11-5-2020 entire issue hi res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Biden Gains Electoral Advantage

Race hinges on key swing states Georgia, Nevada, Arizona and Pennsylvania By ALEC GIUFURTA

political historian who studies voting and electoral history in the Late Wednesday, United States, did not results of the 2020 think any of Trump’s presidential election suits would matter, were still too close to and distinguished the call as boards of elecsituation from the protions in several key cedural posture of Bush swing states had not v. Gore (2000). yet finished counting “If there’s really a a slew of mail-in balserious suit on a legal lots, but former Vice question, then it will President Joe Biden end up in the Supreme held a clear electoral Court,” Bensel said.. map advantage. “The problem the While President Trump [legal team Donald Trump took has] is that they are to Twitter to question going to have trouble mail-in votes as “surselecting or identifying prise ballot dumps,” a large enough discrepCornell professors ancy in the voting –– and Ithaca elected failure to to follow the officials condemned law or outside outright the president’s mescorruption –– They’re saging as irrevocably gonna have trouble damaging. with that.,” Bensel All eyes now rest said. on the not yet called He pointed to two states of Georgia, problems: Biden is ERIN SCHAFF / THE NEW YORK TIMES Pennsylvania and No malarkey | Former Vice President Joe Biden needs to pick up at least two more battleground states in order to win the election. poised to win by more Nevada, as former Vice than just one state, afternoon, Trump’s narrow lead Atlanta, and Georgia’s Secretary in Pennsylvania, Michigan and meaning one state lawsuit won’t President Biden currently leads President Donald Trump in Georgia started shrinking as of State Brad Raffensperger Georgia state courts to temporari- affect the outcome of the race; in the formal electoral vote votes from the Atlanta metro- pushed for results to be delivered ly halt ballot counting. and the suits Trump’s team filed As results trickled in late are statutorily weak. count (264-214, as of midnight politan area filtered in. Over Wednesday. 130,000 mail in ballots remain On Wednesday, the Wednesday, Cornell Prof. Thursday). Throughout Wednesday to be counted, mostly from Trump campaign said it sued Richard Bensel, government, a See VOTES page 4 Sun Senior Editor

Students Express Frustration, Stress at Slow Election Results By MADELINE ROSENBERG Sun Assistant News Editor

Sipping tea Tuesday night in her Keeton House lounge, Madeline Lei ’23 and her suitemate eyed the polls. The pair refreshed the CBS News election results page on their computers and refreshed it again, trying to stay calm as a sea of red appeared on their screens. “We’re both pretty stressed right now. We’re

Vol. 137, No. 28

constantly refreshing the polls seeing what’s happening,” Lei, who voted for former Vice

these states in red and it’s really disturbing and kind of shocking to see it a tight race.”

“We’re seeing all these states in red and it’s really disturbing and kind of shocking to see it a tight race.” Madeline Lei ’23

President Joe Biden, said around 11 p.m. “There hasn’t really been much positive. We’re seeing all

This is election night on a COVID-19 campus. Instead of packing into watch parties and eyeing

the polls until the morning, Cornellians huddled with housemates around computers and television screens, bracing through push notifications and live news broadcasts in between prelim study sessions and problem sets. In an election marked by battleground states and a still-undeclared winner, many Cornell students said they felt the weight of the election. See STUDENTS page 4

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2020

n

President pending

SAUL MARTINEZ / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Historic | Despite the ongoing pandemic, the 2020 election is poised to have the highest voter turnout in U.S. history. Above: Supporters of Joe Biden wave in West Palm Beach, Fla. on Nov. 1.

ITHACA, NEW YORK

12 Pages – Free

News

Dining

Sports

Weather

Cornellians in Congress

Don’t Forget the Farmers

Activism by Athletes

Partly Cloudy

Read about the five Cornell alumni elected to Congress in the 2020 election.

| Page 5

Dining Editor Ben Velani ’21 discusses the politics behind America’s farmers.

| Page 6

Athletes are using their platform to advocate for social issues – a welcome development. | Page 12

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