29 in 20 yrs, Black voters in 48 yrs, Hispanics in 52+ yrs.
3. Coattails: best GOP showing in House popular vote in prez year since 1928. pic.twitter.com/xDEjHVJFAm— (((Harry Enten))) (@ForecasterEnten) November 8, 2024
Trump has the biggest mandate imaginable.
The party of joy failed to instil anyone with any.
The political landscape has completely changed forever.