Though she voted for Vice President Kamala Harris and hoped the Democrat would come out on top, 20-year-old Morgan State University student Raegan Green said she โwasnโt at all surprisedโ by the outcome of Tuesdayโs presidential election.
โI checked my phone, saw the results and continued to eat my breakfast,โ she said. โIt didnโt faze me. I had tests to study for and a 9 a.m. class to get to.โ
Green, like many other college students at Morgan State, Towson and Johns Hopkins universities who voted for Harris, was resigned to the possibility of Trump presidency months ago. Unlike college students in 2016, who organized walk-outs and cry-ins to cope with their shock at Donald Trumpโs first presidential win, this generation of Democratic voters have had their teens and early 20s dominated by Trump politics.
This time, they were determined to continue their days in a โbusiness as usualโ fashion.

Students at three Baltimore-area campuses were relaxing outside, laughing and doing homework on Wednesday.
โI was expecting a Trump win for sure,โ said Julius Torriero, an 18-year-old Towson student. โI could just see it coming, so I still went to class today and stuff.โ
Torriero voted for Harris, as well as other Democrats down the ballot, like senator-elect Angela Alsobrooks. But the first-time voter said he never thought the vice president would actually win.
โI didnโt have much hope, honestly,โ the Montgomery County native said. โBut I still want to keep voting, for sure.โ

Kahniya Simmons, 19, was another first-time voter with little to no hope that her vote would make a difference.
โI saw it coming,โ she said, sitting on a bench at Morgan State, working on homework. โVoting is a nice illusion to say your voice is being heard, but I know how these things tend to go.โ
Her pessimism was fueled by trends on social media she saw, with โyoung men talking about how they didnโt want a female presidentโ like Harris.
Her faith in the American political system wasnโt shaken by the election results, Simmons said. She didnโt have much in the first place.
โI wouldnโt say a Black woman president is impossible, but I do feel like itโs a very far reach in terms of where weโre at in this country,โ she said. โThis election was going to be what it was going to be, at the end of the day. Iโm really not surprised by this, though I would definitely say Iโm disappointed.โ

Simmons had one of her classes canceled on Wednesday morning because of the election results, but most of the students who spoke to the Banner said they still attended their classes and that most of their professors didnโt mention the election.
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โItโs really business as usual around here,โ said Max Rho, a student at Johns Hopkins University.
Rho was sitting on an Adirondack chair in the middle of a small quad at the university. The 21-year-old didnโt vote in the election and was mostly unfazed by the results.
โI knew my vote wasnโt going to make much of a difference, and honestly, I didnโt feel quite strongly about it,โ the New York native said. โI did expect Trump to win, though. I think he ran a stronger campaign.โ
Rho said that his classes were well-attended on Wednesday afternoon, and despite one professor โvaguely mentioning being available to support students,โ most people he knows havenโt talked about it.

Deepti Hagde, a fifth-year Ph.D. student and Indian citizen studying engineering at Johns Hopkins, said she was โshockedโ by the results and โreally surprisedโ nobody had been talking about it on campus.
โIโm so confused why nobody seems stressed about this,โ she said as students walked by, discussing homework. โI havenโt gotten anything done today, but all of the American students here seem totally normal.โ
This story is published in partnership with as part of the Baltimore News Collaborative, a project exploring the challenges and successes experienced by young people in Baltimore. The collaborative is supported by the Annie E. Casey Foundation. News members of the collaborative retain full editorial control.




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