Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has overtaken President-elect Donald Trump for the lead in the online poll of who readers think should be TIME’s ‘Person of the Year’ in 2016.
As of 1:00 pm (eastern time) on Monday, Assange and Trump were deadlocked with 9 percent of all the “yes” votes cast by participants, but Assange pulled ahead to 10 percent shortly after noon, TIME reported.
Wikileaks made headlines regularly during 2016 presidential election by releasing information, including leaked internal Democratic National Committee correspondence and messages from the account of Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager, John Podesta.
Earlier in the year, a United Nations panel found that Assange had been “arbitrarily detained” in London, where he remains in the Ecuadorian embassy in fear of extradition to Sweden on rape charges if he leaves.
Each year, TIME selects the person who has, for better or for worse, impacted the news the most in the past year.
The magazine’s editors always make the final ‘Person of the Year’ selection, but this poll is a way for readers to voice their own opinions on who has made the greatest impact on the world in 2016.
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