Night has well and truly settled in the United States and it's looking unlikely that we'll find out who the President will be before tomorrow dawns.
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But it seems nobody has told Donald Trump that.
Just after his Democratic rival Joe Biden walked off stage from giving a short statement - Trump took to Twitter saying he'd be making a statement tonight "a big WIN!".
Biden said in his statement that he was confident about winning Arizona, but it wasn't his place, or Trump's, to call the election tonight.
"That is a turn around. We also just called it for Minnesota and we are still in the game in Georgia, although that is not what we expected," he said.
Many of the seats to watch are still being counted - although ABC's Antony Green has given Ohio to Trump over Joe Biden, while another critical seat, North Carolina, sits on a knife's edge.
The battleground state of Florida has been declared for Trump, while Arizona and Pennsylvania are too close to call with mail ballots still to be counted, something that won't start until the election day vote counting is done.
One thing we do know is it's looking likely the Democratic party will maintain a majority in the House of Representatives, that's the lower chamber of US Congress.
It's also been reported that Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, who expressed racist views and support for QAnon conspiracy theories in a series of online videos, has won a US House seat representing northwest Georgia.
Her candidacy was bolstered by Trump, who has called her a "future Republican star".
Mostly, election day in the US has been a peaceful affair so far with crowds gathered outside the White House.
The ABC reports a march has started in Washington DC just after midnight local time, and while firecrackers were being set off it has been orderly so far.
While we don't know when we'll find out who the next President is, moving back onto home soil and we do now have a date for when the Victorian-NSW border will open.
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced there would be free movement between the two states from November 23.
The move will make NSW the only state or territory in Australia open to all residents.
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