Biden leads, but Trump takes Florida – VG



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Donald Trump has secured the important state of Florida, and appears to take both Texas and Ohio, but Joe Biden has secured Arizona.

We are still awaiting confirmations regarding Texas, but development there looks very promising for Donald Trump.

Joe Biden, for his part, has also taken the states he must take. Now the undecided states will decide who gets 270 voters and thus will win the 2020 presidential election.

The votes by mail that will be counted in the next few days can be absolutely decisive.

Right now it seems that:

  • Joe Biden has 224 voters
  • Donald Trump has 146 voters

This is necessary for the candidates.

Trump lacks the most voters, but it looks promising for him in several seesaw states, including Ohio, North Carolina, Georgia, Iowa and Texas. The challenge for the incumbent president is that he must win all of these.

You can count on conquering Alaska. In addition to this, he must also win 46 elections from Arizona, Nevada, Minnesota, Michigan or Wisconsin.

Joe Biden, on the other hand, just needs to follow the form, based on anticipated forecasts. You win Hawaii and then you stay if you also take Nevada, Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.

This will give you 270 voters.

The states that have settled

These states are divided (number of voters in parentheses):

  • Donald Trump vinner Indiana (11), Kentucky (8), Mississippi (6), Missouri (10), Oklahoma (7), South Carolina (9), Tennessee (11), West Virginia (5), Arkansas (9) , Alabama (9), Louisiana (8), South Dakota (3), North Dakota (3), Nebraska (2), Wyoming (3), Kansas (6), Utah (6) or Idaho (4)
  • Joe Biden utpekes som vinner i Connecticut (7), Delaware (3), Illinois (20), Maine (3 to 4), Maryland (10), Massachusetts (11), New Jersey (14), Vermont (3), Virginia (13), Washington, DC (3), Rhode Island (4), New Mexico (5), Nebraska (1), New York (29), Colorado (9), New Hampshire (4), California (55), Oregon (7) og Washington (12)

The VG overview is updated by DPA and therefore may be somewhat later:

The New York Times has rejected the speedometer for this year’s election, instead selecting three states where the speedometer shows who is likely to win.

The speedometer hit Florida and also predicts that Georgia and North Carolina will land with the incumbent president.

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CNN’s tally shows that both candidates received more than 5.2 million votes, which is more than Trump received when he won Florida in 2016. Trump received 4,617,886 votes in 2016.

The outcome has reportedly been long delayed due to internet problems in the state.

VG on election vigil in Florida: “I’m sure Trump will win”

The bite can intercept the bending state.

The New York Times speedometer kept Joe Biden the favorite in North Carolina at a young age, but at 03:31 it was Trump who was listed as the favorite here with a 92 percent chance. At that time, about 80 percent of the votes were reported.

Georgia, the third state with its own speedometer, has changed its status from “coin toss” to “probably Trump,” with an 84 percent chance after 17 percent of the vote was counted.

If Biden wins Michigan and Wisconsin, where polls tipped heavily in his favor before the election, he doesn’t need to win more than one or two of the auspicious states of Pennsylvania, Georgia, Ohio, North Carolina or Texas.

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Here are preliminary results on three other tip states:

  • Trump leads at 04.21 with 51.8 percent to 46.8 for Biden in Ohio when 74 percent of the vote is reported.
  • Trump leads with 55.9 percent against Biden’s 42.9 in Georgia with 52 percent counted.
  • Biden leads solidly in Arizona, at 56.5 percent to Trump’s 41.5 percent, when 47 percent of the vote is counted.

Fox News also reports that Democrats retain control of the House of Representatives and, in fact, increase their majority there. It is not yet clear which party will have the majority in the Senate after this election. 35 seats are up for grabs now.

Kilder: New York Times, Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, CBS

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