Trump to go to White Home subsequent week as hundreds protest in opposition to re-election in New York – reside | US elections 2024

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By Calvin S. Nelson


Hundreds of New Yorkers march in opposition to Trump’s re-election

Hundreds of New Yorkers have gathered for the Defend Our Futures march, protesting Donald Trump’s re-election as president. Labor unions, immigrant rights teams and LGBTQ+ advocates held aloft a banner studying “We Gained’t Again Down” as they marched outdoors the Trump Worldwide Resort & Tower in Columbus Circle this afternoon.

Right here’s some footage from the bottom:

#BREAKING: Hundreds of NYers collect at Columbus Circle for the #ProtectOurFutures march!

We’re clear-eyed concerning the hazard posed by a second Trump administration & we’re prepared to face shoulder-to-shoulder to combat again in opposition to his harmful insurance policies.

¡Sí se puede! pic.twitter.com/ysh9oIzSKO

— Make the Highway NY 🦋 (@MaketheRoadNY) November 9, 2024

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Up to date at 20.05 GMT

Key occasions

Listed below are some photographs coming via the newswires of Saturday’s protests throughout New York Metropolis fashioned by varied advocacy organizations in response to Donald Trump’s re-election:

Individuals march within the Defend Our Futures March in response to the election of Donald Trump, in New York Metropolis on Saturday. {Photograph}: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
Marchers move the Trump Worldwide Resort in Manhattan. {Photograph}: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
The Defend Our Futures March on Saturday in New York Metropolis. {Photograph}: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
The Defend Our Futures March on Saturday in New York Metropolis. {Photograph}: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
The Defend Our Futures March on Saturday in New York Metropolis. {Photograph}: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
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Up to date at 20.41 GMT

Trump marketing campaign publicizes leaders of inauguration committee

Donald Trump has introduced the formation of the Trump Vance Inaugural Committee, a corporation that may “plan inaugural occasions”, the Trump-Vance marketing campaign stated in an announcement on Saturday.

The co-chairs of the committee have been introduced as actual property investor Steve Witkoff and former Georgia senator Kelly Loeffler.

“On election night time, we made historical past and I’ve the extraordinary honor of getting been elected the forty seventh President of america because of tens tens of millions of hardworking People throughout the nation who supported our America First agenda. The Trump Vance Inaugural Committee will honor this magnificent victory in a celebration of the American folks and our nation,” Trump stated in an announcement.

“This would be the kick-off to my administration, which is able to ship on daring guarantees to Make America Nice Once more. Collectively, we are going to have fun this second, steeped on historical past and custom, after which get to work to attain probably the most unimaginable future for our folks, restoring power, success, and customary sense to the Oval Workplace,” he added.

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Up to date at 20.10 GMT

With Donald Trump’s re-election, the supreme courtroom is as soon as once more in play. Throughout Trump’s first administration, the president-elect appointed three justices, which in the end created the conservative majority that overturned Roe v Wade.

As he returns to workplace, Trump may appoint new justices – particularly if the getting old conservative justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito retire. Senate Democrats are additionally at the moment debating whether or not to hurry to switch liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor, who’s 70, though they could wrestle to substantiate a alternative earlier than Joe Biden leaves the White Home.

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Up to date at 19.56 GMT

The US presidential election is already having worldwide reverberations – from the conflict in Ukraine to world commerce. One difficulty on many citizens’ minds: the conflict in Gaza.

Right here’s Jason Burke with extra about how the US elections may hold Benjamin Netanyahu in energy till 2026:

Benjamin Netanyahu is ready to remain in energy in Israel till elections due in 2026 and presumably longer, analysts and officers now consider, after a tumultuous week through which the 75-year-old veteran politician efficiently fired his defence minister and was boosted by the outcomes of the US election.

Netanyahu’s newly strengthened place may result in additional intensification of Israel’s marketing campaign in Lebanon, and lengthen the battle in Gaza, critics worry – though the incoming US president Donald Trump has stated he desires to swiftly finish each wars.

Many observers have been shocked by the political resilience of Netanyahu, who’s blamed by most Israelis for the failures that allowed Hamas to launch its bloody assaults into Israel final October, killing round 1,200 and taking greater than 250 hostages.

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Up to date at 19.17 GMT

Greater than two months after the deadline to signal presidential transition paperwork handed, federal transition officers inform Politico that they anticipate Donald Trump’s incoming administration will signal the settlement with the Normal Providers Administration. The GSA coordinates the transition between incoming and outgoing presidential administrations, together with by offering safety clearances, briefings, entry to federal services, paperwork and personnel. The agreements coordinating the transition, which had been due 1 September, mandate that the incoming president comply with an ethics plan and restrict and disclose personal donations.

As Politico stories, “rejecting assist from GSA may have helped defend the federal authorities’s entry to [the Trump team’s] supplies. It additionally would have allowed them to simply accept limitless sums of cash for the transition with out disclosing the identities of its donors.”

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Up to date at 19.01 GMT

Hundreds of New Yorkers march in opposition to Trump’s re-election

Hundreds of New Yorkers have gathered for the Defend Our Futures march, protesting Donald Trump’s re-election as president. Labor unions, immigrant rights teams and LGBTQ+ advocates held aloft a banner studying “We Gained’t Again Down” as they marched outdoors the Trump Worldwide Resort & Tower in Columbus Circle this afternoon.

Right here’s some footage from the bottom:

#BREAKING: Hundreds of NYers collect at Columbus Circle for the #ProtectOurFutures march!

We’re clear-eyed concerning the hazard posed by a second Trump administration & we’re prepared to face shoulder-to-shoulder to combat again in opposition to his harmful insurance policies.

¡Sí se puede! pic.twitter.com/ysh9oIzSKO

— Make the Highway NY 🦋 (@MaketheRoadNY) November 9, 2024

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Up to date at 20.05 GMT

Though the US presidential election has been determined, votes are nonetheless being counted throughout the nation – together with in Arizona, the place the tally will decide which candidate fills the state’s open Senate seat.

Right here’s Edward Helmore with extra:

Arizona remained in a tense ready sport on Saturday for its election outcomes, whilst neighboring Nevada declared for Donald Trump in a single day, giving the president-elect six out of seven swing states after election day on 5 November.

In Arizona, official tallies had been 83% full by mid-morning on Saturday with Trump main at 52.7% and Harris at 46%, or about 180,000 votes forward. However sufficient ballots stay uncounted – 602,000 as of late Friday night time – for the state to stay undeclared. The state sensationally flipped to Joe Biden and the Democrats in 2020.

In the important thing US Senate race there between Republican Kari Lake and Democrat Ruben Gallego, the controversial Lake, who all the time denied that Biden received the White Home pretty in 2020, was trailing the Democrat 48.5% to 49.5%, or by round 33,000 votes, mid-morning on Saturday.

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A file 13 ladies will lead their states as governor subsequent 12 months, breaking the beforehand held file of 12 set after the 2022 election. The information comes as former senator Kelly Ayotte is elected as New Hampshire’s governor – in a race the place a win by both her or her opponent, Joyce Craig, would have set the brand new file.

The victory for ladies’s management is available in the identical election the place voters selected Donald Trump over a feminine presidential candidate for the second time. So far, 18 states nonetheless have by no means had a lady maintain the function of governor.

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Up to date at 17.41 GMT

Lots of of protesters are gathering in New York Metropolis this afternoon for the Defend Our Futures march, in response to the end result of the 2024 presidential election.

The rally, which is gathering in Columbus Circle, was organized by staff’ rights teams just like the Working Households Occasion, the Communications Employees of America and Indivisible – in addition to immigrant justice organizations like Make the Highway NY.

In an invitation to the march, organizers wrote: “New York has a vital function to play in setting the tone for the following 4 years. It’s important to clarify that New Yorkers will proceed to face collectively, in neighborhood, in opposition to the hazard to come back.”

Right here’s some footage as protesters start gathering, together with advocates from Make the Highway NY chanting: “Estamos en la lucha” (we’re within the combat), activists with Jews for Racial and Financial Justice singing a nigun as they march, and members of the Metropolis College of New York’s college and workers union holding aloft crimson “Solidarity” indicators.

With our democracy beneath menace, New Yorkers are taking to the streets to make one factor clear: we’re prepared to face collectively in protection of our neighborhood and shield the folks we love. #ProtectOurFutures

✊We’ll by no means again down! pic.twitter.com/k0CkcmoblD

— Make the Highway NY 🦋 (@MaketheRoadNY) November 9, 2024

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Up to date at 17.40 GMT

Donald Trump’s advisers are evaluating strategies to hold out the president-elect’s promised “largest deportation” in US historical past, the Wall Avenue Journal stories. Presently, the incoming administration is contemplating issuing a nationwide emergency declaration, which may permit Trump to make use of Pentagon funds, army services for detention and army planes for deportations. The administration is reportedly additionally assessing methods to encourage immigrants to depart voluntarily, maybe by waiving a 10-year bar on re-entry.

A current estimate from the American Immigration Council predicted that mass deportations of the present variety of undocumented immigrants within the US may value $968bn over greater than a decade. As Trump decides who to nominate to his new administration, Tom Homan, appearing director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement throughout Trump’s first time period, and Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s “Muslim ban”, are prone to play essential roles.

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Up to date at 17.12 GMT

As outcomes proceed to roll in from the 2024 elections, information reveals that the Republican social gathering picked up seats all throughout the nation – even within the deeply Democratic stronghold of New York Metropolis.

Right here’s Adam Gabbatt with extra on why:

Each single county within the New York Metropolis metropolitan space swung in direction of Trump in contrast with 4 years in the past, Gothamist reported. It’s a staggering shift for a multicultural, closely Democratic metropolis, given the divisive and racist nature of Trump’s marketing campaign.

But it surely shouldn’t have come as an enormous shock to Democrats, stated Lawrence Levy, former chief political columnist for Newsday and government dean of the Nationwide Middle for Suburban Research at Hofstra College.

“One thing began taking place in 2021,” Levy stated. “This didn’t come out of the blue.”

That 12 months, New York Metropolis politics began seeing some reactions to “post-pandemic ache”, Levy stated, as some voters from demographics together with the white, Latino and Asian communities shifted away from Democrats in native elections. Within the 2022 midterm elections, New York Metropolis retained its Democratic members of the Home of Representatives, however some suburban voters to the north and east of the town elected Republicans.

“The query is: what does this all imply?” Levy stated.

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Trump to go to White Home on Wednesday as transition begins

Joe Biden has invited Donald Trump to the Oval Workplace on Wednesday at 11am ET, in keeping with White Home press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. The assembly would be the first between the present and former president after the 2024 election.

Right here’s extra on the presidential transition because it will get beneath manner:

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Up to date at 16.39 GMT

Democratic senator Bob Casey has not but conceded his race for re-election in Pennsylvania – though the Related Press referred to as the race for his opponent two days in the past. Casey ran in opposition to Republican David McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO, in a hotly contested race that ranked as one of many Senate’s most costly, with the campaigns and their allies spending greater than $300m on adverts.

I’ve stated it earlier than, and I’ll say it now. It’s an attractive day to rely each vote.

— Bob Casey Jr. (@Bob_Casey) November 9, 2024

As Joan E Greve writes,

When the AP referred to as the race at 4.09pm ET on Thursday, two days after polls closed in Pennsylvania, McCormick led by 0.5 factors. The slim margin raised the potential for a recount, though Casey faces an uphill climb in overcoming McCormick’s lead of roughly 30,000 votes.

After the AP referred to as the race, the Pennsylvania division of state introduced that a minimum of 100,000 ballots remained uncounted, boosting the Casey workforce’s hopes of a last-minute surge.

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Up to date at 16.39 GMT

Abstract of the day thus far

Here’s a abstract of the most recent developments thus far on in the present day’s US politics weblog:

  • Donald Trump received his sixth battleground state of the 2024 election early on Saturday, beating Kamala Harris in Nevada. The AP declared Trump the winner after concluding there weren’t sufficient uncounted ballots within the state’s strongest Democratic areas to beat the previous president’s 46,000-vote lead over the Democratic nominee. Solely Arizona stays to be referred to as.

  • Nevada Democratic senator Jacky Rosen has received re-election, beating Republican Sam Brown in a good however unusually quiet race for the battleground state. “Thanks, Nevada! I’m honored and grateful to proceed serving as your United States senator,” Rosen stated on Friday on the social platform X.

  • Joe Biden’s slowness in exiting the 2024 presidential election value the Democrats dearly, the previous Home speaker Nancy Pelosi stated, days after Harris was crushed by Trump. “Had the president gotten out sooner, there might have been different candidates within the race. The anticipation was that, if the president had been to step apart, that there can be an open major,” Pelosi remarked in The Interview, a New York Occasions podcast.

  • Officers on the Pentagon are having casual discussions about what to do if Trump had been to present an unlawful order, equivalent to deploying the army domestically, in keeping with a report from CNN. They’re additionally getting ready for the likelihood that he might change guidelines to have the ability to fireplace scores of profession civil servants.

  • The US justice division is bringing felony fees over an Iranian plot to kill Trump that was thwarted by the FBI, the federal government stated. The federal authorities has unsealed felony fees in what the justice division stated was a murder-for-hire plan to take out Trump earlier than this week’s presidential election.

  • Russia is open to listening to Trump’s proposals on ending the conflict, an official stated on Saturday, as a Russian drone killed one particular person and injured 13 within the Ukrainian port metropolis of Odesa and the EU overseas coverage chief held talks in Kyiv. Sergei Ryabkov, Russia’s deputy overseas minister, stated Moscow and Washington had been “exchanging alerts” on Ukraine through “closed channels”, in keeping with AP. He didn’t specify whether or not the communication was with the present administration or Trump and members of his incoming administration.

  • Bryan Lanza, a Republican social gathering strategist and senior adviser to Trump advised, in an interview with the BBC, that the Trump administration will concentrate on securing an finish to the conflict in Ukraine – moderately than making an attempt to assist Kyiv regain territory.

  • Federal transition officers have stated they anticipate Trump’s workforce to signal an settlement to simply accept their assist with preparations for the brand new administration, stories Politico, citing three folks with data of the discussions. Nonetheless, it’s unclear if an settlement has been signed but, says Politico.

  • Iran on Saturday urged Trump to rethink the “most stress” coverage he pursued in opposition to Tehran throughout his first time period. “Trump should present that he’s not following the unsuitable insurance policies of the previous,” the Iranian vice-president for strategic affairs, Mohammad Javad Zarif, advised reporters on Saturday.

  • Simply hours after Trump’s election win on Tuesday, Black folks throughout the US reported receiving racist textual content messages telling them that they’d been “chosen” to choose cotton and wanted to report back to “the closest plantation”. Whereas the texts, a few of which had been signed “a Trump supporter”, assorted intimately, all of them conveyed the identical important message about being chosen to choose cotton. A number of the messages confer with the recipients by identify.

  • Harris obtained a minimum of 22,000 fewer votes than Biden did 4 years in the past in Michigan’s most closely Arab American and Muslim cities, a Guardian evaluation of uncooked vote information within the important swing state finds. The numbers additionally present Trump made small features – about 9,000 votes – throughout these areas, suggesting Harris’s loss there may be extra attributable to Arab People both not voting or casting ballots for third-party candidates.

  • Barack Obama’s former speechwriter stated throughout an episode of the Pod Save America podcast that Biden’s inside polling confirmed Trump profitable “400 electoral votes”, stories the Hill. Jon Favreau, a bunch of the podcast, stated on Friday’s episode, that Biden’s re-election try was a “catastrophic mistake”.

  • Inflation and immigration emerged because the dominant themes on this 12 months’s presidential race. However democracy was additionally distinguished within the minds of voters. Early exit polls on Tuesday night time confirmed democracy as some of the essential points on voters’ minds after the financial system – and each Republican and Democratic voters had issues. In its VoteCast survey, half of the 120,000 voters polled by the AP stated democracy was their single most essential motivating issue for the way they voted.

  • Anti-abortion advocates say there may be nonetheless work to be carried out to additional limit entry to abortion when Trump returns to the White Home subsequent 12 months. “Now the work begins to dismantle the pro-abortion insurance policies of the Biden-Harris administration,” the Susan B Anthony Checklist, the highly effective anti-abortion foyer, stated in an announcement on Wednesday. The group added: “President Trump’s first-term pro-life accomplishments are the baseline for his second time period.” The group declined to launch particulars about what, particularly, they’ll search to undo.

  • The Iraqi prime minister, Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, expressed hopes throughout a telephone name with Trump that he would hold his “guarantees to work in direction of ending wars” within the Center East. Within the telephone name, the Iraqi premier pointed to Trump’s “marketing campaign statements and guarantees to work in direction of ending wars within the area”, an announcement from Sudani’s workplace stated late on Friday.

  • Tens of millions of People are vulnerable to shedding well being protection in 2025 beneath Trump’s forthcoming administration. Greater than 20 million People depend on the person personal medical insurance marketplace for healthcare, personal insurance coverage which is backed by the federal authorities.

  • The choose overseeing Trump’s 2020 election interference case canceled any remaining courtroom deadlines on Friday whereas prosecutors assess the “the suitable course going ahead” in gentle of the Republican’s presidential victory, stories the Related Press.

  • Bomb threats had been made in opposition to a number of Maryland boards of elections and election places of work in a minimum of two California counties on Friday, state authorities stated, including that everybody was secure and regulation enforcement officers had been investigating.

  • Nigel Farage has stated he may very well be “helpful as an interlocutor” between the UK’s Labour authorities and Trump. The Reform UK chief stated he has “bought an awesome relationship” with the president-elect and likewise is aware of folks he believes will probably be in Trump’s administration for “fairly a very long time”. Chatting with the PA information company at a Reform occasion in Exeter, Farage described Trump as a “pro-British American president” who provides the UK “doubtlessly large alternatives if we are able to overcome the difficulties that the entire of the cupboard have been impolite about him”.

  • Ed Davey has urged UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, to “Trump-proof” the UK by urgently in search of nearer European cooperation over army support for Ukraine and financial ties, after the US president-elect’s threats about safety and commerce wars. The Liberal Democrat chief, whose social gathering is the third greatest within the Home of Commons, argued that whereas the UK authorities ought to search to work with a Trump administration, it also needs to be as ready as attainable if he had been to desert Ukraine or impose sweeping tariffs.

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Up to date at 16.20 GMT

Russia open to listening to Trump’s Ukraine peace proposals

Russia is open to listening to Donald Trump’s proposals on ending the conflict, an official stated on Saturday, as a Russian drone killed one particular person and wounded 13 within the Ukrainian port metropolis of Odesa and the European Union overseas coverage chief held talks in Kyiv.

Sergei Ryabkov, Russia’s deputy overseas minister, stated Moscow and Washington had been “exchanging alerts” on Ukraine through “closed channels”, in keeping with the AP. He didn’t specify whether or not the communication was with the present administration or Trump and members of his incoming administration.

Russia’s readiness depends upon whether or not Trump’s proposals are “concepts on transfer ahead within the space of settlement, and never within the space of additional pumping the Kyiv regime with all types of support”, Ryabkov stated on Saturday in an interview with Russian state information company Interfax.

In Kyiv, Ukraine’s overseas minister, Andrii Sybiha, advised reporters that Ukraine is able to work with the Trump administration.

“Do not forget that President Zelenskyy was one of many first world leaders … to greet president Trump,” he stated. “It was a honest dialog [and] an alternate of ideas concerning additional cooperation.”

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Up to date at 15.56 GMT

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