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The American elections, in pictures

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Supporters of Republican candidate Donald Trump react to the results of the US presidential election at a party in West Palm Beach, Florida.

EFE/EPA/CRISTOBAL HERRERA-ULASHKEVICH

Donald Trump celebrates the election results in Palm Beach, Florida.

EFE/EPA/CRISTOBAL HERRERA-ULASHKEVICH

A woman reacts to the results of the US election count at the Ahern Hotel in Las Vegas.


Two women are moved after Donald Trump’s victory in the Senate and the House of Representatives. They are in Las Vegas, Nevada, where Trump also leads the counting race.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

Supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris watch the results during a campaign party at Howard University in Washington, DC. Harris did not come out to give a speech during the vote count, nor is she expected to do so afterward.

EFE/EPA/SHAWN THEW

A young girl observes the results of the elections in the United States from a pub in the capital Washington, a Democratic stronghold where Kamala Harris won.

EFE/EPA/WILL OLIVER

A woman reacts to the results of the US election count at the Ahern Hotel in Las Vegas. Donald Trump wins the vote in the state of Nevada.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

People party at the Ahern Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, where Donald Trump cherishes the official victory.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

Supporters of Democrat Kamala Harris check their cell phones at the party center in Atlanta, Georgia, where almost no one remains. Donald Trump won this state.

EFE/EPA/ERIK S. LESS

People celebrate at the Ahern Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, where Donald Trump cherishes the official victory

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

A man waits for voting results at a Washington DC pub

EFE/EPA/WILL OLIVER

The scene at Vice President Kamala Harris’ election party after she refused to speak and the crowd dispersed at Howard University after Election Day in Washington, D.C.

EFE/EPA/JIM LO SCALZO

Several people vote at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada. Nevada is one of the so-called “swing states,” as the seven states that lack a clear Republican or Democratic tradition are called, and which will ultimately decide the outcome of the election.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

Since the morning, long lines of people have formed waiting to vote in different states. It’s Pennsylvania.

EFE/Angel Colmenares

Voters cast their ballots “electronically” at a library in Atlanta, Georgia. Republican candidate Donald Trump opposed this type of machine during the campaign, arousing fear and suspicion about their role in a possible “punch”.

EFE/EPA/ERIK S. LESS

A person waits to vote in Scottsdale, Arizona, another of the key states that could determine the outcome of the election. After decades of “red” tradition, the state flipped to Democratic blue in the 2020 elections.

EFE/EPA/ALLISON DINNER

A woman walks past a campaign poster of Kamala Harris and Tim Walz in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, another of the swing states. In the last two nominations, Pennsylvania was the defining state who took control of the White House.

EFE/EPA/DAVID MUSE

A group of women wait to vote at a Banana Factory store in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Young women were one of the most important assets of Kamala Harris’ campaign in her defense of abortion and reproductive rights.

EFE/Angel Colmenares

People vote at the At Sunset shopping center in Henderson, Nevada.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

The license plate of a car parked at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas encourages citizens to vote “blue.” That is to say, to the Democratic Party of Kamala Harris.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

Polling places activated at At Sunset shopping center in Henderson, Nevada. Nevada cities, like Las Vegas, have opened schools, libraries, restaurants and even football stadiums to serve as voting centers.

EFE/EPA/CAROLINE BREHMAN

A man works near a ballot box in Washington DC. More than 80 million people, or nearly 40% of citizens eligible to vote, voted in advance, either by mail or in this type of ballot box.

EFE/EPA/GAMAL DIAB

Several citizens vote in Fairfax, Virginia. Polling stations opened early in the morning, but the results will not be known until late at night in Spain or, given the close nature of these elections, tomorrow.

EFE/EPA/WILL OLIVER

Voters in Dearborn Heights, Michigan. Counting is slower in the so-called blue wall, which includes Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, because polls are open later and start after mail voting.

EFE/EPA/CJ GUNTHER

A woman hugs Democratic Senate candidate Rubén Gallego in Guadalupe, Arizona.

EFE/EPA/ALLISON DINNER

A person votes in Atlanta, Georgia. This is the Fulton County Metropolitan Library, one of the key locations that will decide the winner of the state’s elections. The countdown begins at 7:00 p.m.

EFE/EPA/ERIK S. LESS

A boy wears a t-shirt in support of Democrats Kamala Harris and Tim Waltz, leaving the White House Visitor’s Gate.

EFE/EPA/GAMAL DIAB

A bipartisan team judges votes on Election Day at the Maricopa County Election and Tabulation Center in Scottsdale, Arizona. This county received 60% of the votes cast statewide in the 2020 election.

EFE/EPA/ALLISON CENA

A group of people are having a “vote party” outside a polling place in Atlanta, Georgia. Two polling stations in the state had to be evacuated for about 30 minutes after receiving false bomb threats.

EFE/EPA/ERIK S. LESS

A stand sells T-shirts with the face of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris outside the White House in Washington DC.

EFE/EPA/WILL OLIVER

Arizona Vote Counting Center. In this state and others like Nevada, Michigan or Georgia, if there is a problem with mail-in voting, such as a missing signature or identification number, it is a few days after the election to solve it.

EFE/EPA/ALLISON DINNER

A young woman uses an electronic device to mark ballots at the West End Library in Washington DC

EFE/EPA/GAMAL DIAB

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