| President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden continue their battleground duel as they appear in key swing states in the countdown to Tuesday. Biden, who remains the favorite to win the White House with six days remaining, made a show of strength as he campaigned in Georgia in a bid to flip the longtime GOP stronghold and carry Democratic candidates for Senate across the finish line. “There aren’t a lot of pundits who would’ve guessed four years ago that a Democratic candidate in 2020 would be campaigning in Georgia on the final week of the election,” Biden told supporters at a rally in Atlanta. “Or that we’d have such competitive Senate races in Georgia. But we do because something’s happening here in Georgia and across America … people are coming together to transcend the old divides and show what’s possible.” “We win Georgia, we win everything,” Biden added. As The Hill’s Jonathan Easley writes, the former vice president is trying to expand his reach into states that have backed GOP presidential candidates for decades, including Arizona and Iowa, where Biden is set to campaign on Friday. Georgia, his destination as the final campaign week began, has not supported a Democrat for president since 1992. According to the latest RealClearPolitics average, Trump and Biden are in a virtual tie in the Peach State (47.2 percent to 46.8 percent). One GOP operative told the Morning Report that Georgia is “as close, if not closer, than Florida, North Carolina, Arizona” in the late stages and that the Trump-Biden contest is a “deadlock” in the state. A Democratic aide with knowledge of internal polling added that Biden leads by 1 to 2 points. The Hill: Biden calls Trump a “charlatan,” invokes former President Franklin D. Roosevelt in a speech promising to unite the nation. While Biden rallied supporters down South, the president looked to lock down his standing in two Midwestern states that fueled his 2016 victory — Wisconsin and Michigan — in an attempt to recapture the magic of four years ago. However, he trails in both states, according to recent surveys. At an appearance in Lansing, Mich., the president downplayed concerns over his standing in the polls, pointing to polls that show him up 3 points in the state, although it is unclear which poll he was referring to. “I think we’re up a lot more,” Trump told rally goers. “We’re going to have a great red wave.” Trump also campaigned in Omaha, Neb., on Tuesday night in an effort to repeat his victory in the state’s 2nd Congressional District and win the single electoral vote it hands out. The appearance doubled as a play for Iowa voters as the Omaha media market stretches into Western Iowa. This morning’s surprise poll from ABC News-Washington Post: In Wisconsin, Biden leads the president by 17 percentage points (57 percent to 40 percent). The former vice president also holds a 7-point advantage in Michigan (51 percent to 44 percent), according to the newest survey. The Washington Post: One week out, Biden imagines a post-Trump America and the president launches more attacks. Aside from the trio of rallies, Trump’s attention was also trained in the direction of former President Obama, who headlined a rally in Florida on behalf of the former vice president. Speaking to supporters in Orlando, Obama let loose on the president for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and panned White House senior adviser Jared Kushner over remarks claiming that for Trump’s economic policies to work, Black Americans had to “want to be successful.” “What's his closing argument? That people are too focused on COVID,” Obama said, referencing what has become a staple of Trump's rallies and Twitter feed. "He said this at one of his rallies. 'COVID, COVID, COVID,' he's complaining. … He's jealous of COVID's media coverage” (The Hill). “[Kushner] says Black folks have to want to be successful,” Obama said. “Who are these folks? What history books do they read? Who do they talk to?” (The Hill). The remarks reprised a familiar role for Obama: as a troll of his successor. Trump reacted to his predecessor’s comments by complaining that Fox News broadcast the 44th president’s remarks (The Hill). The Hill: Trump blasts Obama speech for Biden as “fake” after Obama hits Trump's tax payments. The New York Times: Obama’s new gig: Gleefully needling Trump. The Associated Press: Trump to appeal to Nevada voters from neighboring Arizona.  © Getty Images The Associated Press: Biden repeats his COVID-19 strategy if he’s president: immediately consult federal virologist Anthony Fauci, work with governors and local officials to institute a national mask mandate and forge consensus with Congress to enact a coronavirus relief bill by the end of January. Reid Wilson, The Hill: Biden camp swamps Trump on late TV ads as battlefield expands. Niall Stanage: The Memo: Women could cost Trump reelection. The New York Times: Michael Bloomberg funds last-minute advertising blitz for Biden in Texas and Ohio. The Hill: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas): Hunter Biden attacks don't move “a single voter.” Nearly 71 million Americans have already voted, according to the U.S. Elections Project, representing close to 52 percent of the 2016 turnout. Poll watch: David Wasserman of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report says the polls could be wrong, but that might help Biden, not just Trump (NBC News contributor). … Biden retains a slight lead over the president in Arizona, according to a new survey of likely voters conducted by OH Predictive Insights. In the Senate race, Democrat Mark Kelly leads Sen. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) by 5 points (50 percent to 45 percent) (The Hill).  © Getty Images |