Presidential Election Results: Biden Wins
Joseph R. Biden Jr. was elected the 46th president of the United States. See full results and maps from the 2020 presidential election.
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Joseph R. Biden Jr. was elected the 46th president of the United States. See full results and maps from the 2020 presidential election.
See full results and maps from the 2020 U.S. Senate elections.
See full results and maps from the 2020 U.S. House elections.
Here’s a look at how many electoral votes have been certified — or made official.
By Maggie Astor, Keith Collins and
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How Trump’s Most Loyal Supporters Are Responding to the Verdict
Many saw in the jury’s finding a rejection of themselves, of their values and even of democracy itself.
By Elizabeth Dias and
Biden Flipped Georgia in 2020. This Year Could Be Different.
His narrow win there in 2020 was seen as a sign of Georgia’s emergence as a battleground state. But in 2024, President Biden faces a changed landscape there.
By Rick Rojas and
The One Thing Voters Remember About Trump
We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.
By Christine Zhang, Sean Catangui and
Perry, a Far-Right Incumbent, Faces Shifting Political Ground in Pennsylvania
The House Freedom Caucus stalwart and 2020 election denier is confronting a general election challenge in a central Pennsylvania district that has grown more competitive.
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More Voters Shift to Republican Party, Closing Gap With Democrats
The trend toward the Republican Party among white voters without a college degree has continued, and Democrats have lost ground among Hispanic voters, too.
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Speaker Johnson Gets Lifeline From Trump Amid Threat to His Job
Mr. Johnson met with former President Donald J. Trump at Mar-a-Lago, where they found common cause in stoking unfounded fears of election fraud.
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G.O.P. Leaders Embrace Early Voting, but Will Their Base Get on Board?
Former President Donald J. Trump has said that until Republicans gain power and can change the law, they have “no choice” but to support voting by mail.
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Why Fox’s Call on Arizona, Which Was Right, Was Still Wrong
It was more a risky guess than a sound decision, and easily could have led to a missed call.
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Ruing Senate Loss, Georgia G.O.P. Asks if Runoff Rule Changes Backfired
Some in the party said that additional changes to election rules were likely, after Senator Raphael Warnock’s victory put a new spotlight on a major 2021 voting law passed by the G.O.P.
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They Used Robocalls to Suppress Black Votes. Now They Have to Register Voters.
An Ohio judge ordered Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman, who concocted a 2020 robocall scheme to discourage mail-in voting, to spend hundreds of hours registering new voters.
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Democrats Lost the Most in Midwestern ‘Factory Towns,’ Report Says
The party’s struggles in communities that saw declines in manufacturing and union jobs, and health care, could more than offset its gains in metropolitan areas.
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Pandemic Relief Bill Fulfills Biden’s Promise to Expand Obamacare, for Two Years
With its expanded subsidies for health plans under the Affordable Care Act, the coronavirus relief bill makes insurance more affordable, and puts health care on the ballot in 2022.
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An Early Test for Biden: Managing a Divided Democratic Party
Moderates and progressives were mostly united during the campaign. Their deep differences will now present a significant challenge for the president-elect.
By Astead W. Herndon and
Where Does Joe Biden Stand on Major Policies?
Here’s an overview on President-elect Biden’s positions on coronavirus, health care, the economy, taxes and climate change.
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How Trump and Biden Differ on Health Care
Let’s look at where the candidates stand on pre-existing conditions, Medicare, Medicaid and more.
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Trump or Biden? The Stock Market Doesn’t Care.
Prediction markets say former President Donald J. Trump has a good chance of winning. So far, the stock market is fine with that.
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Trump’s Tariffs Hurt U.S. Jobs but Swayed American Voters, Study Says
New research finds that former President Donald J. Trump’s tariffs did not bring back U.S. jobs, but voters appeared to reward him for the levies anyway.
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The Week in Business: Fox News Anchors’ Private Messages
President Biden offers a proposed budget. Jobs numbers once again soared past analysts’ forecasts. And we’ll get a new inflation figure this week.
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Your Thursday Briefing: Liz Cheney, Out
Plus a mortgage strike in China and resistance fighters in Ukraine.
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Did the Capitol riot make the belief in American democratic decline mainstream?
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As Trial Looms, Trump Plays to a Jury of Millions
Donald J. Trump and his lawyers realize his chances in the courtroom are dicey. He intends to make whatever happens a political triumph.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and
How Trump Moved Money to Pay $100 Million in Legal Bills
Trump supporters poured money into his effort to challenge his 2020 election loss. That fund has paid lawyers to defend him in his legal battles.
By Molly Cook Escobar, Albert Sun and
Judge Imposes Gag Order on Trump in Manhattan Criminal Trial
The order limiting the former president’s speech came after Justice Juan M. Merchan set an April 15 trial date for the case, which involves a sex scandal cover-up.
By Ben Protess and
After the Capitol Attack, Companies Pledged to Rethink Political Giving. Did They?
A new analysis of corporate PAC donations shines light on an opaque political giving landscape.
By Ephrat Livni and
Pence’s 2024 Bid Confronts Murky Future, as Campaign Cash Dwindles
Mike Pence has still not resolved some of the contradictions at the core of his candidacy, and his campaign has struggled with financial problems, including running up a debt of $620,000.
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Salem Media Group, which co-produced the 2022 film, issued the apology to a Georgia man who was falsely depicted as stuffing a ballot box near Atlanta.
By Ken Bensinger
In a letter to Democratic senators, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said that individual justices decide when to recuse. He declined to meet with the senators to discuss court ethics.
By Abbie VanSickle
The former Hawaii congresswoman, who became estranged from the Democratic Party, has drawn intrigue from Donald J. Trump but is considered a long shot.
By Neil Vigdor
The saga of a Supreme Court justice, his wife and two symbols adopted by people campaigning to overturn the result of the 2020 election.
By Michael Barbaro, Jodi Kantor, Mooj Zadie, Eric Krupke, Luke Vander Ploeg, Michael Benoist, Lisa Chow, Marion Lozano, Dan Powell and Alyssa Moxley
Christopher Joseph Quaglin rushed the police and grabbed an officer by the neck during the U.S. Capitol riot, prosecutors said.
By Hurubie Meko
If Donald Trump wins the presidency, Richard Grenell hopes to be secretary of state. But his work raises questions, even from his former boss.
By Elizabeth Williamson
The ad uses the actor’s distinctive voice to try to remind voters of the chaos of Donald Trump’s presidency and warn them about a second Trump term.
By Nicholas Nehamas
A false, familiar claim by the former president — that the contest in which he’s participating is “rigged” — has reached a fever pitch in this cycle.
By Karen Yourish and Charlie Smart
The outcry over Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. comes amid fears about whether the American public will regard the Supreme Court’s rulings about Jan. 6 as fair.
By Zach Montague
A total of 50 people, including former President Donald J. Trump, are now facing charges in four states related to efforts to keep Mr. Trump in power after he lost in 2020.
By Danny Hakim and Jack Healy
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