Trump Voting Trend Continues in Fall River

Unofficial results show Donald Trump won a majority of votes in the city of Fall River, which no other Republican presidential candidate has done in close to a century

Fall River voter Charlie Chase
Fall River voter Charlie Chase
Jo Goode
Share
Fall River voter Charlie Chase
Fall River voter Charlie Chase
Jo Goode
Trump Voting Trend Continues in Fall River
Copy

The city of Fall River has traditionally been a blue community where Democrats have thrived.

But after the unofficial numbers came in from the city’s 27 polling places, the Spindle City looks like a shade of purple, with President-elect Donald Trump sliding into first place over Vice President Kamala Harris.

The unofficial tally: the Trump/Vance ticket came in at 50.52% of the vote compared to the Harris/Walz vote at 47.58%.

CORRECTION: Due to an editing error, a previous version of this story incorrectly stated that Donald Trump was the first Republican presidential candidate to win Fall River since Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956. Eisenhower lost Fall River to Adlai Stevenson in a close election.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Two House Republicans say Attorney General Peter Neronha overstepped his authority by steering settlement money to children’s dental care, arguing the funds belong in the state’s general fund. Neronha says the move is legal—and necessary
We’re answering your questions as part of our project Breaking Point: The Washington Bridge. Here’s what happened with the short-lived ferry between Bristol and Providence
Fabian Schmidt is readjusting to life back home in Nashua, N.H., after being detained by ICE for two months at the Wyatt Detention Center — despite having a green card
Spending plan prescribes working groups to keep tabs on fiscal tax changes, Medicaid, food assistance and more
With high prices, strict zoning, and limited new construction, Rhode Island is now the least affordable state for homebuyers. Housing expert Richard Godfrey explains the unique challenges driving the crisis—and what might help
The protests were part of a national “No Kings” day of action