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Major news organizations marked it as a tossup in the lead-up to the election. [4] Trump won Pennsylvania with 50.4% of the vote to Kamala Harris's 48.7%, defeating her by a margin of roughly 1.7% and flipping the state. This was the largest margin of victory for a Republican candidate since 1988, as well as the first time since that election ...
[2] [3] During the first presidential election in 1789, Pennsylvania was allotted 15 electoral votes. In 2024, the most recent election, the state was allotted 19. This number, proportional to the state's population and decided every 10 years after a census, peaked at 38 from the 1912 election through the 1928 election. [4] The next ...
Pennsylvania previously voted for Democrats in five of the last six presidential elections — the lone exception being 2016, when Trump edged Clinton by just 44,292 votes out of more than 6 ...
Republican Dave McCormick defeated three-term incumbent Democratic senator Bob Casey Jr. in an upset victory. McCornick won with 48.82% of the vote to Casey's 48.60%. This was Pennsylvania's closest Senate election since the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment, as well as the closest Senate election of the 2024 cycle.
The race for the White House went through Pennsylvania, with Donald Trump claiming victory there. How many votes did Trump get in Pennsylvania? Skip to main content
In less than two months, more than 8.86 million registered voters in Pennsylvania will have a chance to vote in the 2024 presidential election.
Below is a table of Pennsylvania's majority vote in the last twelve presidential elections, alongside the national electoral college results. On the presidential level, the state has voted for the nationwide loser on only 10 occasions – 1824, 1884, 1892, 1912, 1916, 1932, 1948, 1968, 2000, and 2004 – meaning it has voted for the national ...
Republicans took the lead for new registrations last week, with the GOP’s 12,076 new voters pushing the party ahead of 10,785 new Democratic voters.