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FIFA Election Live Updates: Voting Results


FIFA Election Live Updates: Voting Results 
Gianni Infantino was named FIFA’s next president Friday, edging out second-place finisher Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa in an election held in Zurich. Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein and Jerome Champagne finished a distant third and fourth, respectively.
Infantino, who had previously served as general secretary of Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), will take over for banned former President Sepp Blatter at the top of soccer’s governing body .
“I cannot express my feelings in this moment,” Infantino said in his acceptance speech. “I told you I went through an exceptional journey, which made me meet many fantastic people, who live and breathe football, and many people deserve to see  FIFA is highly respected. Everyone in the world will applaud us for what we will do. Everyone will be proud of what we will do.”
Infantino's term as president runs through 2019.
It took two rounds to decide a winner Friday, following a first round in which no candidate received the two-thirds majority needed to win. But in the second round — during which a candidate needed only to garner a simple majority of at least 104 votes to win — Infantino earned 115 votes, edging out Sheikh Salman who garnered 88. In the second round, Prince Ali took four votes and Champagne, none.
In the lead up to the election Infantino had proposed instituting term limits for senior FIFA officials and expanding the World Cup to 40 nations from 32. Heading into Friday many considered Sheikh Salman, Asian Football Confederation president and FIFA vice president, to be the favorite.
Blatter had led FIFA since 1998. Amid sweeping charges of corruption against a number of FIFA officials, Blatter stepped down last year and was later banned — alongside former UEFA boss Michel Platini — from world soccer for six years.
UPDATE: 12:01 p.m. EST — UEFA General Secretary Gianni Infantino has won FIFA’s presidential election by earning 115 votes in the second round of voting, edging out Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa. Sheikh Salman finished second with 88 votes.
UPDATE: 11:41 a.m. EST — The second round of voting in FIFA’s presidential election in Zurich has come to a close. A reminder a candidate has to earn a simple majority — or at least 104 votes — to win in the second round. 
The first round ended with Gianni Infantino receiving 88 votes, followed by Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa (85 votes), Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein (27 votes) and Jerome Champagne (7 votes). The votes are set to be counted and results announced soon after.
Should no candidate garner at least 104 votes, the lowest-polling candidate would be dropped from the ballot for a third round.  
UPDATE: 11:21 a.m. EST — The second round of voting of FIFA’s presidential election Friday has moved along at a seemingly faster clip than the first round. Top candidates Gianni Infantino and Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa are fighting to secure the 104 votes, or a simple majority, to win in round two. Neither secured the two-thirds majority necessary to win in round one. 
The voting moves in alphabetical order, each of the 207 nations called one-by-one, and had progressed to Qatar. Infantino led with 88 votes in round one, followed by Sheikh Salman (85 votes), Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein (27 votes) and Jerome Champagne (7 votes). 
UPDATE: 10:53 a.m. EST — The results of the first round of voting in FIFA’s presidential election Friday were considered surprising, as the consensus front-runner Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa finished a close second to Gianni Infantino. Neither candidate, however, secured enough votes for the two-thirds majority needed to win in the first round.
The election in Zurich is headed to a second round of voting for the first time since 1974, the Guardian reported. The second round of voting — during which each of the 207 eligible member associations vote in alphabetical order — is still in the early stages, as Brazil has just been called to the voting booth.