I may not have been paying attention, but I haven't seen much data on Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, or Iowa. Can anyone give me the latest data?
Michigan
Kerry 51%
Bush 48%
34% reporting
President (41% 10:47 pm) - Kerry (D) 610,539 (51%) Bush (R-I) 579,503 (48%)
Senate (41% reporting as of 10:47 pm; Michels has conceeded) - Feingold (D-I) 663,630 (56%-called) Michels (R) 509,402 (43%)
1st Congressional (45% 10:49) - Ryan (R-I) 77,953 (70%-called) Thomas (D) 32,765 (29%)
2nd Dist (52% 10:44) Baldwin (D-I) 129,496 (65%-not called) Magnum (R) 69,576
3rd Dist (25% 10:44) - Kind (D-I) 44,763 (57%-not called) Schultz (R) 33,262 (43%)
4th Dist (70% 10:51; retiring D) - Moore (D-called) 143,072 (70%) Boyle (R) 57,242 (28%)
5th Dist (40% 10:53) - Sensenbrenner (R-I) 107,807 (69%-called) Kennedy (D) 45,508 (29%)
6th Dist (42% 10:44) - Petri (R-I) 104,491 (69%-called) Hall (D) 42,354 (28%)
7th Dist (28% 10:44) - Obey (D-I) 63,615 (86%-called) third-party candidates 14%
8th Dist (40% 10:44) - Green (R-I) 91,876 (69%-called) LeClair (D) 40,989 (31%)
Bush is barely behind in each of those states.
But it looks like Florida and Ohio are going to go soundly to Bush.
Amazingly Bush is leading in Washington State. How did that happen?