Presidential election results 2020

By Meg Wagner, Melissa Macaya, Veronica Rocha, Melissa Mahtani and Amanda Wills, CNN

Updated 2:44 p.m. ET, November 23, 2020
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2:05 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Enthusiasm to vote on and around college campuses is high this Election Day

From CNN's Rachel Janfaza

Students on and around college campuses across the country are ripe with enthusiasm to vote today. Here's what some students told us about their states:

Pennsylvania

Students from the University of Pittsburgh, many of whom were eager to cast their ballot before heading to class, lined up around the block at the Oakland Career Center near the campus of University of Pittsburgh this morning, Sophia Shapiro, co-president of the University of Pittsburgh Students for Biden, told CNN.

“Everyone’s just really excited to cast their ballot. We had a volunteer try to compete to be first in line this morning. People are enthusiastic and optimistic and really motivated to make their voice heard,” Shapiro said.

 

Arizona

Meanwhile, while the polling site on the campus of Mesa Community College, in Mesa, Arizona didn’t open until 6 a.m. local time, the line of people waiting to vote had already formed by 5:30 a.m. local time, Carla Naranjo, a 21-year-old organizer with Arizona Center for Empowerment (a voting protection agency) told CNN.

The site at Mesa Community College is open to community members and students, Naranjo said, adding that the line was filled with “a good portion of young people.”

“They come in and say yeah I’m a first time voter, they come out excited with a sticker, and just in general, they are energized and ready to vote,” Naranjo said of the young voters she spoke with in Mesa.

Naranjo, a student at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona, voted early in 2020, marking her first time voting in a presidential election.

Virginia

Likewise in Virginia, 20-year-old Ian Waite is tabling on campus at George Mason University in Fairfax County.

Waite, Chairman of the George Mason College Republicans and the College Republicans Federation of Virginia, is voting for the first time in a presidential election and voted Republican up and down the ballot, he told CNN.

“I think overall our campus is very energized this election. Our campus does a great job providing opportunities for us to voice our beliefs,” said.
“Overall I expect our voter turnout on campus to be pretty high,” he said. “I think it’s a combination of one, we’re so close to DC that we have a generally energized population on campus, and two, this election is critical to a significant number of issues that speak to our generation and we’re looking for the best solutions to those issues,” Waite added.

Texas

And in Texas, students are voting on campus at the University of Houston, where students, administrators and Harris county officials worked to turn the TDECU Stadium into a polling center for students and community members on Election Day.

“The enthusiasm shown by UH students has been one of the best showings of unity I’ve ever seen on this campus,” 22-year-old Isaiah Martin and an on-campus group that works with administrators on student initiatives at the University of Houston, told CNN.
“From the many student organizations that made their own creative videos, to all the dedicated poll workers and to the administrators that worked tirelessly to support this effort, our school has jumped on the opportunity to get out the young vote and make sure that all of our voices are heard this election cycle.”

1:53 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

33.48% of absentee ballots already processed in Madison, Wisconsin, city clerk says

From CNN's Caroline Kenny

Maribeth Witzel-Behl, the city clerk in Madison, Wisconsin, tells CNN that as of noon, more than a third of the absentee ballots from across the city have already been processed.

“Our goal is that by the time the polls would ordinarily close at 8 p.m., that we will be through everything. So that's why we have our polling locations calling us every couple of hours to let us know how many absentees have been processed so far,” she said.

“And then those locations that have processed the least percentage of their absentees are getting additional help dispatched to their locations so they can focus on that,” Witzel-Behl added.

The city clerk’s office also tweeted that 33.48% of absentee ballots have already been processed.  

As of Tuesday morning, the city of Madison had 121,207 absentee ballots returned out of 127,900 absentee ballots issued. Voters in Madison can return their absentee ballots to their local polling locations or the city clerk’s office today by 8 p.m. local time.

Witzel-Behl added that she requires poll workers in the city to call in to alert her office when there are lines longer than 10 minutes, and she said she has not received any of those calls yet today.

“When the polls opened this morning, there were locations where people had already been lined up to vote. And so there's that initial rush every single election where people are part of that first group of voters. Then once we get beyond that, our goal is that everybody gets through the line within 15 minutes, and the election officials are to call us if their line reaches 10 minutes long, and we haven't received any calls indicating that there's a 10 minute line,” she said.

Witzel-Beh also said there were no problems to flag in Madison. She did say that a few absentee ballots jammed, but they were cleared really quickly, and that is the extent of the issues she has heard about.

1:48 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Trump indicates that he doesn't have acceptance or concession speech prepared

From CNN's Maegan Vazquez

President Donald Trump visits his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, on November 3.
President Donald Trump visits his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, on November 3. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

President Trump suggested on Tuesday that he does not a have a concession or acceptance speech prepared.

A member of the press asked Trump at the RNC annex in Arlington, Virginia, whether he had written an acceptance or concession speech.

The President responded, “No, I’m not thinking about concession speech or acceptance speech yet.”

“Hopefully we’ll be only doing one of those two and you know, winning is easy. Losing is never easy. Not for me it’s not,” he continued.

Watch:

3:01 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Here's the scene outside of the White House this afternoon

From CNN's Maureen Chowdhury and Paul LeBlanc

A fence protecting the White House in Washington, D.C. on Election day.
A fence protecting the White House in Washington, D.C. on Election day. Ron Haviv/VII/Redux

Federal authorities have put into place "non-scalable" fence around the the perimeter of the White House in preparation for potential civil unrest.

As of this afternoon, peaceful protesters and demonstrators were outside of the fencing near Lafayette Park and St. John's Church.

Here's what the scene looked like:

The fencing, the same type that was put up during protests this summer, encompasses the Ellipse and Lafayette Square.

1:50 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Trump continues to rail against SCOTUS decision in Pennsylvania

From CNN's Jason Hoffman

President Donald Trump speaks from his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, on November 3.
President Donald Trump speaks from his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, on November 3. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

President Trump again strongly criticized the decision by the Supreme Court to allow Pennsylvania to receive ballots up to three days after Election Day, calling it “a very dangerous decision for our country.”

“I think the ruling on Pennsylvania was an unfortunate one by the Supreme Court because I think we should know what happens on the night. Let people put their ballots in earlier, but you have to have numbers, you can have these things delayed for many days and maybe weeks, you can’t do that,” Trump said during remarks at his campaign headquarters in Virginia on Tuesday.

“And a lot of shenanigans, a lot of bad things happen with ballots when you say ‘oh let's devote days and days’ and all of a sudden, the ballot count changes,” Trump baselessly added, implying cheating could occur if ballots are counted after Election Day.

However ballots are always counted after Election Day. Per a CNN fact check: “it's media outlets, not the government, that sometimes — but not always — unofficially project a winner on election night. The outlets do so by making projections based on the incomplete available data, not because they possess certified final totals."

Last night, Trump said the decision by the Supreme Court “will allow rampant and unchecked cheating and will undermine our entire systems of laws. It will also induce violence in the streets.” Twitter flagged the tweet as misleading.

 “I think it's a very dangerous decision for our country in many ways dangerous, in many ways,” Trump added in his remarks Tuesday.

1:31 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

North Carolina's Cabarrus County tracking down about 50 voters who got the wrong House race ballot

From CNN's Pamela Kirkland

Approximately 50 voters were given an incorrect ballot when they showed up to vote at Hickory Ridge Middle School in Harrisburg, North Carolina, this morning.

Cabarrus County, which is northeast of Charlotte, has determined the wrong ballots were distributed between 6:30 a.m. ET until just before 7:30 a.m. ET. The ballots distributed at that time did not include the North Carolina 83rd District House race.

The Cabarrus County Board of Elections is encouraging voters who were at that polling place between those times to return to the site and cast a provisional ballot, for the House race only, by 7:30 p.m. ET. If they don’t cast a provisional ballot, their vote will still count. They just won’t have voted for the House race. 

Kasia Faryna Thompson, Cabarrus County Director of Communications, says the board is working to track down those voters and at this point, “the board knows who each of the voters are.”

2:39 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Here's why the rhythm of election night results may be different in 2020 

From CNN's Jason Kurtz

CNN's Washington Bureau Chief Sam Feist speaks with Erin Burnett on November 3.
CNN's Washington Bureau Chief Sam Feist speaks with Erin Burnett on November 3. CNN

CNN's Washington Bureau Chief Sam Feist explained how CNN makes projections and why 2020 is different to other years.

"This year's different than any other year. Everything in the country is different because of [Covid-19,]" Feist said.

One of the biggest changes in 2020's election rhythm is the massive uptick in mail-in ballots.

"It takes longer to count mail-in ballots. You have to open the envelope, open the outer envelope, check the signature, scan the ballot. It takes a while," he said. 

Certain states, including Florida and North Carolina, have been processing mail-in ballots for weeks, with early counts likely to favor Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Elsewhere, including Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, mail-in ballots aren't tabulated until after voting closes, a detail that could favor President Trump initially.

"Those states may favor Donald Trump late into the night, until those mail-in ballots go in, and then the count will even out a little bit," Feist said.

A look at how CNN makes projections: Wolf Blitzer announces that the network has projected this or that candidate will win a particular race.

The process that leads to Blitzer saying those words is careful and complicated. It involves both real-time results and information from exit polls. CNN, NBC, ABC and CBS work with the polling firm Edison Research in what is known as the National Election Pool for results and exit polling data. Fox News and the Associated Press have a separate arrangement.

For additional details as to how CNN calls a presidential election, read more here.

Watch:

2:23 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

USPS ordered to have postal inspectors sweep some facilities by 3 p.m. ET for election mail

From CNN's Paul Murphy and Katelyn Polantz

Volunteers wearing protective masks process absentee ballots for the 2020 Presidential election at the TCF Center in Detroit, Michigan on Nov. 3, 2020. 
Volunteers wearing protective masks process absentee ballots for the 2020 Presidential election at the TCF Center in Detroit, Michigan on Nov. 3, 2020.  Emily Elconin/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Judge Emmet Sullivan of the US District Court of the District of Columbia ordered the United States Postal Service to sweep all processing facilities by 3 p.m. ET in a number of states, including some critical battleground state.

The order mandates that USPS postal inspectors "or their designees" must start sweeping the processing facilities by 3:00 p.m. ET.

According to the order, this is,

"to ensure that no ballots have been held up and that any identified ballots are immediately sent out for delivery."

The sweeps must be conducted in the following USPS districts: 

  • Central Pennsylvania
  • Philadelphia, Detroit
  • Colorado/Wyoming
  • Atlanta
  • Houston 
  • Alabama 
  • Northern New England (New Hampshire and Maine)
  • Greater South Carolina
  • South Florida
  • Lakeland (Wisconsin)
  • Arizona

Seven battleground states are conducting sweeps and do not allow ballots to arrive after Election Day. They include: Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Florida, New Hampshire, Arizona, and Maine.

1:36 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020

Trump is visiting RNC offices in Virginia: "I feel very good"

From CNN's Kaitlan Collins and Jason Hoffman

President Donald Trump visits his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia on November 3.
President Donald Trump visits his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia on November 3. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

President Trump just walked into the bullpen of his campaign headquarters in Virginia to sustained cheers from campaign staff.

"I hear we are doing very well in Florida and we're doing very well in Arizona. We're doing incredibly well in Texas. We're doing, I think we're doing -- I'm hearing we're doing well all over," Trump said. "I think we are going to have a great night."

"I feel very good," Trump told reporters.

Trump said his message to America was that "everybody should come together, and success brings us together." 

CNN reported earlier, that Trump huddled with his top campaign staffers in a conference room at the headquarters, a source tells CNN, including Bill Stepien, Justin Clark and several others. They met for about 20 minutes. 

Watch Trump address campaign staff at RNC headquarters: