Staff Writers
The news of Donald Trump winning the presidential election prompted mixed emotions Wednesday morning for North Texas voters.
Former president Trump beat Kamala Harris in the Lone Star State, securing 40 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win. Dallas County was a blue speck on the results map with its neighboring counties unsurprisingly red.
Trump is the first person convicted of a felony to win the White House and the first former president to regain power since 1892. The victory marks an extraordinary comeback for a former president who refused to accept defeat four years ago, sparked a violent insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, faced dozens of felony charges and survived two assassination attempts.
Republicans also took control of the Senate, flipping Democrat-held seats in West Virginia and Ohio.
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The Dallas Morning News spoke with several voters to get a better understanding of how they feel about the results and what’s at stake for them over the next four years.
Ken Fitzgerald brought his kids Betty, 9, and Peter, 7, along with him to vote Tuesday at Lakewood Elementary. He said the kids knew about the election since school was closed and were asking questions so he wanted them to see what their school library looked like as a polling place.
Fitzgerald, 41, laughed Wednesday morning recalling Betty and Peter complaining that the line was boring and long but he said they paid careful attention to what he was doing when it came time to fill out the ballot and insert it into the machine.
He said they asked “Who won?” a few times before he sent them to bed because they were falling asleep on the couch. Then, when they woke up the next morning, he told them about Trump’s victory.
“I was glad to leave them with some memory where they got to participate and go vote,” Fitzgerald said.
Though his kids aren’t old enough to get the politics of it all, Fitzgerald, who voted for Trump, said he felt the election results reflected how the majority of voters feel about the current administration’s policies and agenda.
“The economy, inflation and high interest rates are things that people have endured and most voters did not believe things would materially change if there was a continuation of similar leadership,” he said.
Devastation hit Elise Schedler early Wednesday. The 28-year-old stayed up late watching as totals tallied up. She was initially optimistic about a Blue wave, but as Pennsylvania’s 19 electoral college votes looked less and less attainable for Vice President Kamala Harris, she lost hope. Despite dreams of an upset by Dems, she woke up dreading seeing the results on her phone.
“I’m just kind of going to stay away from Twitter for the next four years and hope we don’t have another World War,” she said.
Schedler said Donald Trump’s last term was marred by “constant stress, anxiety at all times.” She worries about Trump’s potentially unfettered power: “Leading with bigotry and leading with that much inherent polarization … I’m worried that it’s going to snowball.”
Women’s rights and securing access to abortion were top-of-mind for Schedler this election. And the effect, she said, will extend beyond Trump’s next four years.
“A lot of women I know are coming together right now and trying to stand up for one another, and support each other, and be loud and care about one another,” she said.
“But at the same time, the fact that we have to come together in our own country, in our own homes, seems incredibly regressive.”
Christopher Barnette, a downtown resident, was sporting a bald eagle and American flag T-shirt while walking his dog Wednesday morning near Klyde Warren Park.
”I’m honestly wearing this ironically, I truly don’t believe in the country right now,” the 27-year-old said. “But I believe in its people.”
He repeatedly said the result of the presidential election “sucks,” but also called on people to differentiate between Trump voters who were motivated by hatred and those who cast their ballot out of obligation.
”Try not to go to hard on them ... because you can only do so much by pushing people away,” he said.
Barnette also said he believes local politics affect people’s day to day lives more and was pleased by the passage of some of the ballot initiatives, including the decriminalization of small amounts of marijuana.
James Parker feels comfortable with Donald Trump as the president-elect. Parker, 35, who works in manufacturing, voted for the Republican candidate, believing he can fix the housing market, ballooning grocery costs and high gas prices.
“I’m excited for the next four years, at least, to know that I’ll be able to financially be straight and structure my life accordingly,” Parker said. “I feel like this is a huge win.”
Parker added: “I expect him to change a lot, that’ll pretty much make the people more comfortable rather than objectives that just don’t address what’s going on in everyday life.”
Tiffanie Carney, 51, said she was “baffled” and “in a state of shock” Wednesday morning.
“We’re just wondering what the future is going to be,” the Harris voter said. “I’m in a state of fear right now, a state of uncertainty.”
Carney said she watched the results come in into the early morning hours. When Trump closed in after winning Georgia, Carney said she turned her TV off and prayed.
“Lord watch over us, whichever way it goes,” she said. “I did my part.”
Carney said she believes there are even bigger implications tied to the fact Republicans also took control of the Senate – especially in regards to women’s health care.
“Women went for this,” Carney said. “I’m past my child-bearing years, but If I had no way of getting the access to the medical help I needed, that would have torn me apart.
“I really paid attention this time and I wanted my voice to be heard. I thought everyone else did and that we all wanted what’s best for our country. It’s scary to think: Our country thinks this is best.”
The popular vote made Claire Mina happy. Mina — a former legislative aide for a Democratic Chicago alderman and Hillary Clinton voter in 2016 who has cast her ballot for Trump in the elections since — believes being a Trump supporter will become less polarizing.
“I was never afraid to say I was Republican,” Mina said. “I was afraid to say I supported Trump because you come off as racist, no matter what, or far right. Now that more than half the people voted for him, maybe that rhetoric will tone down.”
Mina, 54, said she voted for policy not personality: While she said Trump is a poor orator who can be immature and petty, Mina believes he was the better candidate. She’s grown increasingly concerned about the economy, immigration, a lack of respect for the military and veterans, and foreign aid under the Biden administration. She hated the way Biden handled the withdrawal from Afghanistan and student loan forgiveness.
“I’m quite certain that no matter what juvenile dribble comes out of his mouth, it’s going to be better than what Kamala would have done,” Mina said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Maggie writes about public safety and criminal courts. Raised in Columbus, she's a graduate of Ohio University. Maggie previously worked at the Chicago Tribune and The Columbus Dispatch.
Jamie Landers is a breaking news reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She is a graduate of The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication in Phoenix, where she studied journalism and political science. Jamie previously reported for The Arizona Republic and Arizona PBS.
Lana Ferguson joined The Dallas Morning News after reporting in South Carolina's Lowcountry for The Island Packet & Beaufort Gazette newspapers. She graduated from the University of Mississippi where she studied journalism and Southern studies. She's a Virginia native but her work has taken her all over the U.S., southern Africa, and Sri Lanka.
Julia is a breaking news reporter with the Dallas Morning News. She is a Louisiana native and a graduate of the University of Mississippi where she studied journalism and public policy. She previously covered education for Mississippi Today in Jackson, Miss.