U OF M
PARTLY CLOUDY HIGH 58° LOW 36°
MINNEAPOLIS
ST PAUL
2016 ELECTION
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM
NOV. 9-12, 2016
NATIONAL BREAKDOWN ELECTORAL VOTE 49.4% 40.5% 10%
TRUMP 264
POPULAR VOTE RI CT NJ DE
CLINTON
MD
DC
215
47%
TRUMP
55,948,537 Hillary Clinton
MINNESOTA BREAKDOWN
48% 47% 4.7%
CLINTON
56,959,821
Donald Trump
*As of press time
Third party
CLINTON
Not Called
TRUMP
45%
In last minutes, Trump leads
EASTON GREEN, DAILY
Preston Rodrigues celebrates as another state is called for Donald Trump on Tuesday at the Radisson Blue Mall of America in Bloomington.
Donald Trump is positioned to be the 45th U.S. president.
On campus, many students hoped for a Clinton victory.
BY DAILY STAFF
BY DAILY STAFF
hough polls were too close to call, it appears that businessman Donald Trump was poised to defeat Hillar y Clinton and become the 45th President of the United States. The expected results defied nearly every poll and prediction showing a Clinton victory, though her lead had shrunk in the days leading up to the election. Riding an anti-establishment wave, Trump made few political allies, but tapped into the frustrations of many Americans who felt ignored by political elites. As of 1 a.m. Wednesday mor ning, Trump had locked up 266 of the needed 270 electoral votes. Early wins in North Carolina, Florida and Ohio paved the way to Trump’s expected victory. Though his path to victor y seemed inevitable, Clinton had not yet conceded the
ith the White House, Congress and the control of the state Legislature on the line Tuesday, University of Minnesota students flocked to the polls Tuesday to cast their votes in a variety of local and national races. Many stopped by community centers, churches and other voting spots to cast ballots for the first time early Tuesday. Students were encouraged to participate in the days leading up to the election, as well as the day of, by multiple campus leaders, including student government and University President Eric Kaler. At least 9,000 students registered to vote before Oct. 27 — more than all other university campuses in the U.S at the time. In an email to students and faculty Monday, Kaler stressed the importance of
T
u See TRUMP Page 6
W
MEAGAN LYNCH, DAILY
Sisters Emily and Sammi Nachtigal react to polling during the Minnesota DFL election night party at the Minneapolis Hilton on Tuesday.
u See REACTIONS Page 6
DISTRICT 60B
Omar wins; first Somali-American lawmaker in U.S. A landslide victory, Ilhan Omar won the district that includes the University late Tuesday night. BY DAILY STAFF
CHRIST DANG, DAILY
Campaign volunteer Habon Abdulle embraces Ilhan Omar on Tuesday at the Courtyard Marriott on West Bank in Minneapolis. Omar won the seat for House 60B.
Ilhan Omar became the first SomaliAmerican member of the Minnesota Legislature, and first in the U.S. Her campaign announced the victor y after 9 p.m. Tuesday. She won the seat in District 60B, which includes the University of Minnesota’s East and West Bank campuses. She secured nearly 80 percent of the district’s vote. Omar — who was born in Somalia and settled in Cedar-Riverside in 1997 — defeated longtime incumbent Phyllis Kahn in August during the Democratic primary. Kahn had served the district since 1973. Her Republican opponent, Abdimalik Askar suspended his campaign in August. In the primar y, Omar also took on a challenger in Mohamud Noor, who Kahn
19.21% MN State Senator
District 60B
Ilhan Omar
79.77% beat in the 2014 Democratic primary. Omar won 41 percent of the August primary vote compared to both Kahn and Noor, who finished with about 29 percent each. With her election, the Somali community now has someone to represent their district’s issues, she said at her Election Night party at the Courtyard Marriott on West u See OMAR Page 7
VOLUME 117 ISSUE 20