Election 2024 dwell updates: Control of the House nonetheless up within the air as Trump ramps up White House transition
The control of the House is still up for grabs three days after the election.
As of Friday evening, 212 Republicans had been elected compared to 200 Democrats. One party needs 217 seats for a majority. Republicans have already gained control of the Senate, meaning Trump could be given full control of two branches of government and the levers of power in Washington.
Meanwhile, the President-elect has already begun preparing for the Oval Office.
He named Susie Wiles as his new White House chief of staff. Trump could be looking to rehire Tom Homan to handle immigration. Homan, a Project 2025 contributor, served as the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement between 2017 and 2018 and is considered one of the key architects of the first Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” family separation policy.
As the president-elect and his party celebrate his victory, for some Americans, the prospect of a second Trump term has been less welcoming.
This week, Black people are receiving racist text messages demanding they show up at “plantations,” where they’ll be enslaved while at a Texas college campus, protestors carried signs that branded women “property” and used homophobic slurs.
Trump promised voters their incomes and net worth will soar. Economists are not convinced
They turned to him for a solution after finding themselves unable to afford the necessities for their families in a cost-of-living crisis, but concerns have already been raised the Republican billionaire won’t deliver.
What Donald Trump’s presidency could mean for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle amid US visa row
Trump took to the stage in Florida in the early hours of Wednesday morning to address the nation, celebrating his “unprecedented and powerful mandate” after sweeping through key swing states, including North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
His victory coincides with a precarious visa battle for the Sussexes, which may be complicated by their strained relationship with the president.
VOICES: I was the only pollster to predict the Trump landslide – this is how I did it
The Wednesday before election day I was in Detroit. After months of conducting interviews, focus groups and surveys, I asked my last question of a voter in this election.
Sheree is a Black 31-year-old single mother. She voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, sat out 2020, and was undecided in 2024. Throughout our 90-minute interview, we discussed her concerns about Donald Trump (“He’s just so aggressive”), Kamala Harris (“Fake”), the border (“A real disgrace”), education (“I don’t want my daughter to be worrying about sharing a bathroom with a boy”), and the economy (“I just feel stuck”).
But despite never having voted Republican before, when pushed for a preference, Sheree told me she was leaning towards Donald Trump. The primary reason? The economy: she simply felt better off under the Trump administration than she has under that of Joe Biden. She also felt that the former president was more authentic than Harris. “Donald Trump might be a wolf. But he’s straight about it. Kamala is a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” she said.
Donald Trump would ‘certainly’ do trade deal with UK, says Boris Johnson
The former prime minister said the US president-elect is offering “economic hope” but that the Government would be “too pathetic” to try to secure a deal.
Meanwhile, Nigel Farage said the UK needs to “roll out the red carpet” for the incoming president and said that America is “our most important relationship” in terms of trade.
Abortion pill website crashes after Trump election win as Americans rush to stockpile medication
Women have been told not to panic as the website of the leading mail-order abortion pill provider in the US has crashed in the hours after Donald Trump’s election victory as Americans rushed to stock up on medication.
Dr Rebecca Gomperts, founder of Aid Access, told The Independent the platform received 10,000 requests for medication for terminations in the 24 hours after Trump’s win – almost 15 times more than the 600 or so requests they tend to get per day.
The leading abortion rights activist said soaring demand caused their website to crash for two hours last night, but it is now back up and running again.
Feds bring charges in Iranian murder-for-hire plot to assassinate Trump
A fugitive Iranian government operative is accused of hiring a pair of New Yorkers he met in prison to carry out an assassination plot against a critic of the regime and allegedly admitted to FBI agents that he’d also been tasked with finding a hit squad to kill President-elect Donald Trump.
Farhad Shakeri, 51, claimed he was asked in September by regime officials to “put aside his other efforts… and focus on surveilling, and, ultimately, assassinating, former President of the United States, Donald J. Trump,” according to a criminal complaint unsealed Friday in Manhattan federal court.
Shakeri countered that this would cost a “huge” amount of money, to which his regime contact replied, “[W]e have already spent a lot of money .. . [s]o the money’s not an issue.” Shakeri said he was given a deadline of mid-October.
Olivia Rodrigo removes song from TikTok after Trump campaign uses it in victory video
UK must ‘roll out the red carpet’ for Trump, Nigel Farage says
The UK needs to “roll out the red carpet” for Donald Trump following the US election, Nigel Farage has said.
The leader of Reform UK has said the British government needs to do everything it can to welcome Mr Trump and negotiate a trade deal, at the party’s conference in Newport, Wales on Friday.
Mr Farage was speaking after returning from a trip from the president-elect’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where he celebrated Mr Trump’s election win.
Trump plans to rehire Tom Homan to tackle immigration
With Donald Trump headed back to the White House, the Republican is likely to turn to a familiar, highly controversial face to oversee his signature issue of immigration.
Tom Homan, who served as the acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement between 2017 and 2018, is considered one of the key architects of the first Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” family separation policy.
Under the initiative, immigration officials broke with the longstanding practice of keeping migrant families together and out of detention, instead sending parents to immigration court for removal proceedings and children to the care of a separate agency.
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‘I know how men talk behind closed doors’: Howard Stern admits America isn’t ready for a female president
The influential radio host, 70, was speaking on his SiriusXM show on Wednesday (November 6), the day after the election.
“I think Kamala was a fine candidate,” said Stern. “She’s a fine woman. The problem I had is that I thought [President] Biden was doing a really good job, actually. But I understand why people said they had to switch.”
Source: independent.co.uk