最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
People celebrate Biden's win in Glover Park
Natalie Davis poses with her husband, Jimmy Davis, and three children on the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and Calvert Street where they came to celebrate Joe Biden鈥檚 presidential win.

From the waterfront to Calvert Street, Georgetown reacts to a Biden win

The Associated Press called the presidential race for Joe Biden just before 11:30 a.m. Then the celebrations started.

A woman was on the phone as she walked along the Georgetown waterfront just after 11:25 a.m.

鈥284! 284!鈥 she said, which is the number of electoral votes president-elect Joe Biden had won when the Associated Press called the race in his favor late Saturday morning.

Over 90% of D.C. voters cast their ballots for Biden, according the Washington D.C. Board of Elections. 最新蜜桃影像 5% voted for President Trump. Biden鈥檚 proportion of the vote was slightly smaller in Ward 2 and Ward 3, which include Georgetown, where the president-elect picked up about 89% of the vote in each ward.

As the news spread, honks could be heard echoing from M street, where pedestrians and passing drivers simultaneously celebrated the results.

A man driving a car with a Joe Biden bumper sticker on the back cheerfully honked while driving up 35th Street.

We won is written on the sidewalk along 37th Street NW
鈥淲e won鈥 was written on the sidewalk near the intersection of Whitehaven Parkway NW and 37th Street along with 鈥淏iden.鈥 President-elect Joe Biden is slated to win the presidential election with at least 279 electoral votes. (Anna Brugmann/最新蜜桃影像)

 

A few blocks over near the intersection of 37th Street NW and Whitehaven Parkway NW, someone had written 鈥淏iden,鈥 鈥渟afety at last鈥 and 鈥渨e won鈥 in blue sidewalk chalk in front of their home. A prayer candle with a photo of president-elect Biden and a figurine of the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had been placed on the front steps leading to their walkway. The words 鈥淏iden Won鈥 were written underneath in the same blue chalk.

A prayer candle and Ginsburg figurine sit above "we won" in chalk
A Biden prayer candle sits next to a figurine of the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg above the words 鈥淏iden won鈥 written in blue chalk. After four days of vote counting, the Associated Press called the election for Joe Biden late in the morning Saturday. (Anna Brugmann/最新蜜桃影像)

 

Meanwhile, similar celebrations took place all over the United States. that spontaneous cheers broke out around the city when the news broke. Similar scenes where since Friday when president-elect Biden took the lead in Pennsylvania.

Back in D.C., a group of about 20 residents had gathered at the intersection of Calvert Street NW and Wisconsin Avenue around 1 p.m., cheering to the sound of car horns and wooden spoons on pots and pans.

Natalie Davis stood on the corner with her husband and three children. They were at a birthday party in another D.C. park when the AP called the race for Biden. Davis said a woman drove by in a minivan screaming that Kamala Harris was now the vice president. The entire party erupted in cheers, she said.

After driving home and grabbing some kitchen pans and spoons, the five of them stood on the corner of Calvert and Wisconsin celebrating with the passing traffic.

Davis said the four days since the election have been tense. She said her family were 鈥渉olding our breath.鈥

鈥(It was) also really disappointing at first, thinking people were okay with everything staying the same,鈥 Davis said.

Votes cast the day of the election were counted first in many states, giving President Trump a perceived lead election night. That lead began to shrink in the days that followed as states like Pennsylvania and Georgia began counting mail-in and absentee ballots cast prior to Nov. 2.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just a sense of relief,鈥 Davis said.

Kenza Coulibaly, Geneva Jacobs and Keyla Sejas all stood on the same corner. They were on a Metro bus when they heard the news. When the celebrations started, they decided to join in.

All three of the girls are too young to vote, but Coulibaly said her mother voted for president-elect Biden 鈥 her mother鈥檚 first vote as a U.S. citizen.

But watching this election as minors hasn鈥檛 been easy, they said. Coulibaly said she talked to her family, encouraging them to vote this year. Sejas said she phone banked, but mostly they said it felt like the results of this election were in other people鈥檚 hands.

鈥淚t felt really anxious because you didn鈥檛 know who voted for who and you can鈥檛 do anything about it,鈥 Coulibaly said.

A car with a Biden cutout in the back seat drives through the intersection of Wisconsin Ave and Calvert Street
A small group of D.C. residents cheered as a car with a Joe Biden cut out in the back seat drove through the intersection of Wisconsin Avenue and Calvert Street. Celebrations began in cities all over the United States soon after the Associated Press called the presidential election in favor of president-elect Biden late Saturday morning. (Anna Brugmann/最新蜜桃影像)

 

As of 5 p.m. Saturday, President Trump had yet to concede the election. In a statement earlier that day, he had promised additional legal challenges to the results of the election. Since Tuesday, the Trump campaign and its surrogates have launched a series of lawsuits challenging vote counting procedures in Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia.

Judges have been skeptical of Republican鈥檚 arguments, however. A judge denied a request to stop counting votes in Clark County, Nevada, until ballot signatures could be checked by hand as opposed to a computer software Friday evening. The Trump campaign is not a party on that lawsuit, but touted it earlier this week.

Georgetown residents鈥 spirits weren鈥檛 dampened by the possibility of future litigation. Sejas said she would keep celebrating, at least until her voice gave out.

 

Anna Brugmann

Anna covers Bloomingdale, Eckington and surrounding areas for thewash.org. She's interested in education and health access. Before coming to the Wash, Anna covered nonprofits, county government and school programs in Sarasota, Florida. She is a returned Peace Corps volunteer and a Missouri native.

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