Trump suggests he might fire Fauci

The president was responding to chants of "Fire Fauci" at a Florida rally.

President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden are racing toward Election Day with Biden in Pennsylvania and Trump Michigan, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida on Sunday.

Vice President Mike Pence is in North Carolina and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., is in Georgia and North Carolina.

In the season's final ABC News/Washington Post polls, the pandemic versus the economy defines the presidential contest in two key battlegrounds, with Florida holding firm to its toss-up status while Biden leads slightly in Pennsylvania.

There's little change in either state. In Florida, Donald Trump has 50% support among likely voters to Biden's 48%; it was 51%-47% in an ABC/Post poll Sept. 20. Trump won the state by 112,911 votes out of more than 9.4 million cast in 2016.

In Pennsylvania, the race stands at 51%-44%, Biden-Trump, a 7-point advantage for the Democrat; that compares with a 9-point margin late last month. Here, Trump's 2016 win was even narrower: 44,292 votes out of nearly 6.2 million cast.


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Harris, Obama courting Georgia voters

Democrats have not won the state of Georgia in a presidential election since 1992, but the Biden campaign is making efforts there by sending two of its most important figures.

While former President Barack Obama will be in the state on Monday, Harris is visiting Gwinnett County, a suburb of Atlanta, on Sunday.

In 2016, the Atlanta suburb did go for Hillary Clinton, but it was the first time it voted for the Democratic presidential candidate since 1976, when Georgia native Jimmy Carter won every one of Georgia's 159 counties.

Cobb County, another area outside of Atlanta, also flipped to blue in 2016.

Winning statewide in Georgia as a Democrat is going to depend on turnout, and getting more Democratic votes in the Atlanta metro area will be key to this.

The state has seen record turnout so far with absentee ballots and during the three weeks of early voting, almost surpassing the total votes cast in 2016, which is the record for votes cast in a presidential race in Georgia.

-ABC News' Quinn Scanlan


North Carolina the 'epicenter' of this election

Republican strategist and ABC News Contributor Sara Fagen said on "This Week" that North Carolina is now the epicenter of the 2020 election.

"It's also probably the epicenter of the Senate," she said, "who's going to control the Senate."


FiveThirtyEight has Biden with 90 in 100 chance of winning Electoral College

Just days ahead of Nov. 3, the FiveThirtyEight presidential election forecast has Biden with a 90 in 100 chance of winning the Electoral College.

At this point, Trump needs a big polling error in his favor if he's going to win. Although the error doesn’t need to be as big as you might think if you were just looking at national polls.

Editor-in-chief Nate Silver breaks down the forecast:


Biden to address nation on election night

The Biden campaign announced plans for Biden to address the nation on election night from his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.

Biden, Harris and their spouses will all spend the night there.

-ABC News' Molly Nagle


Trump wraps 1st of 5 rallies

Trump spoke to a packed crowd of supporters in Washington, Michigan, declaring he was going to win the state and periodically complaining about the frigid temperature at this first of five rallies on Sunday.

At one point he compared himself to Luciano Pavarotti, who he called "the greatest of all divas," who would leave appearances if he didn't feel up to singing. Trump ultimately said that while he feels like Pavarotti, but that he didn't consider himself a diva, which is why he stuck around to finish his remarks in the cold.

He also said that if he didn't win the state four years ago, he wouldn't have been in Michigan on Sunday.

"I love the people of Michigan. We won. We won. It's worth it. It's worth it. It's worth it. It's worth it," he said. "We won last time, right? It's worth it. If we didn't win last time, I probably wouldn't even be standing here. I'd get up here and say no thanks."

-ABC News' Terrance Smith