Victory for Trump: What do the papers say?
Donald Trump's astounding victory in the US presidential election dominates Thursday's newspaper front pages.
Here is what they had to say about the Republican billionaire becoming the 45th president of the United States:
Daily Mirror
After a "bitter campaign based of fear and division", Donald Trump "waltzed into the White House" as he attempted top "unite the country he had tried his best to split", the Daily Mirror said.
Its US Editor Christopher Bucktin said Mr Trump had targeted a "largely working-class army of support" and "managed to abuse Muslims, women, disabled people and Mexicans, among others".
The Sun
The Sun leads its coverage with a reminder that The Simpsons predicted Donald Trump's rise to presidency 16 years ago.
On Wednesday, the show's creator said the result was "beyond satire".
The newspaper said Mr Trump "shook the world" as he pulled off a "Brexit-style coup" to become the world's most powerful man.
Daily Mail
The Daily Mail said a "revolt" by America's "forgotten white working-class" had "swept Donald Trump to the presidency", which it described as "one of the biggest election upsets in history".
It added that the "seismic victory" would have "repercussions around the world".
The Guardian
The Guardian said American's "woke up to a divided country and a more fearful world", as it noted calls from Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton to respect the result.
The newspaper also pointed out that Mr Trump will now receive the same daily intelligence briefings as President Obama, ahead of his inauguration in January.
It also remarked that, at 70, the tycoon will be the oldest person ever to become US president, following a "farcical" campaign that began with a ride down an escalator at Trump Tower last year in the days when he was "dismissed as a clown who posed no threat".
The Times
The Times said Donald Trump had "dealt a stinging rebuke to the political establishment" as he "vowed to heal a stunned and divided America".
The newspaper added that the former reality TV star's "unabashed populism" had "electrified blue-collar workers across the rust-belt of the Midwest".
It also drew attention to the White House's warning to Mr Trump not to follow up on his promise to ensure that his Democrat rival Hillary Clinton faced prosecution for using a private email server.
The Daily Telegraph
The Daily Telegraph said so-called "Reagan Democrats" had returned to the party in numbers "not seen since the 1980s", when they helped Ronald Reagan to two election victories.
It said they had "confounded the polls" by turning out across a number of swing states and the Midwest to "hand a humiliating defeat to Hillary Clinton".