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.


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ABC's race ratings update: Texas is now a toss-up in campaign's final days

With only four days until Nov. 3, Texas has moved this week in Biden's favor -- shifting from lean Republican to a toss-up, according to ABC's race ratings.

Here's where the race to 270 currently stands: Biden - 290; Trump - 125; Toss-up -123.

Click here for ABC's interactive electoral map, which is updated weekly.

-ABC News' Kendall Karson


Trump mocks COVID-19 public health precautions at Minnesota rally

Trump kicked off his rally in Waterford Township, Michigan, by commenting on the cold weather but saying he felt “very warm in this group” before confidently declaring, “Four days from now, we're going to win this state and we're going to go on to win four more great years in the White House.”

An ABC News/Washington Post [poll] () out this week shows Biden narrowly ahead of Trump among likely voters in Michigan, 51% to 44%.

Speaking to the packed crowd of mostly maskless supporters, Trump mocked the size of Biden’s crowds when compared with his, saying “nobody shows up.”

He also took aim at Biden's running mate, and though he regularly mispronounces Kamala Harris’ name, Trump added the false claim that Harris can't pronounce her own name either.

At one point the president called out to Fox News’ Laura Ingraham, who was present and expressed disbelief that she was wearing a mask -- though coronavirus cases are rising in Michigan and nearly every other battleground state.

"Where is Laura? Where is she? I can't recognize you. Is that a mask? No way. Are you wearing a mask? I've never seen her in a mask. Look at you. She's being very politically correct. Whoa!" Trump said.

Ahead of more rallies in Wisconsin and Minnesota, Trump complained that local officials in Minnesota are “scamming” him by not allowing his campaign to hold a rally of more than 250 people in order to adhere to the state's COVID-19 restrictions.

“You know what, that maybe will give us the final victory. We haven't won Minnesota since 1972, OK?" Trump said. "That's not good odds, but we are very popular because I helped with that disaster in Minneapolis."

-ABC News’ Jordyn Phelps


Harris praises record voting in Texas, says it's still not time to 'let up on the pedal'

Harris’ first stop in Texas was Fort Worth, where she gave remarks to a socially distanced and masked crowd of about 300 supporters outside of First St. John’s Cathedral -- her presence in the state significant as she’s the first Democrat vice presidential candidate to campaign there since 1988.

After the state shattered its 2016 voting record this morning, Harris praised the more than nine million votes already cast in Texas -- but reminded the race isn’t over yet. 


“Today is the last day of early voting in Texas and you all have been doing your thing! What did I hear? Was it 9 million people have voted so far?" Harris said. "Now, we know this is no time to let up on the pedal though, right?"

Urging Texans to vote whether early or on Election Day, she repeated her mantra that voting is one of the best ways to “honor the ancestors,” paying special tribute to the late Congressman John Lewis. 


“John Lewis lived a life that was about a commitment to fighting for equal rights and civil rights, and it was fight that was born out of being a patriot and loving our country,” she said. “Knowing the best way we achieve our ideals, is to fight for those ideals, to do it in every way by standing up, showing up and speaking up -- so we must vote to honor the ancestors.”


Though winning the state’s 29 electoral college votes is a longshot for the party, some Democrats sense an opportunity to snatch the GOP-stronghold for the first time in more than four decades, while others warn the campaign should stay focused on states Clinton narrowly lost in 2016.

“You are strong, you have power, and at election time, that power will be through your vote. And you will tell them when they ask that you elected Joe Biden the President of the United States,” Harris said closing her remarks. “Thank you Fort Worth, and God bless Texas.”

-ABC News’ Averi Harper


Biden argues Trump’s presidency has hurt jobs in Iowa

Returning to the state for the first time since campaigning in the Iowa caucuses, Biden made his argument against Trump’s handling of COVID-19 directly to Iowan voters at a drive-in rally this afternoon, emphasizing the jobs lost in Iowa because of, he said, Trump’s unwillingness to deal with the pandemic.

“Eighty-two thousand Iowa jobs lost in the pandemic, and still, they've not come back. Seventy-thousand jobs lost in Iowa since Donald Trump became president. Here at the fairgrounds, the Iowa State Fair cancelled for the first time since World War Two. Donald Trump has given up," Biden said to honking horns of support.

The former vice president repeated his campaign promise that he wouldn’t raise taxes on those making less than $400,000 a year, but said big corporations -- and the president -- will pay their “fair share” in a Biden administration.

"Why should a firefighter, an educator, a nurse, a cop pay at a higher tax rate -- which you do -- than a major multi-billion dollar corporation? Why should you pay more taxes than Donald Trump, who paid $750?" Biden said, referring to a New York Times report. "Well, you ain't going to be gaming the system anymore in a Biden administration. They're going to start paying.”


The race in Iowa is neck and neck with Trump leading by one point according to a Quinnipiac poll published Thursday -- remarkable given that Trump won the state back in 2016 by 10 points. 


While the state only has 6 electoral college votes, it holds a key demographic of Trump's base: farmers. And Biden catered his argument in Des Moines to that key base, arguing he can end trade abuses by China harming their industry, not Trump.

“He [Trump] says, because of, quote, his bailouts, ‘our farmers do better now than when they actually had a farm,’” Biden said. “Look, I'll do what he's been unable to do. I'll mobilize a true international effort to stop China's abuses, so we can strengthen manufacturing and farming in Iowa and across the country.”

In 2016, Trump’s strength in rural counties propelled his victory in Iowa, which saw the largest swing away from Democrats among the six states that flipped from former President Barack Obama to Trump. But Biden also made clear his close relationship to Obama, reminding Iowans they led them to the White House in 2008 and 2012.

"You, too, have a sacred duty -- a duty to vote. It matters," Biden said. "Iowa matters."

-ABC News’ Lauren Lantry contributed to this report.


Trump touts potential crowd size ahead of first restricted rally in Minnesota

Departing the White House for a three-state tour of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, the president aired his grievances with Minnesota's coronavirus measures imposed by the state's Democratic governor which will restrict his rally size -- for the first time -- to 250 people, while arguing he has "biggest crowds in the history of politics."

"We have 25,000 people in Minnesota, which is our last stop today. Twenty-five thousand people want to be there, and they say you can only have 250 people. So they thought I’d cancel, but I'm not canceling," Trump said, adding his supporters are still angry from civil unrest over the summer.

"And I think it's going to flip for the first time since 1972," Trump added.

After losing Minnesota to Hillary Clinton by just 44,000 votes in 2016, Trump has set his sights on flipping the historically blue state, which has not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since 1972. His visit on Friday will be his fourth trip to the state this year and his eighth visit in the last four years.

But Trump is also facing a surging coronavirus pandemic in the Midwest, as Minnesota state health protocols currently mandate that all large gatherings be limited to 250 people, which the Trump campaign has deemed "free speech-stifling" ahead of the president touching down in Rochester.

Trump narrowly lost Olmsted County, which includes the city of Rochester, by 598 votes in 2016. Although once a fundamentally Republican area, Obama carried the county twice, and now the Trump campaign has devoted increased resources into flipping such districts and courting voters in surrounding rural communities.

The former vice president is set to appear at a drive-in campaign event in St. Paul -- where Democrats have historically performed well -- just one hour before the president is scheduled to appear to take the stage an hour south.

The candidates' visits come one day after the state's reported its single highest daily increase on record. They also come on the heels of the the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals' decision to require all absentee ballots in Minnesota to be received by local officials 8 p.m. on Nov. 3 in order to be counted -- a victory for Trump who has demanded all votes be tabulated on election night, though votes are always certified in the coming days and weeks.

FiveThirtyEight's polling average currently has Biden leading in Minnesota by 8 points.

-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos contributed to this report.