US Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said he got enough votes to win the presidency and defeat President Donald Trump.

In front of a group of his supporters, the Democratic candidate declared that the United States had achieved much, "We will not accept our silence, and my victory is a victory for American democracy."

"It is clear that we are winning enough states to achieve 270 electoral votes," he added.

"The margins for my victory in the states of Wisconsin and Michigan are greater than the margins of victory in both states during the previous elections," he said, stressing that he had won the majority of votes, and said that "we have 3 million difference in the popular vote."

"After a long election night, we think we have won enough votes," he said in a short speech.

"Our campaign will be the fourth in American history to defeat a president running for a second term," he said.

The Democratic candidate said that more than 150 million American voters have cast their votes for a government that emanates from the people.

Biden called on everyone to abandon the language of election campaigns and "start listening to each other. Our differences do not mean that we are enemies, and if I win, I will be president of all Americans."

He stated that the presidency is not a partisan institution, but rather requires the patronage of all Americans, and "I will work hard for the benefit of all."

Trump protests

Last night, President Trump took the initiative to announce his victory in the elections, which heralds a constitutional crisis in the country.

As the count continues, Biden's advance in some swing states, Trump said in a tweet, "Yesterday I was ahead in important states and then these states started to magically disappear."

Earlier, the Democrats' campaign confirmed that they were on their way to winning Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania by a greater margin than Trump scored in 2016.

"If the count stops now, as Trump requested, Biden will be the winner in the presidential election," the campaign said at a news conference.

extra time

For her part, the Assistant Governor of Pennsylvania said that it is "too early to set a date" for the end of the vote counting processes, adding that the procedures for counting votes by mail are in stages and take time.

Republican President Donald Trump's campaign has confirmed that it will immediately request a recount in Wisconsin, where his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, appears slightly ahead, although the final results have yet to be officially announced in the state.

"There have been reports of irregularities in several Wisconsin counties, which raise serious doubts about the validity of the results," campaign director Bill Stepin said in a statement, without giving details of those reports.

"The president passed by a large margin the level of votes that allows him to request a recount, and we will do so immediately," he added.

The campaign also sued in Michigan to stop the vote count.

But the Wisconsin Election Commissioner said there was no room for falsifying any electoral card.

Ed Foley, an expert on election law at the Ohio State University, said that if the courts were brought to court, "the situation may last for several weeks."