Biden narrowly wins Arizona in Democrats’ first triumph in state since Bill Clinton

Victory brings president-elect to 290 electoral votes, 20 more than 270 required to take White House

President-elect Joe Biden speaks in Wilimington, Delaware on Monday. Biden’s  margin in Arizona is about 11,000 votes, or 0.3 percentage points. Photograph:  Amr Alfiky/The New York Times
President-elect Joe Biden speaks in Wilimington, Delaware on Monday. Biden’s margin in Arizona is about 11,000 votes, or 0.3 percentage points. Photograph: Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

US president-elect Joe Biden has narrowly won Arizona, capturing the state's 11 electoral votes and strengthening his electoral college margin as president Donald Trump continues to make baseless attacks on the vote counts favouring Mr Biden.

Mr Biden was projected to win Arizona after more than a week of vote counting, Edison Research said.

Mr Biden, whose margin in Arizona is about 11,000 votes, or 0.3 percentage points, is the first Democratic presidential candidate to carry the state since president Bill Clinton in 1996. Four years ago, Mr Trump won the state by 3.5 percentage points.

That Arizona , the home of the late Senator John McCain and Senator Barry Goldwater, a founder of the 20th century conservative political movement and the 1964 Republican presidential nominee, was in play for Democrats at all is remarkable. Before the state voted for Mr Clinton, the last Democrat it had supported for president was Harry Truman in 1948.

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Mr Biden’s win underscored a profound political shift in Arizona, a longtime Republican bastion that has lurched left in recent years, fuelled by rapidly evolving demographics and a growing contingent of young Hispanic voters championing liberal policies.

Last week, Democratic challenger Mark Kelly defeated the state's Republican senator, Martha McSally, in a special election, making Mr Kelly and Senator Kyrsten Sinema the first pair of Democrats to represent Arizona in the Senate since the 1950s. The Arizona victory brings Mr Biden to 290 electoral votes, 20 more than the 270 required to take the White House. Republicans have been mounting long-shot legal attempts to try to upend results in key battleground states, but they have been mostly dealt setbacks and some of their cases deal with small numbers of ballots. For instance, Mr Trump would have to invalidate roughly 55,000 Pennsylvania votes to overturn Mr Biden's victory there. The office of Pennsylvania's attorney general, Josh Shapiro, has said that there is no evidence to support claims from Trump's lawyers that the election in Philadelphia or elsewhere in Pennsylvania was fraudulent.

The Trump campaign has filed a lawsuit in Arizona, alleging that poll workers in the state’s largest county, Maricopa, improperly pressured voters to enter their vote in a way that would incorrectly reject votes. On Wednesday, Arizona’s attorney general, Mark Brnovich, a Republican, told Fox News that state officials had received about 1,000 complaints about the election but had found “no evidence” of widespread voter fraud. “If indeed there was some great conspiracy, it apparently didn’t work,” he said.

Mr Trump's refusal to accept the result of the November 3rd election has stalled the process of transitioning to a new administration. The federal agency that normally would release funding to an incoming president-elect, the General Services Administration, has not yet recognised Biden as the winner. His pick for White House chief of staff, Ron Klain, told MSNBC on Thursday that receiving transition funding is important given the US government will roll out a coronavirus vaccination campaign early next year. "The sooner we can get our transition experts into meetings with the folks who are planning a vaccination campaign, the more seamless the transition to a Biden presidency from a Trump presidency can be," Mr Klain said. Mr Biden was set to meet with transition advisers again on Friday as he maps out his approach to the pandemic and prepares to name his top appointees, including cabinet members. –New York Times and Reuters