Conversation

3) There is always a chance some results are overturned or at least recounted. *If you ignore that*: Biden wins if he takes Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada, and at least one of Pennsylvania and Georgia. There are other paths, too.
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4) Wisconsin has been called for Biden by many but not all networks, though it will likely have a recount. Arizona and Nevada are inconsistently called but extremely likely to be Biden. No one has called MI, PA, or GA yet.
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5) We're not there yet, but if any of those three states is called for Biden, that will be that. *If*, that is, nothing is overturned later. There is a significant chance of recounts, state court challenges, and potentially a supreme court challenge. (Of what, exactly?)
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6) As of now: MI is looking very good for Biden. There are a number of uncounted ballots, but mostly from blue areas. But there's still uncertainty there. PA has a lot left to count and looks close. GA is weird: much of Atlanta hasn't been counted yet. It's close.
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Replying to
8) There will be recounts! But those don't usually do much: twitter.com/ScottWalker/st Bigger court challenges, of course, could do anything, and could drag on.
Quote Tweet
After recount in 2011 race for WI Supreme Court, there was a swing of 300 votes. After recount in 2016 Presidential race in WI, @realDonaldTrump numbers went up by 131. As I said, 20,000 is a high hurdle. #Election2020 twitter.com/ScottWalker/st…
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9) My best guess is that, in a normal election year: --neither candidate would have conceded yet --Biden would be considering whether to claim victory --Trump would be likely to concede in about a day, once MI and GA votes come in.
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11) Most of the states say they'll finish by 10am HKT (9pm EST) or so. Some (e.g. PA, NV, and NC) will drag on for a few days.
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23) One last note: if it does end up 270-268, then the possibility of faithless electors becomes real.
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