Military mail-in ballots are still coming in battleground states such as Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Nevada, even as President Trump and his campaign protest the counting of votes after Election Day.

Numerous voters in Maricopa County, the largest in Arizona, filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Democratic County Recorder Adrian Fontes, the county Board of Supervisors, and others, insisting that the use of Sharpie permanent markers at some polling sites left ballots too damaged to be counted.

Sen. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., like many others, crashed Fox News for its decision late Tuesday night to call the contest for her Democrat challenger Mark Kelly, representing the step as "premature."

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Wednesday that President Trump will beat Joe Biden by about 40,000 votes in Pennsylvania as the campaign started a legal battle challenging the handling of ballots in the hotly contested state.

Members of Republican-controlled legislatures in four states must "step up" and take command of the ballot-counting method from their governors, who happen to be Democrats, and help President Donald Trump win reelection, political analyst Dick Morris said.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is confronting difficult questions about her ability to win enough votes to maintain her leadership after Democrats shrunk their House majority and moderates in the party planned to back a challenger.

Both President Trump and former Vice President Biden are declaring victory in Pennsylvania, days before the key swing state is to sum to its election final numbers and on the same day it was announced that 21,000 votes were cast by dead people.

Throughout this election, there were signs of the birth of a coalition of normal people unhappy with the radical turns our country has been taking.

The Biden-Harris campaign has begun its transition website Wednesday, even as voters across the nation wait for ballots to be calculated.

The presidential election is over according to the media as major states still continue to count ballots, in particular those cast by mail in unusual numbers.

X