(NewsNation) — Following a months-long campaign filled with twists and turns, two assassination attempts on former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris replacing President Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket, voters go to the polls on Tuesday to determine who will the race for the White House.
Click on your state to see results as they come in. You can also scroll to the bottom to see each state’s results.
Trump and Harris spent the final days of their respective campaigns neck-and-neck in national polling and election forecasts. Neither candidate’s lead in the seven swing states was outside of the margin of error, creating a virtual deadlock.
Both candidates focused their stretch-run campaign rallies on states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Georgia – all of which are expected to factor into who is declared the winner.
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Political experts told NewsNation that due to the razor-thin margins separating Trump and Harris, voters may not know who the next president will be possibly for days.
Heading into the final week leading up to the election, NewsNation partner Decision Desk HQ predicted that Trump had a 54% chance of winning the presidency. Harris maintained a slim lead in the national polls, but Decision Desk HQ President Drew McCoy told NewsNation that several factors gave the edge to Trump.
Despite the forecast that seemed to favor Trump, McCoy said that Harris held a similar advantage a couple of weeks prior, making the presidential race essentially a toss-up.
Haris made her closing argument to American voters a week before Tuesday’s election. The Vice President delivered the speech from the same site where Trump stirred up supporters after he was defeated by Biden and that came ahead of the riots at the U.S. Capitol on January 6. 2021.
“There’s a big difference between he and I,” Harris told reporters last week. “If he were elected, on day one he’s going to sit in the Oval Office working on his enemies list. On day one, if I am elected, which I fully expect to be, I will be working on behalf of the American people on my to-do list.”
Trump continued his criticism of Harris’ handling of the U.S. southern border in a speech held at his Mar-A-Lago resort in Florida. He also accused his Democratic opponent of spearheading a campaign of hate in the days leading up to Tuesday.
Trump, who was shot in the ear in an attempt on his life during a Pennsylvania campaign rally just days before the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, spent much of his campaign insulting and criticizing Harris’ tenure as Biden’s vice president.
Trump also referred to his recent rally at Madison Square Garden in New York City as a “lovefest” amid criticism that the event included sexist and racist comments and that was overshadowed by comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as a “floating island of garbage.” Trump claimed two days after the rally that he did not hear the comments.
Harris remained focused on the future and asked voters at her rallies to “turn the page” on Trump while focusing on undecided voters in the critical swing states that were expected to determine the nation’s next president.
Harris also attempted to win over undecided voters over what the future would look like with her as president amid criticism that a Harris victory would simply mean an extension of Biden’s presidency.
Track how the presidential race is unfolding in all states below: