WASHINGTON — Democrat Joe Biden’s native state of Pennsylvania on Saturday secured his victory to become the next president of the United States when The Associated Press reported he had gained enough votes there to win the electoral college.
The AP called Pennsylvania for Biden at 11:25 a.m., which gave the former vice president 284 electoral college votes to 214 for President Donald Trump. That tally includes Arizona, which the AP and Fox News have called for Biden, but other news outlets have not due to the narrow margin and remaining ballots. Nevada was also called for Biden Saturday.
“JOE BIDEN DEFEATS PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP,” the news organization tweeted.
Fox News has also projected Biden to win.
Fox News projects Biden to defeat Trump, become 46th president after winning Nevada, Pennsylvaniahttps://t.co/BTx2gwdT2N pic.twitter.com/oFrpHTWTKt
— Fox News (@FoxNews) November 7, 2020
“I am honored and humbled by the trust the American people have placed in me and in Vice President-elect Harris,” Biden said in a statement. “In the face of unprecedented obstacles, a record number of Americans voted. Proving once again, that democracy beats deep in the heart of America. With the campaign over, it’s time to put the anger and the harsh rhetoric behind us and come together as a nation. It’s time for America to unite. And to heal. We are the United States of America. And there’s nothing we can’t do, if we do it together.”
With the win, Biden’s runningmate, U.S. Sen. Kamala D. Harris, of California, is set to become the nation’s first woman vice president, and the first woman of Black and Asian descent to hold the post.
Biden’s win capped a laborious and dramatic weeklong vote count punctuated by a barrage of litigation by Trump’s campaign, and repeated, and baseless, claims by Trump that Democrats had conspired to steal the election.
Trump’s remarks earned him a rare public rebuke from U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., who told CBS This Morning on Friday that Trump’s remarks were “very disturbing.”
“The president’s speech last night was very disturbing to me because he made very, very serious allegations without any evidence to support it,” Toomey said, continuing, “I voted for President Trump. I endorsed President Trump. I want the next president to be the person who legitimately wins the Electoral College and I will accept the results.”

Trump, who was at his Virginia golf course Saturday morning, issued a statement vowing to keep contesting the results, accusing Biden of “rushing to falsely pose as the winner.”
“The simple fact is this election is far from over,” Trump said in the statement. “Joe Biden has not been certified as the winner of any states, let alone any of the highly contested states headed for mandatory recounts, or states where our campaign has valid and legitimate legal challenges that could determine the ultimate victor.”
Biden, Trump, and their surrogates blitzed Pennsylvania with a series of in-person events in the race’s final days. Biden and his campaign parked in Pennsylvania on Nov. 2, the day before Election Day, finishing with a drive-in rally in Pittsburgh. Trump campaigned in Luzerne County, a county he flipped in 2016.
Pennsylvanians cast a record 3.2 million mail-in ballots, which county officials were not allowed to begin tabulating until 7 a.m. on Election Day after Gov. Tom Wolf and the Republican-controlled General Assembly failed to reach an agreement to extend the pre-canvassing deadline before the Legislature adjourned for its pre-Election Day recess last month.
Wolf and Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, whose office oversees elections in the state, appealed for calm all week, urging Pennsylvanians to be patient as the vote count unfolded.
“No matter how they voted, we have very strong processes in place to make sure that voting integrity and security are constantly followed in every county in the state,” Boockvar said Thursday night.
The AP call for Biden came after several excruciating days of mail-ballot counting in a handful of battleground states, where early in-person votes had favored Trump. But an unprecedented number of mail ballots — which Trump had portrayed as fraudulent and urged his supporters not to use — favored Biden, allowing him to overcome deficits in Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Georgia.
Trump has challenged those results, through lawsuits in those critical states and in a statement from the White House Thursday evening, in which he cast aspersions on the vote-counting process without citing any specific evidence for his claims.
“This election is not over,” the Trump campaign legal counsel, Matt Morgan, said in a statement after Pennsylvania’s updated vote totals gave Biden a lead on Friday morning.
Responding to reports that Trump may not concede once the race is called, a Biden spokesman said in a statement Friday: “As we said on July 19th, the American people will decide this election. And the United States government is perfectly capable of escorting trespassers out of the White House.”
Biden made a short public statement late Friday in Delaware, urging patience with the vote-counting process and expressing confidence that he would ultimately be declared the winner.
“The numbers tell us a clear and convincing story: We’re going to win this race,” Biden said.
Even with the presidential result appearing to be clear, there remain ballots that were received by Election Day to be counted in a number of states. As in every election, states will still be receiving ballots from overseas and military voters, and will need to certify their initial vote totals.
And in Georgia, where Biden also pulled ahead overnight, a recount is expected due to the very narrow margin between the candidates.
Where do the vote totals stand in Pennsylvania?
As of 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Pennsylvania’s state election data showed Biden with a lead of 28,393 votes. That narrow lead had been growing since Friday morning, when Biden pulled ahead after trailing Trump in Pennsylvania’s early vote totals.
The tsunami of mail ballots from Pennsylvania voters favored Biden 3 to 1, allowing him to overcome a deficit of nearly 700,000 votes late on election night.
The volume of those ballots in a state that had massively expanded access to mail balloting just last fall, combined with rules preventing county officials from starting to open those ballots until Tuesday morning, resulted in a slow counting process.
Legal action from the Trump campaign also slowed down Philadelphia’s counting process. A judge ruled in favor of the campaign’s request for closer access to observe the city’s ballot counting, leading to a two-hour pause Thursday and a shift to only use the equipment where observers could watch, the Inquirer reported.
Philadelphia officials said Friday afternoon they still had 40,000 ballots to tally, estimating it could take several days to finish, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer. State data showed 76,000 mail ballots left to tally Saturday morning.
The Trump campaign did win a favorable ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court Friday evening, when Justice Samuel Alito approved a request from Republicans to require late-arriving mail ballots be segregated from the state’s tallying. But the Pennsylvania Capital-Star reported that state officials already had requested county election officials to do so.
Will Biden’s new lead in Georgia hold?
Pennsylvania wasn’t the only state where Biden came from behind on Friday: He also had notched a slim lead in Georgia, which had grown to 7,200 votes as of Saturday morning, according to the Georgia Recorder. Mail ballots there had been steadily reducing Trump’s lead in what has been a Republican stronghold, and updated tallies from suburban Clayton County pushed him into the lead.
But it may not be clear for weeks who has secured the state’s 16 electoral votes. Georgia’s secretary of state told reporters Friday there will be a recount.
What about Arizona?
Biden has a shrinking lead in Arizona, where he was ahead of Trump by 20,573 votes Saturday morning. That’s down from a lead of 68,000 votes as of Thursday morning, according to the Arizona Mirror.
Arizona also was still sifting through stacks of mail ballots at the end of the week. As of Friday morning, Maricopa County had about 140,000 early ballots left to count, plus nearly 6,000 early ballots that required signature verification, and another 16,000 provisional ballots.
Nevada also called for Biden
Biden had a lead of 22,657 votes as of Friday, according to the Nevada Current, but the state was still far from finished counting. However, on Saturday the AP called the state for the former vice president as his lead grew to nearly 26,000 and was only expected to increase.
Clark County, Nevada’s most populous county and also its bluest, still had thousands of mail ballots to process and count, the Current reported. Additionally, there were thousands of identification-required ballots and provisional ballots to tally.
UPDATE: This post has been updated to add statements from candidates Joe Biden and Donald Trump as well as additional reporting from Pennsylvania and Nevada.
The Pennsylvania Capital-Star’s John Micek and Stephen Caruso contributed to this report.
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