DeWine announces new $1.1 billion Columbus technology district
Ohio is looking to create a third technology hub in Columbus, following innovation districts in Cincinnati and Cleveland. Gov. Mike DeWine, join…
Ohio is looking to create a third technology hub in Columbus, following innovation districts in Cincinnati and Cleveland. Gov. Mike DeWine, join…
WASHINGTON (Los Angeles Times/TNS) — Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States Wednesday, just hours a…
Ohio State’s first LGBTQ center, a set state-of-emergency grading system and a streamlined sexual-assault reporting process — these are some of the…
Written by Ronald Holmes III, President OSU Dems Watching the events unfold Wednesday in our nation’s capital, I was flabbergasted at how t…
It’s been a strange year — every week seemed to bring something new and unprecedented. In March, most everything went online due to COVID-19. At th…
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is projected to become the 46th president of the United States. The Associated Press called Pennsylvania for Biden around 11:30 a.m. Saturday, securing him and running mate California Senator Kamala Harris a total 284 electoral votes, unseating President Donald Trump. Biden also leads the popular vote by more than 4.2 million votes.
The president spoke publicly for the first time since election night, stepping in front of a White House podium to spread baseless accusations of voter fraud. "If you count the legal votes, I easily win," he said. "If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us."
The Associated Press has yet to call five states — Nevada, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia and Alaska. With the exception of Alaska, former Vice President Joe Biden, who sits with 264 electoral votes, needs one of the remaining four states to reach the electoral vote threshold of 270. President Donald Trump, who sits with 214 electoral votes, needs all four.
President Donald Trump is projected to win Ohio by about 450,000 votes early Wednesday morning, but the winner of the presidency has not yet been declared.
Voting experts anticipate record voter turnout and urge Ohioans to be patient while awaiting official results, which will take several days to get.