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Volume 105, Number 10
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
WWW.MARQUETTEWIRE.ORG
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Too early to call As of 4 a.m., official presidential election results are still not in As of 4 a.m., a clear presidential winner for the 2020 election was not yet established. President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden’s work on their respective campaigns all came to a final culmination Nov. 3, when Americans took to the polls to choose their next president in an election many have called the most important one yet. As of 4 A.M., Joe Biden has a 25 electoral lead over Donald Trump. Experts are calling this election anyone’s race In an election year that was overtaken by the COVID-19 pandemic, a disease that has killed over 230,000 Americans and AP Photo/Evan Vucci has infected Trump spoke from the White House early Wednesday.
By Benjamin Wells and Natallie St. Onge
benjamin.wells@marquette.edu natallie.stonge@marquette.edu
over nine million more, absentee ballots were used by a record estimated 60 million Americans. Trump has called this a “disaster.” Throughout the night, Donald Trump had led the state of Wisconsin until a surge in the counting of absentee ballots from Milwaukee County catapulted Biden to a near 10,000 vote lead in the dairy state. The turnout in Milwaukee County appears to be around 83%. Biden was able to secure a majority of the East Coast states that Hillary Clinton was able to win in 2016, including Vermont, New York and New Jersey. Trump was able to secure the same southern support in Alabama, Arkansas and Louisiana. Both candidates were projected to take multiple swing states. Florida and Ohio went to Trump, while Arizona and New
Hampshire went to Biden. Some mail-in ballots in the state of Pennsylvania have yet to still be counted, a state that FiveThirtyEight.com has claimed could change the course of this election. In any election, America is split into red and blue states on major news networks, separating red states and blue states that show a political split that is present in American society. But adjunct instructor at Marquette Brandon Savage anticipated the divide to be a norm of this election. “There will alSee CALL page 2
AP Photo/Paul Sancya
Biden spoke from Delaware early Wednesday.
Democracy in darkness? voting at its polling site Tuesday. “Due to COVID precautions, the AMU is closed to media on Election Day,” the sign on the doors read. University spokesperson Chris Stolarski said to help mitigate the spread of the coronavirus By Benjamin Wells and on campus, the university asked Natallie St. Onge media to conduct interviews and benjamin.wells@marquette.edu stand-ups outside the AMU to natallie.stonge@marquette.edu limit the number of people inMedia was denied access to side the building. “This is to help protect the enter the Alumni Memorial health and safety of students, Union to observe the process of
Media members were not allowed entry into the AMU
INDEX
MUU TV
COVID-19 TRACKER........................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 A&E..................................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12
voters, poll workers and university employees inside the AMU,” Stolarski said in an email. “The purpose of us hosting a polling site is to facilitate voting — voter access is the priority.” Marquette University Police Department Assistant Chief Jeff Kranz said the university has the ability to say press cannot go inside the AMU as the building is “private property.” However, Milwaukee County elections director Julietta Henry said press is not allowed to be NEWS
limited outside of polling places on Election Day. “It is public work, anyone can observe the process (of voting),” Henry said. After being informed of the signs on the doors of the AMU, Henry contacted the City of Milwaukee. The City asked the university to take the signs down so press could observe the process of voting. Designated areas were then made available in the AMU Ballrooms for the press to cover
See DEMOCRACY page 2
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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Election could impact Supreme Court in the future
the polling process in order to protect ballot and voter security. “In talking with the election inspector, we were comfortable moving forward with it ... to keep the moving and nonmoving traffic low,” Kevin Conway, university associate director of communication, said. “The Wisconsin Elections Committee didn’t have any problems with it so that’s why we were comfort-
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