November 4 US election news | CNN Politics

Election 2020 presidential results

Trump Biden ELN night 1104 SPLIT
WATCH LIVE: CNN covers the race to 270
- Source: CNN
147 Posts

Our live coverage has moved

Our live coverage has moved. Go here for the latest results and news from the election.

It's just after 4:30 a.m. ET: This is where the race to 270 stands.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden leads the race for the White House with 253 electoral votes. President Trump has 213 electoral votes.

It’s still too close to call in six states: Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

Based on CNN’s latest projections, this is where the race to 270 currently stands:

CNN projects Biden will win at least three of Maine’s four electoral votes, plus Wisconsin, Michigan, Hawaii, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Virginia, California, Oregon, Washington state, Illinois, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Colorado, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, Delaware, Washington, DC, Maryland, Massachusetts and one of Nebraska’s five electoral votes. Nebraska and Maine award two electoral votes to their statewide winners and divide their other electoral votes by congressional districts.

CNN projects Trump will win Montana, Texas, Iowa, Idaho, Ohio, Mississippi, Wyoming, Missouri, Kansas, Utah, Louisiana, Alabama, South Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota, Arkansas, Indiana, Oklahoma, Kentucky, West Virginia and Tennessee and four of Nebraska’s five electoral votes.

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral college votes to win the presidency.

About 10,000 absentee ballots left to count in Georgia's Fulton County

Democratic and Republican representatives review absentee ballots at the Fulton County Election preparation Center in Atlanta, on November 4.

Georgia’s largest county has about 10,000 absentee ballots left to count, Fulton County elections director Richard Barron told CNN early Thursday morning.  

The county has decided to continue counting through the night and has been tabulating votes at a rate of about 3,000 per hour. 

Fulton County is home to Atlanta and Democratic stronghold.

The county has tabulated all in-person votes and is now counting only absentee votes. The only remaining votes would be provisional and overseas military ballots. 

Republicans remain hopeful about winning key states

While there is no question Republicans are gearing up and prepared to engage in a series of legal challenges, their true hope is tied to the vote totals in the key states of Pennsylvania, Georgia and Arizona. 

Republicans both inside and outside the campaign understand that is where their most realistic path to victory lies and the lawsuits and recount requests serve as more of a Hail Mary to an election that may already be too far gone.  

Still, the GOP remains bullish on their chances of winning the actual vote count. They started sounding the alarm bells on Arizona being a Trump state early on after networks began declaring the race for Biden and continue to warn reporters that the trend lines are in Trump’s favor. If Arizona flips, they believe the race is within the President’s grasp.

Many Republicans hope they will be able to make the case the President won the election from a position of having an electoral college lead, as opposed to hoping to flip results through court challenges. 

One Republican operative expressed frustration over the characters the campaign was rolling out to present their legal arguments, suggesting it wasn’t doing the President any favors.  

“I can’t understand how Rudy keeps popping up,” the operative said referring to former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Biden's lead narrows in Arizona

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks one day after Americans voted in the presidential election, in Wilmington, Delaware, on November 04.

The race for the White House is still too close to call as contests tighten in the battleground states of Georgia, Arizona and Pennsylvania.

Maricopa County, the most populous county in Arizona, has just released the second of two sets of new votes promised Wednesday night – shrinking Joe Biden’s lead in the county by just over 10,000 votes. 

Updated vote totals released by Maricopa County after 2:30 a.m. Thursday show Biden with 912,585 votes and Trump with 838,071.

Previously, Maricopa was reporting 887,457 votes for Biden and 802,160 for Trump. 

Biden currently has 1,469,341 votes statewide, and Trump has 1,400,951. (Follow the race in Arizona here.)

The release came as Maricopa County officials were forced to close the Phoenix election office building to the public due to growing pro-Trump protests outside.

It's 2:30 a.m. ET: This is where the race to 270 stands.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden leads the race for the presidency with 253 electoral votes. President Trump has 213 electoral votes.

It’s still too close to call in six states: Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

Based on CNN’s latest projections, this is where the race to 270 currently stands.

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral college votes to win the presidency.

The Trump campaign filed a series of lawsuits in key battleground states. Here's what we know.

President Trump’s team launched a series of lawsuits in key battleground states that seemed less about sound legal reasoning and more about slowing Joe Biden from marching over the electoral vote threshold. 

At times, the lawsuits have contested ballots in the double digits — hundreds if not thousands of votes away of potentially swing any state’s result.

“I think much of the litigation is a longshot and unlikely to succeed,” said Franita Tolson, a law professor at USC Gould School of Law and CNN contributor. 

She pointed to a lawsuit in Georgia the Trump campaign announced Wednesday night over a poll worker mixing unprocessed and processed absentee ballots. That might have the potential to affect few votes, she said. 

“I suspect that a big goal of this litigation is, in the short term, to change the narrative” from a potential Biden win to a conversation about election mismanagement or even fraud, Tolson said.

Another law professor and CNN contributor, Rick Hasen, said the lawsuits appeared to be more public relations than serious litigation. “These lawsuits so far are not tackling any major problem that would seem to call overall vote totals into questions,” he said.

Justin Levitt, another elections expert and law professor, called some of the suits, like in Michigan, “laughable.” 

“One says you didn’t put people by absentee dropboxes, so stop the count. Huh?!”

Even a Republican-appointed federal judge in Pennsylvania cast doubt on the validity of a suit from Republicans on Wednesday, when they challenged fewer than 100 ballots that absentee voters corrected in a county outside Philadelphia. At a hearing Wednesday morning, the judge, Timothy Savage, did not rule, yet he suggested the lawyer for Republican canvass observers was seeking to disenfranchise votes. He noted the lawsuit appeared to have other problems in its arguments. 

Some legal challenges in Pennsylvania from the Trump campaign were quickly dismissed on Election Day, with Trump touting his appeals of those losses apparently as new cases Wednesday. For instance, a Philadelphia election day judge had shot down a Trump campaign case over ballot processing access, writing that “observers are directed only to observe and not to audit ballots” and deciding that the city’s board of elections complied with the law. Another Election Day challenge from the Trump campaign to the ballot observation process in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, also near Philly, was dismissed by a judge, though Trump is now appealing, according to Pennsylvania court records.

Lawyers for the Trump campaign sued in Nevada on Tuesday, too, claiming that their observers were not given enough access to all aspects of the ballot counting process — from opening the ballots, to machine and manual signature checking and duplicating spoiled ballots. A Nevada judge denied the GOP challenge to the early voting process in the heavily Democratic county.

“If this last-minute suit were successful, it would require a major change in how [Nevada] processed absentee [ballots] to determine if the signature on the ballot matched the voter’s prior signature on file,” said Richard Pildes, a constitutional law professor at New York University and CNN election law analyst. “Courts are typically unwilling to let plaintiffs come in the door so late in the day and ask for major changes to a process that’s already well underway.”

However, one suit, the petition before the US Supreme Court on Pennsylvania’s ballot deadline, may be a more serious litigation challenge. It challenges the validity of potentially several thousand votes cast in good faith by voters, but received by officials after the election through the mail. 

For this case to make a difference, Pennsylvania would need to be the deciding state for the election, and the margin of difference between Trump and Biden would need to be a few tens of thousands of votes.

CNN’s Maeve Reston and Stephen Collinson contributed to this report.

Nevada attorney general: We feel "impenetrable" to any potential Trump legal challenge 

Nevada is ready to rebuff any legal challenges the Trump campaign brings against the state’s election results, the state’s Democratic attorney general Aaron Ford said late this evening.

“We feel quite invulnerable, if you take a look at the track record we’ve already established against Mr. Trump,” said Ford when asked by CNN’s Chris Cuomo how invulnerable to legal attack he felt.

“[Trump] sued us twice, maybe three times, already,” he said. “Each time my office has been able to work with our local district attorney … and defeat those lawsuits.”

Late last month, for example, the Trump campaign along with Nevada Republicans sued in state court to halt the count of some mail-in ballots over stringency of signature-matching computer software and how closely observers can watch votes being counted. A Nevada judge rejected that lawsuit on Monday, with less than 24 hours before Election Day.

“We actually have safeguards to prevent fraud, such as signature verification and unique barcodes, that are also part and parcel of the process here,” Ford told Cuomo. “We think it’s pretty impenetrable when it comes to legal challenge against us.”

Watch the interview:

5c66bbd0-6047-4ec1-a8f1-609cfeaf7ace.mp4
02:36 - Source: cnn

Update on Philadelphia mail-in ballots expected overnight

New numbers on Philadelphia mail-in ballots are expected overnight, according to a state official.

Philadelphia County still has 120,000 mail-in ballots to count, according to the state’s website.

Key Pennsylvania county finishes counting mail-in and absentee votes

Election precinct suitcases containing ballots, election materials and keys to voting machines are held under guard by the Allegheny County Police at the Allegheny County elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on November 4.

Allegheny County, home to Pittsburgh, says it has finished tabulating mail-in and absentee ballots.

County spokesperson Amie Downs told CNN early Thursday that the county tabulated 313,072 absentee and mail-in votes.

Downs said the county will resume tabulating several precincts’ worth of in-person votes later Thursday morning.

About 14,000 ballots left to count in Georgia's Fulton County, elections director says

Election workers count Fulton County ballots at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, on November 4.

Fulton County elections director Richard Barron said his staff and volunteers have about 14,000 mail-in ballots left to be counted, adding they have been counting at a rate of about 3,000 ballots per hour.

His team, many of whom have been working since 8 a.m. ET, have so far counted 127,948 ballots and adjudicated 123,716, he said. 

Barron, who leads the count in Georgia’s most populous country, which includes Atlanta, said he feels a responsibility to get the ballots counted as quickly as possible. Earlier in the evening he said his team would not pause until all the ballots had been counted.

The county has tabulated all in-person votes and is now counting only absentee votes. The only remaining votes would be provisional and overseas military ballots which are due on Friday. As of 1:20 a.m., CNN’s election data gave Joe Biden a 73% to 26% advantage in Fulton Country. 

CNN’s Nick Valencia has more:

45f5b62a-034b-42cb-885e-e7b037c63e1e.mp4
03:44 - Source: cnn

This is where the vote count stands in Pennsylvania

With 71% of mail-in ballots counted in Pennsylvania, officials still needs to count 763,000 of the 2.6 million cast, according to the state’s official website and reporting from CNN’s Kristen Holmes.

Major updates are expected from both Philadelphia County, the largest in the state, and Allegheny County, home to Pittsburgh, before the night is over, Holmes reported.

In Philadelphia County, a major Democratic stronghold, 120,000 mail-in ballots remain uncounted. Seventy percent of those ballots were cast by registered Democrats while 20% were cast by registered Republicans. 

In Allegheny County 46,000 mail-in ballots remain to be counted, as of 12:45 p.m. ET.

CNN’s Kristen Holmes walks through the latest:

ffb69c61-8e74-4480-b158-9ad271c42d30.mp4
02:06 - Source: cnn

Arizona's Maricopa County ballot results are slightly delayed

Maricopa County elections officials count ballots at the Maricopa County Recorder's Office in Phoenix, on November 4.

Maricopa County will post its next batch of ballot results closer to 1:30 a.m. ET/11:30 p.m. MT, because of the process of uploading the data, according to Diana Solorio, a spokesperson for Maricopa County Elections Department.

They originally expected the results to be released by 12:30 a.m. ET/10:30 p.m. MT.

Solorio said the delay is not related to the protest going on outside the elections department building, but that it is simply part of the process uploading election data like this. 

On Tuesday after the initial results posted at 10 p.m. ET/8 p.m. MT, the next uploading took some time and was delayed.

Maricopa County Elections Department tweeted about the ongoing count:

Here's how the votes are being counted in Pennsylvania

CNN visited a ballot counting facility today in the battleground state of Pennsylvania.

Philadelphia city commissioner Al Schmidt explained to CNN the process of counting ballots in Pennsylvania, and why the state had to wait until Election Day to begin counting any votes. 

Here’s what we found out:

13a2fc51-0d72-4e37-ba7a-0b31585a228c.mp4
02:29 - Source: cnn

Georgia's DeKalb County finishes counting

In this Monday, November 2 photo, election workers sort ballots at the DeKalb County Voter Registration and Elections office in Decatur, Georgia.

DeKalb County, Georgia, a large Democratic stronghold just outside Atlanta, finished counting its last absentee ballots just after midnight Thursday.

A total of 127,019 absentee ballots were processed. 

The county’s final tally was roughly 83% for Biden and 16% for Trump.

Fulton County, Georgia’s most populated county, meanwhile is still counting votes. At last check, 17,000 votes remained uncounted in that county.

Why this matters: There are 16 electoral votes at stake in Georgia. CNN is yet to project a winner in the state. Joe Biden leads the race for the presidency with 253 electoral votes. President Trump has 213 electoral votes. The candidates each need 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.

Georgia's Fulton County continues to count ballots through the night

Election personnel examines a ballot as vote counting in the general election continues at State Farm Arena, on Wednesday, November 4, in Atlanta.

Georgia’s most populated county is still planning to count through the night, tabulating the last remaining absentee ballots.

After Fulton County officials briefly considered resuming the count Thursday, county spokesperson Regina Waller told CNN that staffers would continue tabulating until the count was complete.

At last check, 17,000 Fulton County votes remained uncounted.

CNN’s Nick Valencia has more from Atlanta:

e45b687b-2706-4fbd-83aa-f29a2f57c141.mp4
03:14 - Source: cnn

More than 90,000 ballots are still uncounted in Georgia, state official says

There are approximately 90,735 ballots still outstanding in Georgia, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office told CNN.

His office won’t be providing additional updates today detailing how many remaining votes there are to count across the state.

A news conference is scheduled at 10:30 a.m. ET at the Georgia State Capitol. 

This election shows how the Latino vote is complicated and diverse

One lesson Republicans and Democrats can learn after this presidential election is to not paint Latinos with a broad brush, political commentator Ana Navarro told CNN this evening.

Navarro’s advice comes after Democratic organizers and operatives warned that the party was at risk of a poor performance in Florida’s heavily Cuban Miami-Dade County, and that it hadn’t been reaching nearly enough Latinos in the Rio Grande Valley to turn Texas into a battleground.

Those fears proved to be founded, as Joe Biden fell well short of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 performance in those areas.

It was a different story for Biden in Arizona, where “700,000 Latinos voted,” Navarro said.

“His total, his average in Arizona was 75%,” Navarro said regarding the number of Latinos that turned out for Biden in Arizona this year. “The numbers around the country have been much better for Joe Biden than we are talking about.”

CNN’s Eric Bradner contributed to this report.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper speaks to Ana Navarro:

8910c51c-a0a2-4262-a346-98aaca4e2807.mp4
05:06 - Source: cnn

One more set of ballots expected to be released tonight from Arizona's Maricopa County

Election officials in Maricopa County, Arizona, are working to release one more tranche of votes before breaking for the night, CNN’s Kyung Lah reports from inside the county’s elections department in Phoenix. 

Maricopa County, which is the state’s most populous county, is expected to make the final upload for the night at at 12:30 a.m. ET and then continue with uploads at 7 p.m. every night until all votes are in.

Meanwhile, a crowd of protesters have gathered outside the elections facility along with a number of law enforcement officials who are securing the site. 

“There are a lot of red hats, there are a lot of Trump signs and there is a lot of chanting,” Lah reports.

CNN’s Kyung Lah explains:

98730429-4880-48ce-a8b2-cfeb226e5f03.mp4
01:58 - Source: cnn

It's just after 11:30 p.m. ET: This is where the race to 270 stands.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden leads the race for the presidency with 253 electoral votes. President Trump has 213 electoral votes.

Based on CNN’s latest projections, this is where the race to 270 currently stands.

Trump’s campaign is considering taking legal action in Arizona and Nevada as votes are still being counted, two sources told CNN.

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral college votes to win the presidency.

GO DEEPER

Could 2020 be the highest turnout election in a century?
From Tiffany to Target, stores are boarding up windows in case of election unrest
The anxieties looming over Black Americans on Election Day
The global stakes of the US election
Abortion, marijuana, Puerto Rico statehood: Voters consider a wide range of issues in ballot questions

GO DEEPER

Could 2020 be the highest turnout election in a century?
From Tiffany to Target, stores are boarding up windows in case of election unrest
The anxieties looming over Black Americans on Election Day
The global stakes of the US election
Abortion, marijuana, Puerto Rico statehood: Voters consider a wide range of issues in ballot questions