Tag: BIDEN

  • Republican agents stopped from observing vote counting —Trump

    Republican agents stopped from observing vote counting —Trump

    US President Donald Trump on Friday alleged his party agents were barred from observing vote counting in parts of the country.

    The Republican candidate seeking reelection said his campaign office has started a lot of litigations against Democrat challenger Joe Biden and his party, alleging that “they are trying to rig an election and we can’t let that happen”.

    Trump spoke for nearly 17 minutes about the country’s democratic process, saying his “goal is to defend the integrity of the election”.

    “Our goal is to defend the integrity of the election. We will not allow corruption to steal such an important election. We can’t allow anybody to silence our voters and manufacture results,” he alleged.

    Continuing, he said, “There are now only a few states yet to be decided in the presidential race. We were winning in all the key locations actually and then our numbers started getting miraculously whittled away in secret and they wouldn’t allow legally, permissible observers.

    “In a couple of instances, we were able to get the observers in and when the observers got in, they wanted them 60, 70 feet away outside the building to observe people inside the building.

    “In Philadelphia, observers are being kept far away, so far that people are using binoculars to try and see and there have been tremendous problems because they put papers on all of the windows so you can’t see. The people that are banned are very unhappy.”

    Both candidates still had paths to winning the White House by hitting the magic majority threshold of 270 of the electoral votes awarded to whichever candidate wins the popular vote in a given state.

    But momentum moved to Biden, who made a televised speech from his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware to say that “when the count is finished, we believe we will be the winners.”

    By flipping the northern battlegrounds of Michigan and Wisconsin, and also winning formerly pro-Trump Arizona, Biden reached over 250 electoral votes against 214 so far for Trump.

    To reach 270, Biden hopes to add more electoral votes from Nevada, where he had a small and shrinking lead, or, even better, the larger prizes of hard-fought Georgia or Pennsylvania.

     

  • AmericaDecides2020: Trump panicky as Biden closes up on White House

    AmericaDecides2020: Trump panicky as Biden closes up on White House

    With his challenger Joe Biden at the brink of winning the US presidency, incumbent Donald Trump launched an extraordinary assault on the country’s democratic process.

    In words and deeds, Trump showed desperation and panic as his re-election chances faded away, with more votes being counted in a handful of battleground states.

    At a press briefing at the White House on Thursday, Trump falsely claimed the election was being “stolen” from him, as he also lost legal challenges to stop counting.

    Offering no evidence, he lambasted election workers and alleged fraud in the states where results from a dwindling set of uncounted votes are pushing Democrat Joe Biden nearer to victory.

    “This is a case where they’re trying to steal an election,” Trump said.

    He spoke for about 15 minutes in the White House briefing room before leaving without taking questions.

    In Georgia and Michigan on Thursday, Trump’s campaign lost court rulings to challenge the counting of votes.

    Undeterred by the setback, the campaign vowed to bring a new lawsuit challenging what it called voting irregularities in Nevada.

    In the Georgia case, the campaign alleged 53 late-arriving ballots were mixed with on-time ballots. In Michigan, it had sought to stop votes from being counted and obtain greater access to the tabulation process.

    State judges tossed out both the suits on Thursday.

    Judge James Bass, a superior court judge in Georgia, said there was “no evidence” that the ballots in question were invalid.

    In the Michigan case, Judge Cynthia Stephens said: “I have no basis to find that there is a substantial likelihood of success on the merits.”

    Trump allies alleged that there had been voting irregularities in Nevada’s populous Clark County, which includes Las Vegas.

    Biden, the former vice president, was steadily eating away the Republican incumbent’s leads in Pennsylvania and Georgia.

    He also maintains narrow advantages in Nevada and Arizona, moving closer to securing the 270 votes in the state-by-state Electoral College that determines the winner.

    In Pennsylvania, Trump’s lead had shrunk from 319,000 on Wednesday afternoon to less than 64,000 a day later.

    His margin in Georgia fell from 68,000 to fewer than 3,500

    Those numbers were expected to continue to move in Biden’s favour, with many of the outstanding ballots from areas that typically vote Democratic, including the cities of Philadelphia and Atlanta.

    Biden, meanwhile, saw his lead in Arizona contract from 93,000 to 65,000; he was ahead in Nevada by only 11,000 votes.

    Biden would become the next president by winning Pennsylvania, or by winning two out of the trio of Georgia, Nevada and Arizona.

    Trump’s likeliest path appeared narrower – he needed to hang onto Pennsylvania and Georgia while overtaking Biden in either Nevada or Arizona.

    Most major television networks gave Biden a 253 to 214 lead in Electoral College votes, which are largely determined by state population, after he captured the crucial states of Wisconsin and Michigan on Wednesday.

    The Associated Press gave Biden 264 votes, calling out Arizona.

    As demonstrators marched in several U.S. cities for a second straight day, the election lay in the hands of civil employees who were methodically counting hundreds of thousands of ballots, many of which were sent by mail amid the coronavirus pandemic.

  • US Presidential Election: Major setback for Trump as Biden inches towards victory with 264 electoral votes

    US Presidential Election: Major setback for Trump as Biden inches towards victory with 264 electoral votes

    The presidential candidate of the Democratic Party, Joe Biden has rebuilt at least a portion of the Blue Wall, retaking the states of Wisconsin and Michigan from President Donald Trump and coming within striking distance of claiming an Electoral College victory.

    Based on states called for Biden by the Associated Press, the former vice president sits at 264 Electoral College votes. To win the presidency, a candidate needs 270.

    Nevada, which is worth six, has emerged as the potential endpoint for a long and contentious campaign. If Biden’s lead holds in Nevada as further ballots are counted, he’ll hit the number needed to enter the White House.

    Nevada has not gone for a Republican since the 2004 election, in which voters sent then-President George W. Bush to his second term in office.

    It broke for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016 by 2 percentage points.

    Trump campaign representatives have been consistent in their claims that Nevada is in play for Trump coming into 2020. Trump and campaign surrogates made repeated visits to the state in the lead-up to the election.

    Biden’s lead in Nevada was razor-thin this afternoon. He was up by 7,647 votes, or .64%.

    Election officials have indicated they plan to release further vote totals today. It’s possible the state will be called when the next batch of results is released.

    Mail ballots received on Election Day and those that will be received going forward are still waiting for a count. Mail ballots have been more Democratic-leaning nationwide.

    A loss in Nevada would not spell doom for Biden’s campaign, but it would sink Trump’s if all projections hold.

    If Biden loses Nevada but keeps the rest of the states in his column, he would need Pennsylvania, Georgia or North Carolina to win.

    The AP’s projection of an Arizona win for Biden has received pushback from some Republicans, many of whom said it was too early.

    If that state goes to Trump, a win in Nevada would be nice for Biden but wouldn’t sweep him into the White House.

  • US Presidential Poll: Biden wins state of Arizona

    US Presidential Poll: Biden wins state of Arizona

    Democrat Joe Biden has won in the southwestern US state of Arizona, a traditionally Republican stronghold which was captured by President Donald Trump in 2016, Fox News and the Associated Press projected early Wednesday. The call for Biden in Arizona, which has 11 electoral votes, came after a speech from Trump, who claimed victory in the nail-biter election despite several key states not yet being called.

    The call for Biden in Arizona, which has 11 electoral votes, came after a speech from Trump, who claimed victory in the nail-biter election despite several key states not yet being called.

    So far, at the time of filing this report, states clinched by Biden include: Arizona, Hawaii, Minnesota, Colorado, New Mexico, California, New Hampshire, Oregon, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware and Connecticut, as well as the District of Columbia. US 2020 election results live updates: Trump in race with Biden While Trump has won Florida, Texas, Ohio, Kentucky, Kansas, Louisiana, Indiana, Wyoming, West Virginia, South Carolina, Idaho, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Utah, South Dakota, North Dakota, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa and Montana.

     

  • Biden leads with 238 electoral votes; Trump at 213

    Biden leads with 238 electoral votes; Trump at 213

    The Electoral College count currently stands at 238 votes for Biden and 213 votes for Donald Trump.

    In the race to 270 Electoral Votes, Democratic challenger Joe Biden took an early lead on President Donald Trump and maintained it heading into the overnight hours of Tuesday to Wednesday morning’s wee hours, FOX 2 reported.

     

    The former vice president was at 238 overnight holding a lead over Trump’s 213 but some key battleground states remained up in the air like Michigan, along with Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and North Carolina – leaving Trump within striking distance.

    Biden is projected to win Arizona (11), California (55), Connecticut (7), Colorado (9), District of Columbia (3), Delaware (3), Hawaii (4), Maryland (10), Massachusetts (11), Minnesota (10), New Hampshire (4), New Jersey (14), New Mexico (5), New York (29), Oregon (7), Rhode Island (4), Vermont (3), Virginia (13), and Washington (12). He also picked up a single vote from Nebraska’s second district but lost the other district.

     

    Trump is projected to win Alabama (9), Arkansas (6), Florida (29) Idaho (4), Indiana (11), Iowa (6), Kansas (6), Kentucky (8), Louisiana (8), Missouri (10), Nebraska (5), Ohio (18), Oklahoma (7), Mississippi (6), Nebraska’s first district (4), North Dakota (3), South Carolina (9), South Dakota (3), Tennessee (11), Texas (38), Utah (6), and West Virginia (5), Wyoming (3).

    The Democratic Party retained control of the House and is projected to add five more seats, according to FOX News.

    Pennsylvania and Georgia have called it a night and will continue to count ballots Wednesday.

    With millions of votes yet to be counted, President Trump asserted election fraud, vowed to mount a legal challenge to official state results and made a premature claim of victory.

    In remarks at the White House early Wednesday, Trump claimed that he’d won several states that are still counting ballots, including Georgia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, according to Washington post.

    His Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, insisted earlier that “we believe we’re on track to win this election,” citing Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan, where votes were still being tallied in a bitterly contested presidential election that may take days to resolve. “It ain’t over till every vote is counted,” Biden said.

    More than 100 million people cast their ballots in early voting before election day on Tuesday – setting US on course for its highest turnout in a century. NewsNow

  • US presidential poll: Biden narrowly leads Trump in six swing states, poll shows

    US presidential poll: Biden narrowly leads Trump in six swing states, poll shows

    Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden holds narrow leads over President Donald Trump in six states the president aims to defend Tuesday (today) in his bid for a second term, according to a new CNBC/Change Research poll.

    The survey released Monday finds the former vice president holding at least a slim edge in all of Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, all of which Trump won in 2016. Even so, it shows a race within striking distance for the president in most of those electoral college prizes.

    • All six swing states: Biden 50%, Trump 46%
    • Arizona: Biden 50%, Trump 47%
    • Florida: Biden 51%, Trump 48%
    • Michigan: Biden 51%, Trump 44%
    • North Carolina: Biden 49%, Trump 47%
    • Pennsylvania: Biden 50%, Trump 46%
    • Wisconsin: Biden 53%, Trump 45%

    A separate national CNBC/Change Research poll shows Biden leading Trump by a 52% to 42% margin.

    The swing-state poll surveyed 3,328 people from Thursday to Sunday and has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.7 percentage points. The national survey, taken over the same time frame, has a sample size of 1,880 likely voters with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.26 percentage points.

    The polls in the final stretch before Election Day show a clear, but by no means insurmountable, advantage for Biden in the race for the White House. While contests in Arizona, Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania appear close, Trump has more ground to make up in Michigan and Wisconsin, two long blue states that helped to propel him to the White House in 2016.

    It is unclear how much any late shifts in voter sentiment will change the presidential race this year. In an election where Americans cast their ballots early or by mail in staggering numbers, 68% of respondents to both the national and swing-state surveys said they had already voted.

    In Arizona, 85% of respondents said they already voted, while 82% and 81% of likely voters in Florida and North Carolina, respectively, said the same. Meanwhile, 63% and 57% of Wisconsin and Michigan voters, respectively, said they had cast ballots. In Pennsylvania — which could take days to count mail-in votes — only 40% of respondents said they had voted.

    Meanwhile, the battleground-state poll shows Democrats leading close races for three pivotal Senate seats. The party winning all of the elections in Arizona, Michigan and North Carolina would go a long way toward it gaining control of the Senate. Republicans currently hold a 53-47 majority.

    The polls suggest Trump’s performance during his first term, particularly in handling the coronavirus pandemic that has led to more than 230,000 American deaths, hampered him in key states. In the six swing states, 46% of likely voters said they approve of how Trump is handling the virus, versus 54% who disapprove.

    Nationally, only 41% of respondents said they approve of how the president is managing the outbreak, versus 59% who said they disapprove.

    At the same time, 53% of voters in the battleground states said they prefer Biden and Democrats to handle coronavirus, versus 47% who chose Trump and Republicans. Nationally, 58% said they would choose Biden and his party to manage the outbreak, while 42% picked the president and his party.

    Trump got better marks on the economy: 51% of respondents in the swing states and 46% nationally said they approved of how he is handling the issue.

    The economy and coronavirus appeared to be the defining issues for poll respondents in the final stretch before Election Day when voters were asked to name the three most important topics facing the country.

    In the swing-state survey, 48% chose the economy, jobs and cost of living, while 41% picked Covid-19. The next biggest concern was political corruption, which 34% of voters chose.

    Nationally, 44% of voters chose Covid-19, followed by the economy, jobs and cost of living at 43% aand political corruption at 31%.

    The data signal Biden’s lead has a lot to do with the current occupant of the White House. More than half, or 54%, of swing-state Biden voters said they are primarily voting against Trump, while 46% said they are largely voting for the former vice president.

    The motivation differs among Trump supporters. More than eight-in-10, or 84%, said they are mostly voting for Trump, while 16% answered they are voting against Biden.

  • US Election 2020: Key highlights from Trump, Biden final debate

    US Election 2020: Key highlights from Trump, Biden final debate

    Here are some key quotes from the final debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden as they tried to sway undecided American voters.

    NBC News correspondent Kristen Welker moderated the debate, which was held in Nashville, Tennessee, on Thursday evening, with less than two weeks to go before the Nov. 3 presidential election.

    COVID-19 PANDEMIC
    Welker asked how each candidate would lead the country out of the pandemic crisis.

    Trump: “We’re fighting it and we’re fighting it hard… We’re rounding the corner. It’s going away.”

    Trump: “I caught it. I learned a lot … We have to recover. We can’t close up our nation.”

    Biden: “If you hear nothing else I say tonight hear this … Anyone who’s responsible for that many deaths should not remain as president of United States of America.”

    Biden: “This is the same fellow told you this is going to end by Easter last time. This is the same fellow who told you that, don’t worry, we’re going to end this by the summer. We’re about to go into a dark winter, a dark winter, and he has no clear plan.”

    Trump: “I don’t know if we’re going to have a dark winter, and at all. We’re opening up our country. We’ve learned and studied and understand the disease.”

    Biden: “He says, we’re, you know, we’re learning to live with it. People are learning to die with it.”

    FOREIGN POLICY
    Biden: “He’s legitimized North Korea. He’s talked about his good buddy (leader Kim Jong Un), who’s a thug, a thug. And he talks about how we’re better off when North Korea is much more capable of firing a missile that is able to reach U.S. territory. “

    Trump: “You know what? North Korea – we’re not in a war. We have a good relationship.”

    Biden: “We had a good relationship with Hitler before he in fact invaded Europe. Come on.”

    “The reason he (Kim) would not meet with President Obama is because President Obama said, ‘We’re going to talk about denuclearization. We’re not going to legitimize you. We’re going to continue to push stronger and stronger sanctions on you.’ That’s why he wouldn’t meet with us.”

    HEALTHCARE

    Trump: “No matter how well you run (the Affordable Care Act), it’s no good. What we’d like to do is terminate it. We have the individual mandate done. I don’t know that it’s going to work. If we don’t win (in court) … we’ll have Obamacare but it will be better run.”

    Biden: “People deserve to have affordable health care, period. Period. Period. Period.”

    IMMIGRATION
    Biden on children separated at the border: “It makes us a laughingstock and it violates every notion of who we are.”

    Trump: “Children are brought here by coyotes and lots of bad people, cartels … We let people in but they have to come in legally.”

  • US Presidential Poll: Trump, Biden clash sharply over pandemic in less chaotic final debate

    US Presidential Poll: Trump, Biden clash sharply over pandemic in less chaotic final debate

    U.S. President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden offered sharply contrasting views on the still-raging coronavirus pandemic at Thursday’s final presidential debate, seeking to persuade the few remaining undecided voters 12 days before the Nov. 3 election.

    Trump, a Republican, adopted a more restrained tone than he did during the chaotic first presidential debate in September, when he repeatedly interrupted Biden.

    But Thursday’s clash still featured plenty of personal attacks between two men who evince little respect for each other, and Trump kept fact-checkers busy by leveling unfounded corruption accusations at Biden and his family.

    The televised encounter in Nashville, Tennessee, represented one of Trump’s last remaining opportunities to reshape a campaign dominated by a pandemic that has killed more than 221,000 people in the United States.

    Trump has trailed Biden in opinion polls for months, though the contest is tighter in some battleground states likely to decide the election.

    “Anyone who’s responsible for that many deaths should not remain president of the United States of America,” Biden said.

    Trump defended his approach to the outbreak and said the country could not afford to close businesses again, even amid fresh surges.

    “We’re learning to live with it,” said Trump, who has played down the virus for months. “We have no choice.”

    “Learning to live with it?” Biden retorted. “Come on. We’re dying with it.”

    Trump asserted that a vaccine was potentially “weeks” away. Most experts, including administration officials, have said a vaccine is unlikely to be widely available until mid-2021.

    Several U.S. states, including the election swing state of Ohio, reported record single-day increases in COVID-19 infections on Thursday, evidence the pandemic is accelerating anew.

    Trump, whose instinct remains to run as an outsider, portrayed Biden as a career politician whose nearly 50-year record was insubstantial.

    But Biden returned again and again to Trump’s nearly four years as president, pointing to the economic damage the virus has done to people’s lives.

    After an opening segment on the pandemic, Thursday’s clash pivoted to rapid-fire exchanges over whether either candidate had improper foreign entanglements.

    Trump repeated his accusations that Biden and his son Hunter engaged in unethical practices in China and Ukraine.

    No evidence has been verified to support the allegations, and Biden called them false and discredited.

    Trump’s effort to uncover dirt on Hunter Biden’s Ukraine business ties led to the president’s impeachment.

    The president and his children have been accused of conflicts of interest of their own since he entered the White House in 2017, most involving the family’s international real estate and hotel businesses.

    Biden defended his family and said unequivocally that he had never made “a single penny” from a foreign country, before pivoting to accuse Trump of trying to distract Americans.

    “There’s a reason why he’s bringing up all this malarkey,” Biden said, looking directly into the camera.

    “It’s not about his family and my family. It’s about your family, and your family’s hurting badly.”

    He accused Trump of avoiding paying taxes, citing a New York Times investigation that reported Trump’s tax returns show he paid almost no federal income tax over more than 20 years.

    “Release your tax returns or stop talking about corruption,” Biden said.

    Trump, who has broken with decades of precedent in refusing to release his tax returns, said he had paid “millions.” He again said he would release his returns only once a longstanding audit was completed.

    The candidates clashed over healthcare, China policy and – after months of anti-racism protests – race relations, with Biden saying Trump was “one of the most racist presidents” in history.

    “He pours fuel on every single racist fire,” Biden said. “This guy has a dog whistle as big as a foghorn.”

    Trump responded by criticising Biden’s authorship of a 1994 crime bill that increased incarceration of minority defendants while asserting that he had done more for Black Americans than any president with the “possible” exception of Abraham Lincoln in the 1860s.

    Biden criticised Trump’s effort to persuade the U.S. Supreme Court to invalidate the 2010 Affordable Care Act, the sweeping healthcare reform passed when Biden was vice president in President Barack Obama’s administration.

    “People deserve to have affordable healthcare, period,” Biden said, noting that the law prevented insurance companies from denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

    Trump said he wanted to replace the ACA with something “much better” that would offer the same protections, even though the administration has yet to propose a comprehensive healthcare plan in spite of a promise to do so for years.

    During a segment on climate change, Biden said his environmental plan would “transition from the oil industry” in favour of renewable energy sources, prompting Trump to go on the attack.

    “He is going to destroy the oil industry,” Trump said. “Will you remember that, Texas? Will you remember that, Pennsylvania?”

    Relatively few voters have yet to make up their minds, and Trump’s window to influence the outcome may be closing.

    A record 47 million Americans already have cast ballots, eclipsing total early voting from the 2016 election.

    The contentious first debate, when the two men traded insults, was watched by at least 73 million viewers.

    Trump passed up another planned debate last week after it was switched to a virtual format following his COVID-19 diagnosis.

  • US presidential election:Trump, Biden second debate cancelled

    US presidential election:Trump, Biden second debate cancelled

    The U.S. Commission on Presidential Debates has decided to cancel the second debate between President Trump and his challenger Joe Biden.

    The debate was to hold on 15 October in a virtual format, but Trump said he preferred a person-to-person debate.

    His COVID-19 infection was the main reason the non-partisan debate body suggested the virtual format, so as not to endanger the Biden camp.

    But matters became more complicated when the Biden campaign rejected the suggestion by the Trump campaign that the debate be moved to 22 October and the 22 October debate shifted to 29 October.

    On Friday, the Commission on Presidential Debates said it will now focus on preparations for the October 22 debate, which will be the final debate between the two candidates.

    Mr. Trump is still recovering from COVID-19, and a number of his top aides have also become infected.

    The first debate that held in Cleveland Ohio was chaotic, with Trump notably and rudely interjecting Biden, whenever he took the floor.

  • US Poll: Trump tackles organisers, rejects virtual debate with Biden

    US Poll: Trump tackles organisers, rejects virtual debate with Biden

    President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he would not participate in a virtual debate with 2020 Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden after organizers plan to stage the rivals’ next face-off virtually to protect the health and safety of those involved.

    “I’m not going to do a virtual debate,” Trump, who’s recovering from COVID-19 at the White House, said in an interview with Fox Business.

    “I’m not going to waste my time with a virtual debate. That’s not what debating is all about. You sit behind a computer and do a debate, that is ridiculous,” Trump said.

    The Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) announced on Thursday morning that the second Trump-Biden encounter, scheduled for Oct. 15, “will take the form of a town meeting, in which the candidates would participate from separate remote locations.”

    The town meeting participants and the moderator, it added, would be located at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, Florida.

    Bill Stepien, Trump’s campaign manager, said in a statement that “there is no need for this unilateral declaration,” referring to the change to the debate format.

    “The safety of all involved can easily be achieved without canceling a chance for voters to see both candidates go head to head,” said Stepien, who also recently tested positive for COVID-19.

    “We’ll pass on this sad excuse to bail out Joe Biden and do a rally instead,” Stepien said.

    The presidential candidates met for their first debate in the race in Cleveland, Ohio on Sept. 29, two days before the incumbent tested positive for COVID-19. Biden has undergone multiple tests since Trump’s diagnosis, with each one returning negative.

    The former vice president has said the second debate should not be held if his Republican opponent still has the virus.

    Kate Bedingfield, Biden’s deputy campaign manager, said on Thursday that the Democrat intended to take part in the virtual debate next week.

    “Vice President Biden looks forward to speaking directly to the American people and comparing his plan for bringing the country together and building back better with Donald Trump’s failed leadership on the coronavirus that has thrown the strong economy he inherited into the worst downturn since the Great Depression,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

    Frank Fahrenkopf, head of the CPD, told CNN that the panel spoke with both campaigns “just before” it announced the decision to hold the Miami debate virtually, but did not consult with them about the decision.

    Fahrenkopf said that the decision had the support of the Cleveland Clinic, the commission’s health advisers, while also acknowledging that it was fully within Trump’s right to decline to debate.

    “There is no law requiring any presidential candidate to debate,” he explained, adding: “So it is up to every candidate to decide whether they want to debate or not.”

    Trump returned to the White House on Monday, where he continues to receive COVID-19 treatment after a three-day hospitalisation.

    Speaking to Fox Business on Thursday, the president said he was feeling “perfect,” while appearing eager to hit the campaign trail as Biden’s lead over him in national polls continues widening.

    “I think I’m better … to a point where I’d love to do a rally tonight. I wanted to do one last night.

    “I feel perfect. There’s nothing wrong,” Trump said.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that individuals self-isolate for at least 10 days after the onset of symptoms from COVID-19, which has infected more than 7.55 million people and killed nearly 212,000 in the U.S.