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.
Top headlines:
- Trump, at rally, suggests he might fire Fauci after election
- FBI investigating Texas bus incident involving Trump supporters
- Trump presses for election results to be known on Nov. 3
- FiveThirtyEight has Biden with 90 in 100 chance of winning Electoral College
- Philadelphia prepares for 'avalanche' of mail-in ballots
Biden, Harris, spouses to split campaign duties in Pennsylvania Monday
Biden, Harris and their spouses will divide the state of Pennsylvania in half on the final day before the election.
Joe and Jill Biden will take Western Pennsylvania, while Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff will visit the eastern half, according to the Biden campaign.
The day in Pennsylvania will culminate with drive-in rallies headlined by Harris and Emhoff in Philadelphia and the Bidens in Pittsburgh.
-ABC News' Molly Nagle
Harris tests negative for COVID-19
Harris tested negative for COVID-19 on Sunday, according to an aide to the senator.
Efforts to throw out 127,000 votes in Harris County, Texas, continue
The Texas State Supreme Court has again just rejected a separate effort by the plaintiffs in this case seeking to invalidate the Harris County drive-thru votes.
The order, which was posted on the court's website Sunday, did not include any comment on the merits of the case.
This is separate from an effort underway by the plaintiffs in the Southern District of Texas federal court, where a federally appointed judge could decide whether to invalidate 127,000 early ballots cast in Harris County via a secure "drive-thru" method after a lawsuit was filed, challenging the county on the legitimacy of the method.
Harris County said it got state approval for drive-in voting in June. The state of Texas did not allow for no-excuse absentee voting during the pandemic, so this method ensured at-risk people could vote in the safety of their cars.
A similar lawsuit was rejected by the all-Republican Texas Supreme Court last week.
Harris County has already set an all-time record for total turnout, with the drive-thru votes accounting for roughly 10% of the total early vote turnout.
-ABC News’ Alexander Mallin, Matt Foster and Jon Schlosberg
First lady to speak at campaign rally in North Carolina
First lady Melania trump will speak at a campaign rally in Huntersville, North Carolina, on Monday at 4 p.m., according to the campaign.
Trump's final campaign rally blitz
Trump on Sunday kicks off two back-to-back five-rally days, bounding across the country to hold packed events in hopes of boosting turnout in the final days leading to Election Day, just like he did in 2016.
The president is set to hold his last rally before Election Day in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the same city where he wrapped up his 2016 campaign four years ago.
But some of the other stops on the president's final campaign push have changed since his initial run.
Unlike 2016, in 2020 Trump is not campaigning in the final 48 hours in New Hampshire, Minnesota, or Virginia — all states he ended up losing. In fact, the president has no rallies scheduled in the final two days in any pickup states, as Trump remains on defense with time running out.
For his re-election, Trump is zeroing in on Midwestern states, especially Michigan -- holding three rallies in the state over the next two days. Trump is also traveling to Iowa, a state he won by nine points, and Georgia where he won by over five points.
-ABC News' Will Steakin