Donald Trump is cruising to victory over Harris for a big win.
Today, Donald Trump is on the eve of one of the greatest comebacks in political history.
With more than 100 million votes counted, the Republican outperformed bitter rival Kamala Harris in most critical swing states, RadarOnline can reveal.
His early surge was enough for the bookmakers to hail him for a stunning victory.
Trump’s billionaire cheerleader Elon Musk declared: “Game, set and match:”
And at a party at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, close friend and British right-wing politician Nigel Farage said: “The mood is joyful. This is the most incredible political comeback in our entire lifetimes.”
Confidence that he was on his way back to the White House grew from the moment the first polls closed.
In critical swing states, early tallies showed him doing significantly better against Harris than when he lost to Joe Biden in 2020.
He scored his first major victory, with the Associated Press naming North Carolina as the former president.
Just two hours later, Georgia would be the next to defeat Trump, by a margin of about 51-48 percent.
It was four years ago when Trump famously begged the state’s elections director to “find him” the 11,000 votes needed to hold on.
And then Fox called the crucial battlefield of Pennsylvania for him too.
It brought him within a fraction of the 270 needed for victory – with Arizona, Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin all up for grabs.
As the walls closed in on Harris, one bookmaker said, “She can’t come back from this.”
Trump also defied a poll that had made headlines by predicting he would lose Iowa.
Other swing state races remained too close to call, and some Democrats had not given up hope that Harris would turn the night around.
But Republican Foreign Affairs spokesperson Sara Elliot said her candidate had “shellacked” Harris.
She said, ‘This is what we in America would call a shellacking, a thump.
“It’s certainly not what we expected in some ways, with the polls being as close as they are.”
Scarlett Maguire, a pollster at JL Partners, said Trump has made “tremendous progress” with both young voters and non-white voters.
He won about one in three ethnic minority votes, which Maguire said for a Republican candidate was “absolutely astonishing”.
She added that the coalition of voters who elected Trump is one of the most diverse in American history.
Maguire said: “It is a radical realignment that the US is seeing.
“It would have been unthinkable that a Republican candidate could do this well.
“What’s especially interesting is that it seems to be driven by Hispanic men and black men. They really came out with Trump.”
Pals of Harris informed reporters that they were concerned her path to the White House was becoming “too narrow.”
Harris was on the ground this morning after withdrawing from a planned speech at her own party in Washington.
Her campaign co-chair told gathered supporters – where the mood was “pretty grim” – that they “won’t hear from the VP tonight.”
At a Democratic event in London, there were cries of “no, that can’t be true” as projections showed Trump taking a big lead among Michigan’s Latino voters.
His strong showing with Latinos came just days after an argument when a comedian called Puerto Rico “trash” during one of his rallies.
The betting markets went into a frenzy when early results gave Trump a big lead in a series of swing states in the last election.