Donald Trump is projected to take Pennsylvania, which was seen as the biggest of the seven “swing” states that could decide the election.
He was also projected to have won North Carolina and Georgia.
We are still awaiting the outcome of the others: Arizona, Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, the Republicans are also set to take control of the Senate.
For the data in the map, click here
To win the presidency, a candidate needs 270 out of 538 electoral college votes.
Each state is worth a differing number of electoral college votes depending on the size of the population. In most cases if a candidate gets the most votes in a state, they win all the electoral college votes for that state.
Pennsylvania was seen as the biggest state to watch out for. With its 19 electoral votes, it was seen as a major part to either side winning.
For the data in the map, click here
The map above shows the voting in each county of Pennsylvania.
Kamala Harris needed to do well in the densely populated suburbs of the major cities.
Erie (in the north-west of the map), Northampton (half way down the east side) and Luzerne (to the east of Scranton) are all counties that voted for Trump in 2016 and switched to Biden in 2020. Now they’ve voted for Trump again.
There are also elections to both Houses of Congress. The Republicans are projected to have gained a majority in Senate after wins including West Virginia and Ohio.
For the data in the map, click here
If the President’s party controls both these institutions it gives him or her a good chance of implementing their agenda.
If either House is in the hands of the other party, more negotiation will be needed.
The US exit polls help build a picture of how different groups of people have voted across the nation.
The latest numbers suggest that women are breaking for Kamala Harris but perhaps not by the margins her campaign had hoped, at 54% compared with 44% for Donald Trump.
In 2020, the exit polls suggested 57% of women backed Joe Biden, which is broadly similar once the margin of error is taken into account.
Exit poll data is updated throughout the night so the picture may change.
Looking at race, Trump is leading among white voters – the biggest single group – and Harris is leading with black voters.
She is also ahead with Hispanic voters but it looks like support for Trump has increased more than 10 points among this group compared with 2020.
A majority of younger voters are backing Harris while just over half of middle-aged voters are voting Trump, the latest data suggests. The over-65 age group is evenly split.
Nearly six in 10 college-educated voters in the data said they voted Harris, while a similar proportion of people without a college degree voted for Trump.
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