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Follow the latest news and information about voting and the 2020 election, including essential information about how to vote during a pandemic and more.

'Count Every Vote!' Large Postelection Protests Seen In Several U.S. Cities

Protestors take to the streets as results of the presidential election remain uncertain on Wednesday in New York City.
Protestors take to the streets as results of the presidential election remain uncertain on Wednesday in New York City.

Public protests took place in several U.S. cities, including New York, Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis, as demonstrators call for every vote to be counted in the presidential race. President Trump is falsely declaring he has already won the election. Several clashes with police brought arrests.

Some of the protests had been planned ahead of Election Day. They were apparently intensified by a presidential race that's still playing out, despite Trump's attempts to pronounce himself the winner.

The president has also urged officials not to count ballots after Nov. 3 – and he is now amplifying that sentiment.

"STOP THE COUNT!" Trump tweeted Thursday morning.

Police block traffic as demonstrators march on to highway I-94 on Wednesday in Minneapolis, Minn.
Stephen Maturen / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Police block traffic as demonstrators march on to highway I-94 on Wednesday in Minneapolis, Minn.

Trump trails Joe Biden, with several key states too close to call. But on the day after the election, the president said his campaign will "claim" electoral votes in the undecided states of Pennsylvania, Georgia and North Carolina, and also in Michigan – where a narrow victory has since been called for Biden.

A large march in Manhattan Wednesday night resulted in 25 arrests, the New York City Police Department says.

"Count every vote! Every vote counts!" the protesters yelled as they marched.

Police officers arrest some protesters in New York City on Wednesday.
Lev Radin / Sipa USA via Reuters
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Sipa USA via Reuters
Police officers arrest some protesters in New York City on Wednesday.

Clashes with police broke out later in the evening, and some protesters lit fires on sidewalks.

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said weapons were found on some people at the march, listing knives, a Taser, and M-80 explosives.

"Many businesses in this part of the city are boarded up anticipating more post-election unrest," NPR's Brian Mann reports.

In Minneapolis, police issued citations to hundreds of protesters after a march went through downtown and onto Interstate 94.

"Troopers and Minneapolis police cited and released 646 people," member station Minnesota Public Radio reports, citing the State Patrol.

"We're here because the simple fact is we want to make sure that Donald Trump and his cronies don't steal this election," protest organizer Rod Adams told MPR.

Outside the White House in Washington, D.C., "Hundreds of people gathered in Black Lives Matter Plaza for a second night in a row," member station WAMU reports.

There were sporadic clashes with police, the station says. People danced and shared art and music as they waited, along with the rest of the country, for news about who will occupy the Oval Office for the next four years.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.