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Nevada live election results for the 2024 presidential race
What to know about Nevada
Nevada, with an economy largely based around tourism and hospitality surrounding Las Vegas, is home to a significant working class population. Both Trump and Harris announced no-tax-on-tips policies in Nevada earlier this year, underscoring the dominance of service industry workers in the Silver State.
Although a Republican presidential candidate hasn’t won Nevada since 2004, Democrats’ margin of victory has decreased in recent years. The Silver State’s economy, dependent on the hospitality industry, was among the most impacted by pandemic closures in 2020, leading to a much slower recovery than in other states, and spurring frustration with Democrat-led policies.
In 2022, Republicans flipped the governor’s mansion, and the state was home to the closest Senate race in the country, suggesting that in 2024, it could be seriously in play for Republicans even at the presidential level. But Nevada, a state with high population turnover, has historically posed polling difficulties. And the largest voting bloc — more than 30% of voters — are registered as nonpartisan in 2024.
How Nevada voted in 2016 and 2020
All but two counties backed Trump in the last election — but those two Democrat-voting counties, home to Las Vegas and Reno, make up the bulk of the state’s population. President Biden defeated Trump in the 2020 election by more than 33,000 votes, and Hillary Clinton won the state in 2016, besting Trump by just over 27,000 votes.
Major races in Nevada
Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen and Republican Sam Brown are facing off in a key Senate race in Nevada as Democrats fight to hold onto control of the chamber. Brown, a 40-year-old businessman and former Army captain who lost the 2022 Republican Senate primary, is aiming to unseat Rosen in her first reelection bid and deliver the GOP its first Senate seat win in the Silver State since 2012.
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Pennsylvania leaning Trump, CBS News rates
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Watch Live: Trump expected to speak as Harris’ path to victory narrows
Former President Donald Trump is expected to speak early Wednesday morning at his Election Night headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida, as Vice President Kamala Harris’ path to victory narrows.
CBS News has not yet made a projection in the presidential race, as Trump doesn’t currently have the electoral votes to declare victory.
So far, the battleground states CBS News is projecting Trump will win are North Carolina, Georgia and Pennsylvania. CBS News rates Wisconsin as leans Trump. He needs 270 electoral votes to win.
Harris was expected to celebrate Election Night at her alma mater, Howard University, but after midnight, Harris campaign co-chair Cedric Richmond told the crowd she won’t speak to supporters tonight. Harris has remained at the vice president’s residence in Washington, D.C.
Trump’s supporters at his watch party in West Palm Beach were upbeat Tuesday night as results rolled in, with Fox News playing in the background. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Sen. Marco Rubio and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum were among those supporters.
Trump has long cast doubt on the integrity of the election and its results. But he was largely silent on social media Tuesday night, once results appeared to return in his favor.
CBS News projects Republicans will take control of the Senate when the new Congress begins in January.
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Republicans win majority in the Senate, CBS News projects
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