Election 2020 updates: Obama, Biden finish day of campaigning in Detroit

More than 91 million people have cast their ballots -- an early voting record.

With three days until Election Day, and President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden racing toward Nov. 3, more than 91 million Americans have already cast their ballots -- an early voting record.

On Saturday, Biden's top surrogate, former President Barack Obama, is joining him for the first time on the trail with drive-in rallies in Flint and Detroit.

Trump has four rallies in Pennsylvania as both candidates plan to "barnstorm" the state they deem critical in the final days before the election with the contest overshadowed by coronavirus cases rising there and in nearly every battleground territory.

Vice President Mike Pence has a pair of rallies in North Carolina -- a state Trump won by four points in 2016. California Sen. Kamala Harris is campaigning in Florida as Democrats vie for the state's 29 electoral votes key to Trump's pathway to the White House.


0

North Carolina most expensive Senate race so far

With nearly $300 million in total spending pouring in, the North Carolina Senate race has been the most expensive congressional race so far in 2020, followed by Iowa and South Carolina, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics.

In the 10 most expensive Senate races this year, Democrats have been vastly outraising and outspending Republicans, especially where Democratic challengers are competing against Republican incumbents, the center's analysis of campaign spending records shows. Outside political groups not affiliated with the campaigns have also been driving up the spending.

Across the Senate battleground, North Carolina could possibly be the state that tilts control of the chamber -- reflected in $280 million in both campaign and outside money being poured into the state. The candidates have spent more than $64 million in the contest, with Democrat challenger Cal Cunningham raising and spending more than twice the amount of Republican Sen. Thom Tillis. Outside groups have also spent upward of $215 million supporting the two.

The contest between Republican Sen. Joni Ernst and Democratic challenger Theresa Greenfield in Iowa has also attracted far more spending from political interest groups than the candidates. Outside groups have funneled at least $170 million into the race, with more than $94 million going into unseating the incumbent senator and more than $74 million spent to fend off the challenger. The candidates' campaigns have spent about $64 million combined so far.

South Carolina has spent more than $209 million in a surprisingly competitive race for this cycle. The candidates have spent far more than outside groups in this race, with $164 million being spent by Democrat Jaime Harrison and GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, compared to $45 million by outside groups. Harrison's campaign had raised $107 million and spent $104 million of that by mid-October, while Graham has raised $72 million and spent $60 million.

-ABC News' Kendall Karson and Soorin Kim


Trump slams SCOTUS absentee ballot decision

At the second of his four Pennsylvania rallies on Saturday, President Donald Trump railed over a recent Supreme Court ruling allowing absentee ballots in the state to be counted after Election Day in Pennsylvania and North Carolina.

“I've had many disappointing opinions from the Supreme Court, I will tell you,” Trump said at the rally in Reading. "That was a terrible decision."

He also conflated the likely delay in election results due to the historic increase in mail-in ballots with voter fraud, of which there is very little evidence, and baselessly claimed votes counted after Election Day would be “when the cheating’s gonna take place."

"Do you know when the cheating’s gonna take place? From the third to whatever the date it is that they gave," he said, calling the deadline extension "disappointing."

"That was a very political decision, I have to say," he said.

-ABC News' Will Steakin and Elizabeth Thomas


Who Trump is courting in Pennsylvania on Saturday

President Trump's Pennsylvania rally blitz on Saturday is primarily taking him to GOP strongholds to excite supporters and activate Republicans who may not have voted four years ago -- a bid to supercharge Election Day turnout to offset any Democratic gains in the suburbs.

Stop 1: Bucks County

Bucks County is 25 miles north of Philadelphia and the fourth-most-populous county in the state. It's Trump's only stop on Saturday to an area that isn't reliably Republican. While it's gone blue in every presidential election since 2000, the margin has tightened in recent years. Hillary Clinton won Bucks County by fewer than 3,000 votes in 2016. Demographically, Bucks County is 88.1% white, with 40.5% of residents holding bachelor's degrees or higher, according to the 2019 census.

Stop 2: Berks County
Trump stopped next in Reading, the seat of Berks County and the fifth-largest city in Pennsylvania. Berks County came close to flipping for former President Barack Obama in 2012, where he lost by under 2,000 votes. Trump closed that gap four years ago, seizing the lion's share of the vote by 18,000. Demographically, Berks County is a little more diverse than Bucks. The census estimates that as of 2019, 86.9% of Berks County residents identified as white and 22.5% identified as Latino -- compared to 5.7% in Bucks County. Only about 24.5% of Berks County residents hold degrees.

Stop 3: Butler County 
Trump will travel next to Butler County in western Pennsylvania, another Republican stronghold since 2000. He handily trounced Clinton here in 2016, receiving more than 61,000 votes compared to Clinton's 26,834. According to The Associated Press, more than 10,000 Republicans in the county did not vote in 2016. Butler County is overwhelmingly white, according to census estimates (95.8%), and only 35.4% of residents hold bachelor's degrees or higher.

Stop 4: Lycoming County
The final stop will be Montoursville in Lycoming County -- yet another GOP area that has not been hotly contested to as far back as 2000.

Bonus: Luzerne County
First lady Melania Trump was also heading to Wapwallopen in Luzerne County this evening -- one of three "pivot" counties that went for Trump four years ago after backing Obama twice.

-ABC News' Benjamin Siegel


Biden tests negative for COVID-19 Saturday

Former Vice President Joe Biden tested negative for COVID-19 on Saturday, according to the pool.

This was his 18th negative test announced since Trump's positive diagnosis earlier this month.

-ABC News' John Verhovek


Trump finishes day of rallies with series of false claims

President Trump had an eye on Joe Biden and Barack Obama today, telling the crowd in Montoursville, Pennsylvania, at his fourth rally of the day he watched their events and that they "draw flies." Of course, the Biden campaign uses limitations due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which the Trump campaign does not.

Trump falsely suggested that the scientists advising Biden have called for "slowing down" a coronavirus vaccine for political gain and erroneously claimed that it was Biden and Kamala Harris who don’t believe in science, when it's been Trump himself often dismissing scientific evidence that the pandemic is still surging.

He also falsely claimed that Biden and Harris were trying to "discourage" people from taking the vaccine. Both Harris and Biden have said that they would be vaccinated if it was recommended by health professions, but not if it was only suggested by Trump.

"Our opponents do not believe in science. They want unlimited power over you and your family. They got to open it up. The so-called experts advising Joe Biden have called for slowing down the vaccine," Trump claimed without evidence. "Can you believe this? Now, if it weren't in my opinion so political, they just didn’t want to have it come out before the election. But everybody knows it's right there, and we're ready to go, but it became a big political thing and they were actually trying to discourage people from taking it. That’s so bad and so stupid and so dangerous."

A vaccine is not yet ready, though health officials have said the Food and Drug Administration may grant emergency use authorization to one by the end of the year. High-risk individuals and health care workers would likely be the first vaccinated, with all Americans possibly receiving the vaccine by June 2021.

At one point, seemingly oblivious to the optics, Trump started pointing out people in the packed, mostly maskless crowd who don't have as good an immune system as young people as he made a case for reopening schools.

"They have great immune systems; stronger than you or you or you. That guy, definitely stronger than him," Trump said, pointing out members of the crowd. "And they have got to go back to school, OK? They got to go back to school."

-ABC News' Will Steakin and Justin Gomez