Making A Difference

‘Time Will Tell’: Trump Comes Closest To Conceding Defeat, As Biden Consolidates Lead

Biden scripts history by polling the largest number of votes by any US presidential candidate so far

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‘Time Will Tell’: Trump Comes Closest To Conceding Defeat, As Biden Consolidates Lead
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President-elect Joe Biden has wrested Georgia and President Donald Trump has retained North Carolina, bringing the bitter and closely fought 2020 presidential race to a close, US media channels claimed on Friday.

Out of the nearly 78 million ballots that have so far been counted, Biden has polled the largest number of votes in the US by any presidential candidate.

With the projection that Trump has won in North Carolina, the final tally in the November 3 presidential election is 306-232, a major victory for Biden, the 77-year-old Democrat President-elect.

Trump, who has not yet conceded defeat, alluded for the first time on Friday to a possible new administration on January 20. Looking subdued, the 74-year-old president stopped short of acknowledging his defeat and did not mention Biden by name in his first official appearance since polls closed on November 3.

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"This administration will not be going to a lockdown," he said during a briefing of his coronavirus task force. "Whatever happens in the future, who knows which administration will be. I guess time will tell," Trump said. However, Trump has not yet conceded the race - and may never actually do so, NBC News quoted his aides as saying.

Trump has voiced unfounded fears about the vote tabulation process and has repeatedly falsely claimed that mass voter fraud fuelled Biden’s victory, which has been projected by major news outlets since Saturday when the former vice president crossed the mandatory 270 electoral votes needed to win the race for the White House. Trump aides are still confident that he will prevail in litigation in several states where Biden's victory margin is not very high.

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US election officials said on Thursday that the 2020 vote was the "most secure in American history", rejecting Trump's unsubstantiated claims.

Meanwhile, counties across Georgia have begun the task of counting nearly five million ballots by hand. Election workers taking part in the state-wide audit face a Wednesday night deadline to complete their count. It is the first time such an audit has been done in Georgia. Trump and Joe Biden are separated by just 14,000 votes in Georgia, with Biden in the lead. Biden's apparent victory in Georgia, the first for a Democrat since 1992, was a major blow to the long-dominant Republicans in the key battleground state.

Georgia and North Carolina have been the last two states to be projected in the race for the White House. Biden's victory in Georgia added 16 electoral votes to his tally, bringing him to 306 -- matching President Trump's total against Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election.

Biden, a Democrat, will win Georgia, CNN projected on Friday, striking at the heart of what has been a Republican presidential stronghold for nearly three decades. The former vice president is the first Democratic nominee to triumph in Georgia since Bill Clinton won the state in 1992, CNN said.

With 99 per cent of the vote counted in Georgia, Biden received 49.5 per cent of the votes, while Trump polled 49.2 per cent. Biden’s margin in his apparent victory over Trump in the state was by a difference of 14,152 votes, NBC News reported. The outcome in Georgia, however, is subject to a planned recount of the state’s votes, the report said.

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With 99 per cent of the vote counted in North Carolina, Trump had 50 per cent of the vote, while Biden had 48.6 per cent. Trump’s margin of victory over Biden in the state was by a margin of 73,600 votes. Trump’s projected win in North Carolina added 15 electoral college votes, helping him retain the state he won in 2016.

With 97 per cent of the expected vote across the country counted on Friday, Biden led Trump by 50.8 per cent to 47.4 per cent in the popular vote, a contrast to Trump, who lost the popular vote in 2016 while winning the electoral college.

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