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As it happenedended

As it happened: Donald Trump elected President of the United States in shock defeat of Hillary Clinton

Former outsider sweeps to decisive victory after winning key battleground states

Donald Trump's victory speech after winning US election

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Donald Trump has been elected President of the United States in the biggest shock in the country's electoral history. Here are the things you need to know:

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Donald Trump has been named the shock victor of the US presidential election, pledging to be a "President for all Americans".

In a victory speech in New York, the Republican candidate, vowed to unite the country following a divisive campaign littered with controversies.

“Now it’s time for America to bind the wounds of division…I say it is time for us to come together as one united people,” he said, as supporters chanted “USA! USA! USA!”.

Amid widespread concern over international tensions following Mr Trump’s comments on countries including China and Russia, he insisted he expected “great relationships” with foreign nations.

“America will no longer settle for anything less than best, - we must reclaim our country’s destiny,” he added. “I want to tell the world community that while we will always put America’s interests first, we will always deal fairly with everyone – all people and all other nations.

“We will seek common ground, not hostility. Partnership, not conflict.”

Hillary Clinton phoned Mr Trump in the early hours of Wednesday morning to concede defeat but made no immediate public comment.

As her loss looked ever more certain, she tweeted: "Whatever happens tonight, thank you for everything."

Clinton back out to 2-9 in the betting after briefly touching 1-7

James Moore9 November 2016 00:17

Gary Johnson, the libertarian third candidate, is doing alright in Florida too – with just over 10 per cent of the vote. (Again, on a very tiny portion of the vote.)

Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:17

At the moment – and, again, it means very little – Trump is beating Clinton 19-3 in the electoral college. Of course, all of those are coming from states that each expected to win, and so Trump's lead doesn't really indicate anything more than the fact that neither looks headed for a landslide.They need 270 to win, which shows just how much work and how much of the night there is left.

Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:19

It's getting very close in Florida – Trump with 51, Clinton with 46.

Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:22

Whoops at FLA Hispanic Dems HQ as Clintin takes the lead in the state #ElectionNight

David Usborne9 November 2016 00:27

Hillary Clinton has now taken the lead in Florida – again, a really important state. The lead is very slim and it's based on just 30 per cent of the vote, so it's really very much too close to call. And it looks to be sticking that way.

Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:27

Nikkei now shooting higher, 130 points, 0.77 per cent. Traders getting confident about Clinton as she takes lead in Florida?

James Moore9 November 2016 00:27
Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:28

The big takeaway so far is really as expected, and not especially meaningful: it's looking very, very close. That doesn't mean much beyond the fact that it looks like we won't know what's going on until much later.

Andrew Griffin9 November 2016 00:30

Dems in FLA taking heart as HRC outperforms Obama in key counties, including Osceola, Orange and Broward #ElectionNight

David Usborne9 November 2016 00:31

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