View live results of the Pennsylvania presidential election. See maps of county-by-county presidential election results in the race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
Follow Pennsylvania House District 13 election results live during the 2024 election. Get updates on voting outcomes from the Pennsylvania House election, including maps from NBC News.
Results for the 2024 Pennsylvania U.S. Senate Class I general election. Find Pennsylvania and national elections results at BostonGlobe.com.
Donald Trump reclaimed Pennsylvania by improving his margins across the state, shaving Democratic President Joe Biden’s 2020 win in Philadelphia, expanding his own dominance in rural parts of the state and flipping key suburban counties to the GOP column.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have been laser-focused on Pennsylvania. The nation is anxiously awaiting the state's choice.
Harris closed her campaign with an election-eve rally at the Philadelphia Museum of Art chock-full of cultural references to her fight against Trump.
Supporters of both parties in Cumberland County told Newsweek they're "optimistic" that their candidate will win.
With Donald Trump set to win swing states Georgia and North Carolina, NBC News projects, much of the focus turned to the remaining states that could go either way — especially on the so-called “blue wall.
All ballots in the 2024 presidential race in Pennsylvania have now been cast and the counting is underway. At stake are 19 electoral votes in what is sure to be a close contest between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. CBS News is tracking the vote in each county. You can see how people in your area voted below.
Follow Pennsylvania House District 15 election results live during the 2024 election. Get updates on voting outcomes from the Pennsylvania House election, including maps from NBC News.
Most election forecasters ahead of the election considered Pennsylvania the most likely tipping-point state, or the one that would push the race in either candidate's favor. If history holds, the remaining "blue wall" states — Michigan and Wisconsin — may also go the same way.