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
1 min read
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.

On a crisp morning at Bradbury Mountain, Park Ranger Jeff Pengel leads a pun-filled journey into the overlooked world of lichens — ancient, resilient organisms quietly shaping our forests and hinting at the impacts of climate change
Saturday’s funeral mass will begin at 10 a.m. local time — 4 a.m. ET
Val Lawson and Frank Ciccone join forces in bid to lead chamber, while Ryan Pearson mounts challenge in high-stakes scramble for votes ahead of potential Tuesday decision
Activists and local officials demand answers after federal agents allegedly used a taser during an apprehension in Dexter Park and transferred the injured man without allowing him to speak to a lawyer
‘It’s a huge loss. I can’t put into words what a huge loss it is’
On foggy spring nights, volunteers step into the dark to help frogs and salamanders survive their ancient migration—one wet hop at a time—against the threats of cars and climate change
After 60 years of supporting low-income families, Head Start faces an existential threat under a proposed federal budget—prompting Rhode Island’s Sen. Reed and advocates to rally in defense of early childhood education
The public has only one month to comment on Housing 2030 draft released Wednesday
Jennifer Gilooly Cahoon, Owner, HeARTspot Art Center and Gallery, East Providence