Election 2020 updates: Trump ends long day rushing through final rally in Minnesota

Trump and Biden both campaigned in three Midwestern states Friday.

With four days until Election Day, and President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden racing toward Nov. 3, more than 82 million Americans have already cast their ballots -- an early voting record.

Friday brings both Trump and Biden to Minnesota and Wisconsin, revealing how crucial the states are to both campaigns, with the contest overshadowed by coronavirus cases rising there and in nearly every battleground state.

The president's aggressive, defensive strategy -- visiting states he won in 2016 including a first stop in Michigan this afternoon -- comes as polls show him trailing nationally and in swing states key to his reelection hopes. Vice President Mike Pence returns to Arizona for a pair of rallies in Flagstaff and Tucson.

Biden will see his busiest travel day to date of the general election. With a stop in Iowa, too, it's the first time the former vice president has made plans to campaign in three states in one day for the 2020 cycle. Running mate California Sen. Kamala Harris is in Texas as Democrats play offense and sense an opportunity to snatch the GOP-stronghold for the first time in more than four decades.


0

Early vote explosion shows system working, with stress tests ahead

It's happening the way it's supposed to happen. Voters are voting -- smashing records, adjusting behaviors and recalibrating expectations -- in ways that show the nation is many things, but definitely not apathetic.

It's also happening in ways that will stress the systems built to account for it all. More early votes, oddly, will mean reporting out results will take longer in several critical states -- to say nothing of the continuing challenges of participating in and administering an election in the midst of a pandemic.


Amid a flurry of COVID-era campaigning in battleground states, this week brought new high-water marks that suggest turnout records will fall this year.

Nearly as many Texans have voted as in all of 2016, with Georgia, North Carolina, Florida and Arizona are among the states already three-quarters of the way there, according to the United States Elections Project at the University of Florida.


But this week also brought continued uncertainties about the process of voting. The Supreme Court now has nine justices again, and voters in states, including Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Minnesota and North Carolina have a right to be confused about what the law is when it comes to how to vote -- and even what those laws might be on Election Day and beyond.

Layered on top of all of that are the efforts by President Trump to sow doubts about the integrity of the election.


From the local level on up, election officials say they're confident that there will be an accurate -- and, hopefully, promptly tallied -- vote count. But the surge of voting, while good for democracy, figures to make everything more difficult during this most difficult of times for the country.

-ABC News’ Political Director Rick Klein


Significance of Harris campaigning in Texas in the homestretch

Sen. Kamala Harris is taking to Texas this afternoon, becoming the first member of either major party ticket to attend a non-fundraiser event in the state since the general election campaign got underway and the first Democrat vice presidential candidate to campaign in the state since 1988.

Though Biden made a noteworthy stop in Dallas during the primaries in March -- where Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Pete Buttigieg and Beto O'Rourke joined him to lend their official endorsements -- Friday's events mark the Democratic ticket's acknowledgement that the state -- and other significant races across the state -- may be in play.


The visit comes after several prominent Texas Democrats made public pleas for Biden or Harris to visit, noting that, in addition to any boost in the presidential race, their presence would bolster local candidates.

"We need some help from the national ticket,” O’Rourke said on a Texas Democratic Party call last week.

Harris will visit Fort Worth, McAllen and Houston, in what would appear to be a play to solidify the Democrats' inroads with suburban voters and Latino voters at the border.


Beyond the presidential race, not only are there opportunities to convert additional suburban voters and run up the score in Democratic strongholds, but the party is further hopeful that Harris' presence can have a trickle-down effect on congressional contests.
 
-ABC News’ Adam Kelsey