Pennsylvania: Trump leads Biden by 5.3% but result may take days
PENNSYLVANIA: Trump leads by 5.3% and result may not come until FRIDAY – but Biden is predicted to win because remaining mail-in ballots are expected to give him 800,000 MORE votes
- Gov Tom Wolf said ‘we may not know the results today’, tweeting there are more than a million ballots to count
- The final result could come in as late as Friday
- Data from the Secretary of State shows that Biden has won the absentee votes by an overwhelming margin of 78% to 21%
- If he carried the remaining mail-in ballots by a similar margin he would stand to gain 800,000 more votes which would take him across the line
- Results by AP show Donald Trump and the Republicans on 52 percent, or 3,118,571 votes
- Joe Biden and the Democrats on 46.7 percent, or 2,798,695 votes – with 64 per cent of the vote counted
- Keystone State holds 20 Electoral College votes and is one of the states most critical for Trump to win election
Trump is currently leading Biden in Pennsylvania by 5.3 percent, but officials say a definitive result may not be reached until as late as Friday with more than one million mail-in ballots still to be counted.
Results by AP show Donald Trump and the Republicans on 52 percent, or 3,118,571 votes, and Joe Biden and the Democrats on 46.7 percent, or 2,798,695 votes – with 64 per cent of the vote counted.
Data release Wednesday from the Pennsylvania Secretary of State shows that Biden has so far won absentee votes by an overwhelming margin of 78% to 21%.
If he carried the remaining mail-in ballots by a similar margin he would stand to gain 800,000 more votes which would take him across the line, according the The New York Times.
In states such as Pennsylvania that do not count mail-in ballots until Election Day, initial results favor Trump because they were slower to count mailed ballots.
The Trump campaign filed lawsuits Wednesday in the state, and in Michigan, seeking better access for campaign observers to locations where ballots are being processed and counted.
The campaign also is seeking to intervene in a Pennsylvania case at the Supreme Court that is centered on whether ballots received up to three days after the election can still be counted.
They’re seeking to temporarily cease all counting in both states until the campaign is given ‘meaningful’ access in numerous locations and allowed to review ballots that have already been counted and processed.
Biden has been projected as the winner of Michigan by CNN, while the president is still ahead in Pennsylvania but his margin is gradually diminishing.
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, condemned the Trump campaign’s lawsuit, accusing them of attempting to ‘intimidate’ election officials.
‘Pennsylvania is going to count every vote and make sure that everyone has their voice heard. Pennsylvania is going to fight every single attempt to disenfranchise voter and continue to administer a free and fair election.
‘Our election officials at the state and local level should be free to do their jobs without intimidation or attacks,’ he continued. ‘These attempts to subvert the democratic process are disgraceful.’
Pennsylvania (pictured, Philadelphia) is being watched closely as the fate of the presidency could come down to the state bordering New York
Republicans in the state are also trying to cast doubt on the state’s election result.
Late Tuesday, the two most prominent Republicans in the Pennsylvania Senate issued a 1,500-word press release criticizing the state’s top election official and accusing her of mishandling the election.
Pennsylvania’s Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman and Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati blasted Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, a Democrat, saying she had changed her guidance to counties multiple times in the days leading up to Election Day. The also called for Boockvar to resign.
Gov. Wolf issued strongly worded rebuke to the Republican leaders, calling their criticism ‘an attempt to undermine confidence in the results of the election’ and adding that ‘we should all denounce them for the undemocratic actions they are.’
‘I support our Secretary of State and all of our state and local election officials who are working hard to deliver timely, accurate results and ensure that everyone’s vote is counted and protected,’ Wolfe continued.
Boockvar told reporters she will not be resigning, and instead cast blame at the legislature, which is in fact to blame for the delay in counting mail ballots.
The protests of Corman and Scarnati were based in-large on two main issues.
They complained that Boockvar’s instructions about how to handle mail ballots that arrived after 8pm on Election Day could lead to these ballots getting mixed up with ballots that arrived before that hour.
The difference between the two groups is that any mail ballot that arrived before 8pm on Election Day would be counted regardless. It’s believed there are between 2.5 to 3 million requested mail ballots that fall into this group.
There is a pending Republican appeal at the Supreme Court over whether Pennsylvania can count votes that arrive in the mail from Wednesday to Friday.
Republicans had also filed suits in state and federal court on Tuesday challenging Pennsylvania election officials’ move to allow counties to contact voters whose mail-in ballots were rejected because of mistakes, and then give them the opportunity to fix those ballots or cast provisional, replacement ballots.
In their joint letter, Corman and Scarnati also touched upon this issue.
Boockvar previously issued instructions to counties saying they could allow a voter to cast a provisional ballot if there was a problem with their mail ballot. Not all counties did this, however, and so Republicans claim the decision is being carried out unequally.
‘This scattershot approach to Pennsylvania’s elections is wholly inappropriate and a direct breach of the positions she is on record of supporting in litigation – a position that Justice Baer specifically said is best left to the legislative branch of Pennsylvania’s government,’ Corman and Scarnati wrote.
‘As leaders, we simply cannot stand by and allow Kathy Boockvar’s blatant disregard for the legislative process and the law to continue.
‘In order for trust to be restored to the Pennsylvania election system, Kathy Boockvar must resign as Secretary of State in Pennsylvania following these most recent efforts to weaken the state’s voting system and damage the integrity and confidence in our elections,’ they continued.
Republicans are said to be keeping their legal options open to challenge absentee ballots in Pennsylvania, if the battleground state could swing President Donald Trump’s reelection.
Corman was reported in the Atlantic to have said that he and the state legislature would consider replacing the popular vote in Pennsylvania with Electoral College members of the legislature’s choosing if the voting result were too convoluted. He then reportedly distanced himself from the idea a short while later.
Experts told Yahoo News the election may now be heading towards what they call a ‘nightmare scenario’.
While the majority of the country opted otherwise, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan all resisted bipartisan entreaties to let their election clerks have their mail ballots counted by Election Day.
Consequently, each of the states will be counting in Mail ballots for several days, with the count expected to last until Friday.
Philadelphia City Commissioner Al Schmidt told CNN: ‘We are really running two election systems at the same time.’
He said there had been no break for people working on the ballots, but he said they had to flick from mail-in, to poll voters, back to mail-in.
He added: ‘We are not stopping, we’re going to continue. We have hundreds of people working. We’re going to continue day and night.’
But when asked how long it would be before the results were in, Commissioner Schmidt said it will take all day Wednesday, Thursday and they have until Friday.
He added that some ballots had not arrived but would be counted if they were posted on time.
Lleft to right) Pennsylvania’s Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman and Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati blasted Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, a Democrat, saying she had changed her guidance to counties multiple times in the days leading up to Election Day. The also called for Boockvar to resign.
Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar told reporters she will not be resigning, and instead cast blame at the legislature, which is in fact to blame for the delay in counting mail ballots.
Winning Pennsylvania and one other larger state would give Mr Biden the 32 votes needed to pass the 270 threshold needed in the Electoral College.
Wins in Georgia, Alaska, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Michigan, which all voted for him in 2016, would give Mr Trump an additional 70 votes, taking him to 283 votes.
A win in these states and Wisconsin but a loss in Pennsylvania would lead to a narrow victory for Mr Trump, with 273 votes.
Democrats hope women, black people and Latinos in Pennsylvania have backed Biden over the President at the polls – despite voting for Trump in 2016.
The rural areas are expected to back the incumbent – potentially by a lesser number than last time – but city voters are understood to want a change in leader.
Biden will hope for a large turn out by black and Latino people in built up areas such as Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
Meanwhile the president is relying on the backing of mostly white people from more rural districts. Governor Wolf last night called for residents of the crucial swing state to remain calm and stay patient.
He was preparing for Election Night unrest in light of the state mail-in ballot policy, where final results there may not be known until next week.
Wolf released a brief one-and-a-half-minute video in Election Day where he urged Pennsylvanians to ‘take a breath.’
He said: ‘Across the state, dedicated county workers are ready to tirelessly make sure everyone’s vote counts.
‘But counting that tremendous number of ballots will take more time than we are used to.’
‘We may not know the results today,’ he acknowledged, ‘but I encourage all of us to take a deep breath and be patient.’
He added: ‘What is most important is that we have accurate results – even if that takes a little longer.’
The Democratic governor has come under immense fire from critics the last few months regarding his coronavirus restrictions and lockdowns.
Republicans in the state were handed a loss from the Supreme Court when they challenged the new state rule allowing election officials to accept and count mail-in ballots received up to three days after the election – as long as it is postmarked for Election Day, November 3.
This year – in light of the coronavirus pandemic – a record number of more than 100 million voters cast their ballots early whether in-person or by mail.
Democrats in Pennsylvania argue election officials need the extra few days to count up the mail-in ballots this year.
Republicans claim any ballots received after election day should be void. Trump claims the measure is an attempt by Democrats to ‘steal’ the election.
Just a few steps from the birthplace of the US, mail-in ballots are processed, flattened and scanned by poll workers in the Philadelphia Convention Center in Center City yesterday
‘We may not know the results today, but I encourage all of us to take a deep breath and be patient,’ Wolf said in his video as thousands of Pennsylvanias headed to the polls Tuesday to cast their ballots
The Keystone State holds 20 Electoral College votes and is one of the states considered the most critical for Trump to win reelection – along with Florida.
Wolf said in his video message: ‘I believe the days ahead are our moment to shine, and we will do it as a state united as we count every vote.’
Trump lashed out against the Supreme Court ruling, claiming he will levy legal challenges against the Pennsylvania result if they change in the days after Election Day as mail-in ballots are counted.
He said the results should be known on Tuesday night.
He said on a visit to his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia: ‘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,’ he suggested of mail-in and absentee voting. ‘But you have to have numbers, you can have these things delayed for many days and maybe weeks.
‘You can’t do that. The whole world is waiting, this country is waiting – but the whole world is waiting.’
‘You have to have a date, and the date happens to be November 3,’ the president reiterated. ‘And we should be entitled to know who won on November 3.’
‘They should put the ballot in earlier, there’s no reason why they can’t put the ballot in a few weeks earlier, one week earlier. I think it’s a very dangerous decision for a country in many ways dangerous, in many ways.’
Gov Wolf tweeted after the comments: ‘Let’s be clear. This is a partisan attack on Pennsylvania’s election, our votes and democracy.’
The Supreme Court also ruled last month North Carolina could continue accepting and counting mail-in ballots received eight days after Tuesday.
Although victors are not officially called on Election Day, projects by the media are usually accurate enough to predict the winner – and there is typically a concession and victory speech delivered the night of the election.
This year, however, everything is up-in-the-air. Results could take weeks as Trump has threatened to challenge the legal validity of the results in Pennsylvania, which, depending on how close the race is, could cause the winner.
Trump railed against Pennsylvania’s policy on Tuesday, claiming it’s a way for Democrats to try and ‘steal’ the election: ‘We should be entitled to know who won on November 3’
Biden yesterday visited his childhood home in Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he left a message on the wall, before being mobbed by fans in the battleground state, after starting election day attending mass and visiting his son Beau’s grave in Delaware.
The Democratic candidate scrawled the message ‘from this house to the White House with the grace of God’ alongside his signature and the date of the 59th US presidential election on the wall of the living room to his boyhood home, as he stopped in the town just hours before the polls close.
Biden was then mobbed by dozens of supporters who had gathered outside the in a show of support, as he headed for the next stop on his whistlestop tour of the state.
Biden made appearances across two Pennsylvania cities on Tuesday as he made a final play for the battleground state where pollsters and both political parties feel the White House race could be won or lost.
The trip came after he started election day by attending morning mass and visiting Beau’s grave at St Joseph On the Brandywine Catholic Church in Wilmington, Delaware, with his wife Jill and teenage granddaughters Finnegan and Natalie.
Joe Biden was mobbed by fans gathered outside his childhood home on Tuesday in a show of support for the candidate
The Democrat left a poignant message on the wall of the living room of his childhood home reading: ‘From this house to the White House with the grace of God’
Biden walked into St. Joseph On the Brandywine Catholic Church in Wilmington with Jill, Finnegan and Natalie soon after 7am Tuesday.
The family attended a short mass at their local church before paying a visit to the grave of Biden’s late son Beau, an Iraq War veteran and Delaware attorney general, who was laid to rest there following his death in 2015 from brain cancer.
Biden’s late first wife Neilia and baby daughter Naomi, who both died in a car crash in 1972, are also buried in the cemetery.
Biden and Finnegan locked arms and she put her arm around her grandfather at one point as they took a moment at his grave.
Finnegan’s message to the American people was plain for all to see as she sported a face mask and black boots with the word ‘vote’ emblazoned on them.
It marked the second time in three days that Biden had paid a visit to the church after he was spotted attending a service there Sunday.
During that visit, he was met with a small group of pro-life protesters who shouted at the presidential candidate about his stance on abortion and held up banners reading: ‘No Catholic can vote for Joe Biden’ and ‘Joe Biden equals abortion, euthanasia and infanticide.’
The three demonstrators, two women and one man, held signs and heckled Biden shouting ‘Joe, you’re a disgrace to the Catholic faith.’
They also heckled Biden’s late son chanting: ‘Repent for your soul’ and ‘Repent for Beau’s soul’.
Beau died aged 46 in 2015 from brain cancer and Biden often pays tribute to his courage battling the disease and also during his deployment to Iraq as a major in the Delaware Army National Guard.
How Biden or Trump could both still win fair and square TODAY without election ending up in court
Donald Trump and Joe Biden have plausible paths to claiming victory in the White House race on Wednesday without going to court.
But they depend on a series of factors falling into place. As of 5 am Joe Biden was on 238 Electoral College votes and Donald Trump on 213.
Undecided were Nevada – widely expected to break for Biden – and Alaska, seen as safely in Trump’s column. That would put them on 244 and 216.
But undecided are Georgia (16 votes), North Carolina (15), Wisconsin (10), Michigan (16), a single vote from Maine’s undeclared Congressional district and the big prize of Pennsylvania with 20 votes.
Numerically, Biden has the easier path: he needs 26 votes to get to 270, while Trump needs 58. That means he could eke out a win on Wednesday – but only if results come in his favor.
Trump’s path on Wednesday seems less likely, because he needs to get more states into his column. And the one clear fact is that Pennsylvania’s count will not be over until Friday, which means that every attempt to settle it before then is fraught for both men.
SCENARIO ONE: MICHIGAN AND WISCONSIN GO FOR BIDEN
This is the ending to the election which involves the fewest states and could break most rapidly.
Combined the two mid-western states have 26 votes. That would put Joe Biden on the vital 270 figure.
Wisconsin’s results could come as early as 9am Wednesday.
Michigan’s results are less clear but the Secretary of State said Tuesday that she hopes to provide ‘a very clear picture, if not a final picture’ by Wednesday night.
As of 6am Biden was slightly behind Trump, at 51.3% to 47%.
Currently almost 20% of votes are still to be counted and they are mail-in ballots, which are expected to favor Biden.
Detroit, the state’s biggest city and a hub of Democratic voters, won’t have its results known until sometime Wednesday as it experiences record levels of turnout, a good sign for Biden.
Turnout in Motor City, where Biden campaigned with Barack Obama on Friday, is expected to hit 55 per cent – that’s up seven points over the 48 per cent who voted in 2016.
The record number of votes means full results will be known Wednesday, City Clerk Janice Winfrey announced Tuesday night.
Statewide, 3.3 million absentee ballots had been cast, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said, but results will take time.
‘We’re on track to be in a position to potentially see a full result of every tabulation in the next 24 hours,’ she announced.
Trump won the state by taking the suburbs – the Macomb and Monroe counties outside of Detroit – but he also won working-class areas in like Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, which has many white working-class voters.
Biden has concentrated on winning African American voters in the state in urban areas like Flint.
If that tactic eventually pays off there could be a victory for Biden declared rapidly – on Wednesday night.
But the state governor Gretchen Whitmer has also warned that results could take days more.
Workers with the Detroit Department of Elections process absentee ballots at the Central Counting Board in the TCF Center in Detroit
SCENARIO TWO: TRUMP GETS GEORGIA, NORTH CAROLINA AND MICHIGAN
This scenario sees Trump gain the upper hand in the south.
If the southern states reports clear results on Wednesday and go for Trump, he would climb to 247, putting him in touching distance of 270 – if he can gain Michigan.
Gaining Wisconsin alone is pointless in this scenario. Its 10 votes only take him to 257.
However Michigan’s would put him on 273 – a victory.
Georgia Secretary of State has said he expected Georgia to have all its results on Wednesday.
Trump was narrowly ahead of Biden by 5am but with a substantial number of votes still to be counted from Atlanta where poll workers went home to rest.
But North Carolina’s results are in greater doubt. Trump was ahead as of 5am, 50.1% to 48.7%, with 95% of the vote reported.
On its own that seems to make the scenario unlikely for Biden.
But mail-in ballots postmarked by Tuesday will be accepted until November 12.
SCENARIO THREE: BIDEN TAKES THE SOUTH
This appears the least likely scenario given that North Carolina is trending slightly towards Trump.
But if Joe Biden takes Georgia and North Carolina, that would get him a total of 31 votes. That puts him on 275.
Poll workers process absentee ballots the night of Election Day at Milwaukee Central Count
Georgia Secretary of State has said he expected Georgia to have all its results on Wednesday.
Trump was narrowly ahead of Biden by 5am but with a substantial number of votes still to be counted from Atlanta where poll workers went home to rest.
But North Carolina’s results are in greater doubt. Trump was ahead as of 5am, 50.1% to 48.7%, with 95% of the vote reported.
On its own that seems to make the scenario unlikely for Biden.
But mail-in ballots postmarked by Tuesday will be accepted until November 12.
If mail-in ballots skew Democratic, that may make it impossible to know the outcome before November 12 even if it is in Biden’s favor.
SCENARIO FOUR: TRUMP TAKES THE SOUTH AND MICHIGAN
If Trump takes Georgia and North Carolina, he moves up to 247.
That puts him in touching distance if he can also win Michigan, whose 16 votes take him to 273.
SCENARIO FIVE: TRUMP CLEAN SWEEP
If Trump takes all four of the states on the table without touching Pennsylvania, it is game over for Biden.
Trump would get
SCENARIO FIVE: IT’S ALL ABOUT PENNSYLVANIA SO THERE WILL BE NO RESULT ON WEDNESDAY
Pennsylvania’s results probably won’t be known until Friday.
But its 20 electoral college votes would offer a clear path to victory for whoever gets them.
If Biden takes the 20, he needs to pick up any one of the other states to get over 270.
For Trump the path is trickier but Pennsylvania would undoubtedly help.
With 226 votes secured, he could then win with the two southern states and Michigan – leaving Wisconsin untouched.
But Pennsylvania is the most challenging state for both parties because of the huge uncertainties which surround its votes.
Compounding the problem are lawsuits expected over disputed ballots, which could drag out the results of the election even longer. Republicans have made it clear they will sue when and where they see necessary.
In Pennsylvania, state law forbids officials from counting mail-in ballots until Election Day. Additionally, the Supreme Court allowed the state to count ballots for three days after Nov. 3 so long as they are postmarked by Election Day.
In Philadelphia officials said around 350,000 votes were cast, but only 76,000 were tallied during the day Tuesday. The rest would not be counted until Wednesday.
Election officials begin counting ballots Tuesday night in York County, Pennsylvania, where mail-in ballots cannot be counted until Election Day
‘The counties are working really hard to get [the results] in as soon as possible,’ Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar said Tuesday. ‘It’s going to take time.’
Biden’s biggest strongholds in the Keystone State are in Philadelphia and then Pittsburgh – where he and VP nominee Kamala Harris held rallies with Lady Gaga and John Legend Monday night.
Philadelphia in particular is a Democratic stronghold with more than 1.1 million registered voters, which is more than 10 per cent of all the voters in the state.
But Trump has campaigned heavily in the state – he held four rallies there on Saturday alone – and wants to repeat his stunning 2016 win there.
Election workers in Luzerne County, a northeastern county near Scranton, stopped counting mail-in ballots on Tuesday evening and will resume Wednesday, according to county manager David Pedri. He said the county had counted about 26,000 mail-in ballots of the about 60,000 cast.
Pennsylvania Gov Wolf, a Democrat, on Tuesday called on residents to remain calm and patient as they await results. In a brief one-and-a-half-minute video, he urged Pennsylvanians to ‘take a breath.’
‘Across the state, dedicated county workers are ready to tirelessly make sure everyone’s vote counts,’ the Pennsylvania governor said. ‘But counting that tremendous number of ballots will take more time than we are used to.’
‘We may not know the results today,’ he acknowledged, ‘but I encourage all of us to take a deep breath and be patient.’
‘What is most important is that we have accurate results – even if that takes a little longer,’ Wolf added.
Pennsylvania saw about 2.5 million of its 9 million registered voters request absentee ballots. As of Tuesday morning, 81 per cent of them had been returned.
Any ballot post marked by Election Day and received by November 6 will be counted.
Why have the crucial states taken so long to count votes? Pennsylvania is under fire for slow tally of mail-ins while Wisconsin is forced to fix misprinted ballots by hand because machine ran out of INK
Election officials in battleground states are facing mounting questions over bungled vote counting that left the result in limbo.
Slow tallying of absentee ballots, malfunctioning machines, ink shortages and printing errors that forced poll workers to count single ballot cards by hand in the early hours of Wednesday morning as America was kept waiting for the outcome.
The Midwestern states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania were all still up in the air as the sun rose on Wednesday, with officials caught flat-footed by the historic turnout that saw almost 100 million votes this year.
In all three states, officials were not allowed to begin counting ballots until on or just before election day. Republican-led state legislatures in the states had opposed changing laws to allow earlier preparations as other states did.
Pennsylvania, which may well be the deciding state in the election, will continue to accept ballots postmarked by Tuesday if they are received by 5pm on Friday.
Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf, a Democrat, said at 3am Wednesday that the state had more than 1 million ballots left to tally. President Donald Trump leads the state by nearly 11 points with 74 percent of expected votes counted, but the likely tilt of mail-in ballots toward Joe Biden made declaring a winner impossible.
Absentee ballots can be time-consuming to process, with most states verifying the signature on the interior envelope against voter roles before the ballot can be scanned.
But technical snags and snafus in several jurisdictions slowed the process further.
In Outagamie County, Wisconsin, which is outside Green Bay, poll workers on Tuesday were working to transfer votes from around 13,500 misprinted absentee ballots to clean ballots that won’t jam the electronic tabulating machine, the county clerk told CNN.
Mail-in ballots are processed, flattened and scanned by poll workers in the Philadelphia Convention Center in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania will continue to accept ballots postmarked by Tuesday if they are received by 5pm on Friday
Poll workers sort out early and absentee ballots in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Officials say about 1.9 million people in Wisconsin returned an absentee ballot
The votes had to be transferred to the clean ballots by hand in order to be fed through the tabulating machine.
In Green Bay, absentee ballot results were delayed after one of the vote-counting machines ran out of ink.
According to the Wisconsin Elections Commission, about 1.9 million people in Wisconsin returned an absentee ballot as of Monday morning. That’s more than double the number of absentee ballots cast in 2016.
In Michigan, election officials said more than 3.1 absentee ballots have been returned.
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson predicted to reporters Tuesday evening that the state could ‘potentially see a full result of every tabulation out of Michigan in the next 24 hours.’
She had previously suggested that counting could take until Friday.
Workers in Detroit, Michigan process absentee ballots early Wednesday. In Michigan, election officials said more than 3.1 absentee ballots have been returned
Other key states, including Georgia and North Carolina, could still not be declared by Wednesday morning.
In Georgia, a burst pipe caused delays in counting up to 60,000 absentee ballots in Fulton County, which includes part of Atlanta and leans Democrat.
The incident happened in a room at State Farm Arena where Fulton County absentee ballots were being counted, registration chief Ralph Jones told the county elections board during a video meeting Tuesday evening.
That caused processing to stop for several hours, but no ballots or equipment were damaged, county officials said. Ballot counters were sent home at 10:30pm and set to return 8:30am Wednesday.
In North Carolina, a record 4.5 million absentee ballots were cast ahead of Election Day.
Even with 95 percent of the vote counted in North Carolina, the state remained too close to call early Wednesday, with Trump maintaining a slim lead of 50.1 percent to 48.7 percent.