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Joe Biden becomes 46th president, Kamala Harris become first black woman VP

President-elect Joe Biden’s victory over President Donald Trump is causing jubilation in some sectors and dejection others. Following his win just minutes ago in Pennsylvania, supporters in cities across the country are celebrating the long-awaited win.

With key battleground states left to complete election tallies – Georgia key among them – the Atlanta Daily World projected as early as Wednesday that Biden would win the ferociously fought battle for the 270 electoral college votes needed to win the White House and become 46th president of the United States.
As of 9:30 Friday morning, Biden led No. 45 with 253 electoral votes to Trump’s 213.

And as Georgia poll workers continued to count ballots on Friday morning, Democrat Joe Biden has squeaked into the lead in the state’s presidential race by roughly 1,100 votes.

After a historic campaign cycle, vigorous get-out-the-vote efforts and a brutally contested election, former President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris parlayed their close lead in both Georgia and Pennsylavia into a decisive win.

The Biden-Harris election campaign strategy of multiple paths to the White House garnered support with voters in key states and were key to earning Biden and Haris the win in a nail-biting race to end one of the most oppressive and polarizing presidential administrations in modern history. Georgia, a traditionally conservative state sans Atlanta is arguably a determining factor for the win.

But the final nail in Trump’s political coffin came when the Biden-Harris won Saturday morning in Pennsylvania, which was marked with Biden supporters flooding into the streets of Philadelphia.

While early results indicated a nail-bitingly close race initially, Biden announced just before midnight on Tuesday that he remains optimistic about a win and cautioned supporters to be patient with the count.

Although Donald Trump falsely declared himself the winner at 2;30 a.m. on Wednesday and insinuated that Democrats were cheating at the polls, wishing just didn’t make it so.

“It’s the people who decide the results of elections –– not candidates, elected officials, political parties, or anyone else. We have the power. Election officials are working hard to ensure every vote is counted amidst historic turnout and we will be patient while the results are tallied. Despite a global pandemic and Trump’s attempts to bully his way through this election, the people … showed up in record numbers. Trump is just sowing division to try to get what he wants. What we’re calling for is unity and for the will of the people to win the day,” said a representative of a national watchdog organization.

Trump’s handling of the surging pandemic and the worst public health crisis in a century – killing more than 231,000 Americans – was inevitably his undoing according to exit polls. The former POTUS’s scheme to cheat his way back into the White House, including decreasing the number of polling places, making it more difficult to vote and tampering with the U.S. mail was not enough to overcome the will of the people this time who turned out in record numbers.

“We will work to unite the country around solutions that will push our country forward, and most importantly, I will listen to those impacted by the long-standing inequities in our system—especially Black Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Native Americans,” Biden said in a letter to the Atlanta Voice.

The hard-fought campaign indicates that voters – both Democrats and Republicans – are eager to move on and work to return the country to civility and regain international prominence and respect.

“I believe there’s a lot of division and separation,” said Kelvin Hardnett, who was among more than two dozen voters who lined up more than an hour before the polling site at the Cobb County Civic Center outside Atlanta opened on Tuesday morning. “And I believe that once we get past the names and the titles and the personal agendas, then you know, we can focus on some real issues.”

 

 

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