More than 50 million Americans have cast ballots in the presidential election, an early-voting expert said on Friday, signaling a potential record turnout out for the November 3 matchup between President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden.
According to Michael McDonald of the University of Florida’s Elections Project, at least 52 million people had cast ballots in person or by mail 11 days before Election Day.
That is 22 percent of all eligible US voters. McDonald and other experts predict the election could set a modern turnout record, surpassing the 60 percent participation rate of recent presidential elections.
The massive early-vote total gives the Republican Trump less leeway to change minds before voting concludes. Opinion polls show him trailing Biden, a Democrat, both nationally and, by a narrower margin, in several battleground states that will decide who sits in the White House on January 20, 2021.
Trump said those polls underestimated his support. “I think we’re leading in a lot of states you don’t know about,” he told reporters at the White House.
Campaign manager Bill Stepien said the race was tightening in Minnesota and said the campaign would buy more television advertising there. Opinion polls show Biden leading in the state.
A final debate with Biden on Thursday offered Trump a chance to reverse his fortunes, but analysts said it was unlikely to alter the race in any fundamental way.
Preliminary estimates showed that fewer people watched the debate than their first debate in September.
Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 221,000 people in the United States and cost millions their jobs has remained the key issue in voters minds.
In a reminder of the COVID-19’s accelerated spread as winter approaches, researchers at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation warned the virus could kill more than half a million people in the United States by the end of February 2021.
They said that roughly 130,000 lives could be saved if everybody wore masks, according to a study released on Friday.
Biden, 77, plans a speech in Delaware on Friday to discuss his plans to beat back the coronavirus pandemic.
Biden said Trump, 74, has bungled the response. Trump has defended his handling of the health crisis, saying the worst was over.
‘Everything's up'
Trump has frequently assailed absentee voting, which is surging in the pandemic, as unreliable, and his campaign has fought states’ efforts to expand a practice that analysts say is as secure as any other method.
Trump himself has voted by mail in past elections, but plans to vote in person in Florida on Saturday, the White House said.
Vice President Mike Pence cast his early-vote ballot in Indianapolis on Friday morning.
Democrats have cast roughly 5 million more votes than Republicans so far, though their margin has shrunk in recent days, according to TargetSmart, a Democratic analytics firm.
Democratic analysts say they are cheered by those numbers but caution that they expect a late surge of Republican votes on Election Day.
Republican strategists say strong in-person turnout in Florida, North Carolina and Iowa gives them hope that Trump can win those battleground states again this year.
“It’s really, really hard to compare this to anything,” Democratic strategist Steve Schale told reporters. “Everything’s up from 2016.”
Americans may find themselves waiting days or weeks to know who won as election officials count tens of millions of mail-in votes.
In Texas, a traditionally Republican state that has been growing more competitive, turnout has already reached 71 percent of the 2016 total, according to McDonald’s figures. It has reached 50 percent in three southern battleground states: Georgia, North Carolina and Florida.
Election officials in battleground states like Pennsylvania are scrambling to minimize the possibility of a disputed outcome.
Focus on Florida
Both candidates have showered attention on Florida, where a Reuters/Ipsos poll this week found Biden moving into a slight lead after being in a statistical tie a week earlier.
Trump will begin his visit at the Villages, a sprawling retirement center. Trump won voters above the age of 65 by 17 percentage points in 2016, but polls show him running even or trailing Biden with senior voters this year in the state.
In the evening, Trump will hold an airport rally in Pensacola in northwestern Florida’s heavily Republican panhandle. Trump will cast his vote in West Palm Beach on Saturday.
Former President Barack Obama, with whom Biden served as vice president for eight years, will campaign in Florida on Saturday. Obama made his campaign-trail debut for Biden in Pennsylvania on Wednesday.
Biden entered the final days of the race with more cash than Trump. The Democrat raised about $130 million during the October 1-14 period, about three times the roughly $44 million raised by Trump’s campaign.
Reuters.