I have asked my friends--is it 2000, or worse 1860. One is adamant that with early/absentee votes, this is going to be Biden victory. The other says that GA/NV are going to be the determinant. I guess he's given up on other contested States.
Both are great liberal friends. Have been for over a decade. They are wondering about my Trump choice but respectful.
Trump cannot win without Pennsylvania.
If Trump loses Pennsylvania, its over tonight.
It's crazy though that Biden will win this election by just 1 or maybe 2 states. Did not think it would be this close.
The other immediate reaction I had was that even if Biden wins, Dems still underperformed hugely and dropped the ball big time by losing the Senate, so it will be exactly situation like Obama where:
Democratic President + Republican Senate = Gridlock (Nothing can get passed)
In practical terms, what this basically means is that the whole criticism about the 2015 Iran JCPOA deal not being binding because Senate never ratified it under Obama will happen under Biden also, because neither Obama or Biden could get enough Dem seats in the Senate, they need a majority in the Senate to ratify JCPOA under Congress and make it binding permanently. But now, since Dems lost Senate, Biden's only option is to do what Obama did and pass JCPOA by executive order which skips Congress, but that also means whoever comes after Biden can trash JCPOA again like Trump did after Obama.
If I was Iran, I would be *very* careful to sign any kind of deal even if Biden wins because it will be just like Obama's 2015 deal that is not binding, and thus it would be much easier for next Pres to kill a new executive order Iran deal vs if Biden passed new JCPOA with ratified Senate majority which would make it permanent and much harder to undo.
Good news for Iran is this:
Democrats could still win midterm Senate elections in 2022 while Biden still has 2 years left. So if Dems get Senate majority in 2022, then let's say Biden signs an Iran deal in 2023, he can send it to Congress and Democrat majority in Senate will ratify it and make it permanent, so a Senate ratified Iran deal signed into law would be very difficult to undo compared to the executive order Obama did.