The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

All eyes on the path to 270

Electoral number hinges on tight races, including Pennsylvan­ia

- By Jonathan Lemire, Aamer Madhani, Zeke Miller, Jill Colvin and Alexandra Jaffe

WASHINGTON » On a day of electoral uncertaint­y and legal action, Joe Biden won Wisconsin on Wednesday, reclaiming a key part of the “blue wall” that slipped away from Democrats four years ago and narrowing President Donald Trump’s pathway to reelection.

A full day after Election Day, neither candidate had cleared the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House. Margins remained tight in several fiercely contested states including the Great Lakes battlegrou­nds of Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia. But Biden’s victory in Wisconsin loomed as an important step to the presidency.

He said in that late afternoon that he now expected to win the White House along with running mate Kamala Harris, though he

stopped short of outright declaring victory.

“I will govern as an American president,” Biden said. “There will be no red states and blue states when we win. Just the United States of America.”

The Associated Press called Wisconsin for Biden af ter election of f icials in the state said all outstandin­g ballots had been counted, save for a few hundred in one township and an expected small number of provisiona­l votes.

Trump’s campaign requested a recount. Statewide recounts in Wisconsin have historical­ly changed the vote tally by only a few hundred votes; Biden led by 0.624 percentage point out of nearly 3.3 million ballots counted.

It was unclear when or how quickly a national winner could be determined after a long, bitter campaign dominated by the coronaviru­s and its effects on Americans and the national economy. But Biden’s possible pathways to the White House were expanding rapidly.

After the victory in Wisconsin, he held 248 Electoral College votes, 22 shy of the 270 needed to win the presidency. The former vice president had several possible combinatio­ns of outstandin­g states to win the White House. For example, combining Nevada with either Michigan or Georgia would land him at precisely 270.

Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien said the president would formally request a Wisconsin recount, citing “irregulari­ties” in several counties. And the campaign said it was filing suit in Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia to halt ballot counting on grounds that it wasn’t given proper access to observe.

At the same time, hundreds of thousands of votes were still to be counted in Pennsylvan­ia, and Trump’s campaign said it was moving to intervene in the existing Supreme Court litigation over counting mailin ballots there.

In other closely watched races, Trump picked up Florida, the largest of the swing states, while Biden flipped Arizona, a state that had reliably voted Republican in recent elections.

The Trump campaign questioned the results in Arizona, with aides having come to the conclusion that, without Wisconsin, their best, if still unlikely, path to victory was winning that state and Pennsylvan­ia. A legal challenge in Arizona was possible.

The unsettled nature of the presidenti­al race was reflective of a somewhat disappoint­ing night for Democrats, who had hoped to deliver a thorough repudiatio­n of Trump’s four years in office while also reclaiming the Senate to have a firm grasp on all of Washington. But the GOP held on to several Senate seats that had been considered vulnerable, including in Iowa, Texas, Maine and Kansas. Democrats lost House seats but were expected to retain control there.

The high-stakes election was held against the backdrop of a historic pandemic that has killed more than 232,000 Americans and wiped away millions of jobs. The candidates spent months pressing dramatical­ly different visions for the nation’s future, including on racial justice, and voters responded in huge numbers, with more than 100 million people casting votes ahead of Election Day.

Trump, in an extraordin­ary move from the White House, issued premature claims of victory and said he would take the election to the Supreme Court to stop the counting. It was unclear exactly what legal action he could try to pursue.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell discounted the president’s quick claim of victory, saying it would take a while for states to conduct their vote counts. The Kentucky Republican said Wednesday that “claiming you’ve won the election is different from finishing the counting.”

The president stayed out of the public eye but took to Twitter to suggest, without basis, that the election was being tainted by late-counted ballots. Twitter flagged a number of Trump’s tweets, noting some of the informatio­n shared was “disputed and might be misleading about an election or other civic process.”

Biden, brief ly appearing in front of supporters in Delaware early Wednesday, urged patience, saying the election “ain’t over until every vote is counted, every ballot is counted.”

“It’s not my place or Donald Trump’s place to declare who’s won this election,” Biden said. “That’s the decision of the American people.”

Vote tabulation­s routinely continue beyond Election Day, and states largely set the rules for when the count has to end. In presidenti­al elections, a key point is the date in December when presidenti­al electors met. That’s set by federal law.

Several states allow mailed-in votes to be accepted as long as they were postmarked by Tuesday. That includes Pennsylvan­ia, where ballots postmarked by Nov. 3 can be accepted if they arrive up to three days later.

Trump appeared to suggest those ballots should not be counted and that he would fight for that outcome at the high court. But legal experts were dubious of Trump’s declaratio­n. Trump has appointed three of the high court’s nine justices including, most recently, Amy Coney Barrett.

The Trump campaign on Wednesday pushed Republican donors to dig deeper into their pockets to help finance legal challenges. Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, during a donor call, spoke plainly: “The fight’s not over. We’re in it.”

Harris made a pitch on Twitter to supporters to pitch in $5 to help pay for a fight that could “stretch on for weeks.”

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chester County election workers process mail-in and absentee ballots for the 2020 general election Wednesday.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chester County election workers process mail-in and absentee ballots for the 2020 general election Wednesday.

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