Trump Rallies Supporters as He Nears Victory Over Harris

(Bloomberg) -- Republican nominee Donald Trump is on the cusp of recapturing the White House, projected as the winner across pivotal battleground states with his party set to control the Senate and markets swinging in expectation of his likely triumph.

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Trump, in an address to supporters at his election watch party in West Palm Beach, Florida, called it “a political victory that our country’s never seen before.”

“I will not rest until we have delivered the strong, safe, and prosperous America that our children deserve and that you deserve,” Trump said, adding that “we’re going to help our country heal.”

While Trump has not yet been declared the winner by most news outlets, he won Pennsylvania, puncturing Democrats’ Blue Wall and all but ending Democratic nominee Kamala Harris’ hopes of mounting a comeback. Both North Carolina and Georgia — the latter of which voted for Democrats four years ago — had already been formally called for the former president.

Republicans’ strength has already delivered them the Senate, flipping seats in at least Ohio and West Virginia while successfully fending off challenges in Texas and Nebraska, and the results showed Trump overperforming his 2020 results in several regions.

S&P 500 futures climbed 1.2%, 10-year yields rose as much as 19 basis points to a four-month high of 4.47% and Bitcoin spiked to a record – moves that reflect rising wagers on a Trump presidency.

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was up as much as 1.6%. The Mexican peso slumped over 3%, while the Japanese yen and the euro slid at least 1.5%. Contracts on the Russell 2000 Index added 2.4%. Smaller companies with typically domestic operations are seen as potential gainers in a Republican win, given the party’s protectionist stance.

Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. surged in trading on Robinhood Markets Inc.’s 24-hour platform.

Trump peppered his remarks with shout-outs to celebrities who flocked to Florida to soak in the rally, from billionaire Elon Musk to Ultimate Fighting Championship President Dana White to professional golfer Bryson DeChambeau.

He reiterated his intention to appoint former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to a prominent position in his administration and pledged “nothing will stop me from keeping my word to you” to fulfill promises made on the campaign trail.

“It’s time to put the divisions of the past four years behind us. It’s time to unite,” Trump said.

Foreign leaders also offered Trump congratulations on his likely victory, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy saying in a post on X, “We look forward to an era of a strong United States of America under President Trump’s decisive leadership.”

Trump has been a critic of US aid to Ukraine to help it repel Russia’s invasion and has pledged to broker a deal between Zelenskiy and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also congratulated Trump on X, saying that his expected return to the White House offers “a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between Israel and America.”

Harris campaign co-chair Cedric Richmond told supporters at the vice president’s watch party at Howard University in Washington that she would wait until later Wednesday to address them.

“We still have votes to count, we still have states that have not been counted yet,” Richmond said. “We will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted.”

Trump posted gains across the South, including heavily Hispanic counties. Harris victories were largely contained to Democratic strongholds including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

Republican Jim Justice flipped the West Virginia Senate seat being held by outgoing Democrat-turned-independent Joe Manchin, while Bernie Moreno unseated Ohio Democrat Sherrod Brown.

Angela Alsobrooks was named the winner of the Maryland Senate race, defeating the state’s Republican former governor, Larry Hogan, in a Democratic-leaning state. Fox News projected that Texas Senator Ted Cruz had won reelection, snuffing out what some Democrats had hoped was a longshot pickup opportunity.

Independent Senator Bernie Sanders won reelection in Vermont. In North Carolina, Democrat Josh Stein defeated Republican Mark Robinson, who gained national notoriety after a report that he had posted racially inflammatory comments online, in the governor’s race.

Control of the House of Representatives remained too close to call.

Exit polls suggested voters remained frustrated with the state of the economy in exit polls released Tuesday afternoon by a consortium of networks that included NBC News, Fox News, and CNN.

Almost half of all surveyed voters — 48% — said they are very concerned about the cost of gas and 51% said they’re concerned about housing costs. Only 26% of voters said they were enthusiastic or satisfied with the way things are going, while 72% were dissatisfied or angry. President Joe Biden’s approval rating sits at 41%.

Trump cast his own ballot at a recreation center in Palm Beach, Florida, alongside former first lady Melania Trump, before stopping by his campaign headquarters to thank staff. The former president expressed confidence to reporters but asked his supporters to remain in line and ensure they could cast their ballots.

Harris earlier this week said she had voted by mail in her home state of California.

Long lines were reported in several states and there were no signs of major issues. Bogus bomb threats briefly delayed voting at some locations in Georgia. Those threats extended voting hours at some precincts.

“Georgia’s not going to be intimidated,” the state’s top election official, Brad Raffensperger, said. The FBI attributed the threats to Russian email domains.

In Las Vegas, the Allegiant Stadium was turned into the “largest polling location in the history” of the state, said Nevada Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar.

“Nevada’s experienced some of the largest turnout they’ve seen, especially among our youth voters,” he said in an interview outside of the stadium.

The 2024 presidential campaign marked one of the most contentious and unpredictable contests in US history, with Biden becoming the first incumbent to forgo a reelection bid in over half a century, Trump surviving two failed assassination attempts — and managing to unify his party despite being the first former president convicted of a felony, one of a slew of legal challenges.

Harris had hoped to become the first Black woman and first Asian American president in a truncated campaign she only launched in late July after Biden’s exit from the race.

Trump’s victory would mark a defiant return to the Oval Office after he left Washington in disgrace following the attack on the US Capitol by supporters seeking to block certification of the 2020 election. He ran as the first former US president convicted of a felony following a Manhattan trial over hush-money payments and faces other indictments.

More than $14.8 billion has been spent on this election, on track to top the levels spent in 2020 as everyone from small-dollar donors to billionaires like Musk, have poured money into the contest. Musk joined Trump at his Mar-a-Lago home in south Florida to watch the results.

--With assistance from Tanaz Meghjani, Jenny Leonard, Stephanie Lai and Hadriana Lowenkron.

(Updates to add additional details on Trump remarks, reaction in paragraphs 9-14)

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