nytimes.com 
<https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/07/us/politics/election-call-biden-trump.html> 
 


Biden Leads, but No Call Yet Four Days After Election: This Week in the 2020 
Race


Astead W. Herndon, Annie Karni

7-9 minutes

  _____  

Election Day has turned into Election Week and while Joe Biden is within 
striking distance of 270 Electoral College vote, the counting is continuing.

 

 

Credit...Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

*       Nov. 7, 2020, 3:00 a.m. ET
*        

Get emails for all live election updates

Welcome to our weekly analysis of the state of the 2020 campaign.


Catch me up


As Election Day turned into Election Week, an anxious nation lost days of 
productivity, with Americans interested only in what map gurus like CNN’s John 
King and MSNBC’s Steve Kornacki had to say about the effect of every new 
tranche of votes on the outcome of the race. And, a bold race call awarding 
Arizona to Joseph R. Biden Jr. by Fox News on election night, followed by The 
Associated Press, shocked the Trump campaign.

As of late Friday, Mr. Biden was within striking distance of being the next 
president of the United States, powered by tight statewide victories in the 
Midwest states that went for President Trump in 2016: Michigan and Wisconsin. 
Mr. Biden was leading in Pennsylvania, another state that went for Mr. Trump in 
the last cycle. The former vice president was ahead in Arizona in the West, and 
Georgia in the South — giving Democrats hope for future victories in those 
states in spite of poor results down ballot elsewhere.

It was a mixed bag of results that is not yet final, as some states may require 
a recount while others continue to count ballots. Here are four takeaways from 
the results we know so far:


Despite several upsets, Democrats make some gains


 

Image

 

Credit...Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Democrats spent election night in a state of panic, as it became clear that 
Republican turnout surged passed polling predictions and Mr. Trump had an 
enduring coalition. By Thursday, as Mr. Biden edged closer to 270 electoral 
votes, Democratic fears had subsided but not disappeared. The party lost key 
Congressional races, failed to flip several state legislatures, and continued 
to show weakness among voting populations in Florida, Texas and Iowa.

The good news:

*       The ‘Blue Wall’ was repaired: Since the beginning, Mr. Biden’s campaign 
promised to win back the Midwestern states that delivered Mr. Trump an 
Electoral College victory in 2016. With wins in Michigan and Wisconsin so far, 
he’s close to doing it. The margin was smaller than most polling predicted, and 
Mr. Trump showed real durability in rural areas, but Mr. Biden seems to have 
done enough. Going forward, that breaks down the belief that the party had 
become to localized to the coasts.
*       Georgia looks promising: The Georgia special election for the Senate 
seat currently held by Kelly Loeffler, who was appointed to the position, will 
move to a runoff. Ms. Loeffler will face the Rev. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, 
in January. The state’s other senator, David Purdue, is also heading to a 
runoff after he failed to clear 50 percent in a tight race against his 
Democratic challenger, Jon Ossoff. Mr. Biden pulled ahead of Mr. Trump in the 
state early Friday morning as tallies in the vote-rich Atlanta suburbs notched 
up for the Democrat. A race call there was not expected for weeks, but Nate 
Cohn said the president would likely need a tabulation error to win. The last 
Democrat to be elected president here was Bill Clinton in 1992.


The 2020 race taught us more about 2016


 

Image

 

Credit...Doug mills/The New York Times

There was one subset of the political world that felt vindicated by the 
nail-biter presidential race: Democrats who worked for Hillary Clinton. The 
closeness of the Biden-Trump race suggests that the 2016 election outcome may 
have been less about Mrs. Clinton’s political weaknesses than it was about Mr. 
Trump’s political strengths.

In some of the states that Mr. Biden managed to flip, like Wisconsin, his 
victory was by a slim margin of about 20,000 votes. Four years ago, Mrs. 
Clinton lost the state by about 22,000. A potential victory with more than 300 
electoral votes would look like a blowout for Mr. Biden, but it would also mask 
the fact that in some of the most critical states, the race was still only won 
by a hair.

Mr. Biden has not received the wide margins nationwide that many liberals had 
been hoping for. The silver lining for some former members of Clintonworld, as 
one put it: The 2016 Democratic nominee might not go down in history as the 
political version of Bill Buckner, who blew the World Series for the Red Sox in 
1986 by letting a ground ball go through his legs.

“His electoral strength in 2016 had less to do with any shortcomings of Hillary 
Clinton as a candidate or of her campaign than with Trump’s own appeal to a 
broad segment of the population,” Stuart Appelbaum, president of the Retail, 
Wholesale and Department Store Union and a member of the D.N.C.’s executive 
committee, said of Mr. Trump. “We need as Democrats to understand that and 
confront it more effectively going forward.”

Philippe Reines, a former top adviser to Mrs. Clinton both in the Senate and at 
the State Department, was even more blunt. “Hillary’s owed more than a few 
apologies for how her campaign was assessed,” Mr. Reines said. Jennifer 
Palmieri, who served as communications director for the 2016 Clinton campaign, 
said that the current election gives a new perspective to the race four years 
ago.

“There’s only so much you can do to ameliorate larger forces,” Ms. Palmieri 
said. “When I see young Latino and African-American men siding with Trump in a 
way they didn’t in 2016, I don’t fault the Biden campaign’s African-American 
radio program. It is a symptom of a larger change that’s happening.”


Trump’s unhelpful personal feuds




Image

 

Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

The tight map means that the Trump campaign will be forced to reckon with the 
realization that if they had done any number of small things differently, or if 
the candidate had not pursued unhelpful fights with political enemies (even 
beyond the grave), this thing could have gone the other way.

Campaign officials and outside advisers acknowledged that Republicans were 
damaged in Arizona by Mr. Trump’s yearslong feud with Senator John McCain, a 
beloved figure in his home state, a personal disdain that continued even after 
he died in 2018. Fox News and The A.P. called Arizona for Mr. Biden on Tuesday 
night.

In Georgia, Mr. Biden took a narrow lead on Friday thanks to votes from Clayton 
County, the district that was represented by former Representative John Lewis, 
the civil rights icon who died in July. Mr. Trump had berated Mr. Lewis for 
calling his presidency “illegitimate,” noting that he should spend more time 
fixing his “horrible” and “crime-infested” district. Apparently, those words 
were not easily forgotten by the voters who lived there.

Some of his supporters were already playing the “what if” game, more broadly. 
“Where would Trump be if he never said what he said about Charlottesville, if 
he never said what he said about Khizr Khan, about Mika Brzezinski,” said Ari 
Fleischer, a former White House press secretary to President George W. Bush. In 
other words, where would he be if he wasn’t Donald Trump?

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