Factbox-Who is winning the US presidential election? By Reuters
(Reuters) – Democrat Kamala Harris faced Republican Donald Trump on Tuesday in the US presidential election.
There are 538 Electoral College votes allocated to the 50 states and the District of Columbia. 270 votes are needed to win.
The following table shows the projected winner for each state as predicted by media and data providers Edison Research and the Decision Desk HQ, as well as Electoral College statistics based on each party’s predictions.
As of 11:15 pm ET (0415 GMT):
ABC CBS NBC FOX CNN EDISON AP DDHQ
Trump 215 211 214 216 211 211 214 246
Harris 153 145 158 193 145 153 179 169
Battlefields
Arizona (11)
Georgia (16) T
Michigan (15)
Nevada (6)
North Carolina (16) T
Pennsylvania (19)
Wisconsin (10)
Other states
Alabama (9) TTTTTTTT
Alaska (3)
Arkansas (6) TTTTTTTT
California (54) HHHHHHHH
Colorado (10) HHHHHHHHH
Connecticut (7) HHH
Delaware (3) HHHHHHHHH
District of Columbia (3) HHHHHHHH
Florida (30) TTTTTTTT
Hawaii (4)
Idaho (4) TTTTTTTT
Illinois (19) HHHHHHHHH
Indiana (11) TTTTTTTT
Iowa (6) TTTTTTTT
Kansas (6) TTTTTTTT
Kentucky (8) TTTTTTTT
Louisiana (8) TTTTTTTT
Maine (popular vote) (2) H
First District of Maine (1) HH
2nd District of Maine (1) T
Maryland (10) HHHHHHHHH
Massachusetts (11) HHHHHHHHH
Minnesota (10)
Mississippi (6) TTTTTTTT
Missouri (10) TTTTTTTT
Montana (4) TTTTTTTT
Nebraska (popular vote) (2) TTTTT
State of Nebraska 1st (1) TT
Nebraska’s 2nd District (1)
Nebraska 3rd District (1) TTTTT
New Hampshire (4) HH
New Jersey (14) HH
New Mexico (5) H
New York (28) HHHHHHHHH
North Dakota (3) TTTTTTTT
Ohio (17) TTTTTTTT
Oklahoma (7) TTTTTTTT
Oregon (8) HHHH
Rhode Island (4) HHHHHHHHH
South Carolina (9) TTTTTTTT
South Dakota (3) TTTTTTTT
Tennessee (11) TTTTTTTT
Texas (40) TTTTTTTT
Utah (6) TTTTTTTT
Vermont (3) HHHHHHHHH
Virginia (13) H
Washington (12) HH
West Virginia (4) TTTTTTTT
Wyoming (3) TTTTTTTT
Edison Research provides turnout and vote count data to the National Election Pool (NASDAQ: ), a consortium that includes ABC News, CBS News, CNN and NBC News. The networks use the data to inform their ratings. Reuters has an agreement with NEP/Edison to distribute turnout and vote count data to clients. Reuters did not present the results independently. The Associated Press has a separate polling and counting process and makes its own predictions. Fox News relies on data from the AP to inform its projections.