306 is a solid win, not really a blowout I think. If you want a real blowout, wait till the re-election :)
Yup, 306. Blowout. Total repudiation of the libtards.
Yeah... funny how that works...
I was wondering the same thing.
His final tally 274????
Who knows?
MN, AZ, NH, MI still have not been called. Trump has 279 with a projected outcome of 306
302....doesn’t look like he’s going to pull out New Hampshire.
Politico really didn’t want to give Wisconsin to Trump, even though he was up by 3.2 with 96% of the vote in, with the remainder in Trump friendly rural spots.
Yeh, I think I saw it on TV about 20 minutes ago.
350 is a blowout. 306 is a fairly solid win, though 308 would be fully solid—below 308, flipping his largest state would be enough to change the outcome.
306 is very good for loosing the popular vote (though who knows how much fraud there was).
He’s been declared the winner because he’s over 270. As the results from the states are finalized the electoral votes will be added to Trump or Clinton as appropriate. If you will remember in 2008 is was several days after the election before the electoral votes for Missouri were awarded to McCain.
NYT has him at 279 right now, with the probability of 306.
I had a heck of a time this morning trying to find the final electoral count online...
Go, President Elect, Trump, GO!
November 8, 2016—Election Day
Registered voters cast their votes for President and Vice President. By doing so, they also help choose the electors who will represent their state in the Electoral College.
Mid-November through December 19, 2016
After the presidential election, the governor of your state prepares seven Certificates of Ascertainment. “As soon as practicable,” after the election results in your state are certified, the governor sends one of the Certificates of Ascertainment to the Archivist.
Certificates of Ascertainment should be sent to the Archivist no later than the meeting of the electors in December. However, federal law sets no penalty for missing the deadline.
The remaining six Certificates of Ascertainment are held for use at the meeting of the Electors in December.
December 13, 2016
States must make final decisions in any controversies over the appointment of their electors at least six days before the meeting of the Electors. This is so their electoral votes will be presumed valid when presented to Congress.
Decisions by states’ courts are conclusive, if decided under laws enacted before Election Day.
December 19, 2016
The Electors meet in their state and vote for President and Vice President on separate ballots. The electors record their votes on six “Certificates of Vote,” which are paired with the six remaining Certificates of Ascertainment.
The electors sign, seal, and certify six sets of electoral votes. A set of electoral votes consists of one Certificate of Ascertainment and one Certificate of Vote. These are distributed immediately as follows:
- one set to the President of the Senate (the Vice President) for the official count of the electoral votes in January;
- two packages to the Secretary of State in the state where the electors met—one is an archival set that becomes part of the public record of the Secretary of State's office and the other is a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes;
- two packages to the Archivist—one is an archival set that becomes part of the permanent collection at the National Archives and Records Administration and the other is a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes; and
- one set to the presiding judge in the district where the Electors met—this is also a reserve set that is subject to the call of the President of the Senate to replace missing or incomplete electoral votes.
December 28, 2016
Electoral votes (the Certificates of Vote) must be received by the President of the Senate and the Archivist no later than nine days after the meeting of the electors. States face no legal penalty for failure to comply.
If votes are lost or delayed, the Archivist may take extraordinary measures to retrieve duplicate originals.
On or Before January 3, 2017
The Archivist and/or representatives from the Office of the Federal Register meet with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House in late December or early January. This is, in part, a ceremonial occasion. Informal meetings may take place earlier.
January 6, 2017
The Congress meets in joint session to count the electoral votes. Congress may pass a law to change this date.
I noticed. They just wilted.
Those cornflakes on the Left are a real work of art.
Looks that way.
NYT map shows NH, MN light blue and undecided.
MI and AZ light red and undecided.
It is really something when millions of illegal aliens voting along with a hundreds of thousands of manufactured absentee ballots in strategic locations cannot flip an election. The Democrats believed their own polls and didn’t realize that they needed to cheat more to win.
I think New Hampshire is lost both on the Presedential and Senate level, at least without a recount—three of the last four precincts have come in, and the Dems have increasd their narrow lead. The one remaining precinct is in a blue county.
last i saw they hadn’t called maine 2 either.
We will be at 306 in the Electoral College vote.
There are significant precincts that had not reported in NH, AZ and Michigan. With practiced efforts to minimize any accomplishments by Trump the media is not showing the certain wins that Trump has in MI and AZ which will give him 306.
I might add that I predicted the EV to within 1%.