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
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Your support makes all the difference.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:
- European leaders warn of 'new era of uncertainty'
- Hillary Clinton gives concession speech: 'For all the girls and women watching this, don't give up'
- Stunned world reacts to Mr Trump's victory
- Victor pledges to be 'President for all Americans' in speech
- Billionaire reality star's journey to the White House
- What happens next
- Barack Obama invites successor to White House
- How Mr Trump won the election
- ...and how victory slipped through Ms Clinton's fingers
- Theresa May congratulates the President-elect
- Jeremy Corbyn calls Mr Trump's policies 'wrong'
- Nigel Farage will be first UK politician to meet victor
- Former KKK leader claims support sealed victory
- Financial markets drop as analysts fear 'Brexit all over again'
- How British politicians reacted to the election of Donald Trump
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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."
Donald Trump has an important lead in Florida! It's 63,000 votes – which in the grand scheme of things sounds like nothing, but which in Florida is huge.
But Clinton is winning Ohio. If someone was able to win both of those states they'd probably be home dry.
There's only about 20,000 votes between Clinton and Trump. And Jill Stein has about 60,000. That means that many people who backed the green candidate could have made the difference if they went for Clinton (or Trump) instead.
A non-presidential, important result: Florida also voted to legalise medical marijuana, today, for people with PTSD, epilepsy and other conditions.(Voting today isn't just for the national president and legislatures: there's a bunch of different referenda and other things like judges going on, too.)
One thing is clear: nobody is going to lose in a landslide. We don't know who will win or how long it will take, but it's not going to happen anything like decisively. That will be important because it will help Trump's claim that the election wasn't fair, if he loses and chooses not to concede
NBC News is projecting that the Republicans are going to keep control of the House.
Minority voters are six times as likely as whites to wait more than an hour to vote: nyti.ms/2fXouub