Arts Friday | 75 German People of Influence in Western Canada

Elke Porter, 75 German-Speaking Influential People in Western Canada
Author Elke Porter holding up her new book. C’mon along to the book launch on Saturday!

During the course of the 2018 Vancouver municipal election, one of highlights of the “contest” to become a Vancouver City Councillor occurred at The Imperial on Main, at the Last Candidate Standing event (won by current Councillor, Christine Boyle), was the emergence of a relatively unknown independent candidate for Vancouver City Council, the incredibly witty and socially conscious, author and publisher, longtime Kitsilano resident, Elke Porter — who wowed the crowd, taking all into her heart.

“In 2018, I went into the election thinking that I had something of value to contribute,” Elke Porter told VanRamblings in an interview Thursday. “As a parent to two young women, I have long played a role in the parent action committees at their schools, had volunteered with a great many non-profit and charitable organizations, and had, for years, contributed as an activist and organizer within the German community.”

“With my girls now almost fully grown, running for Council seemed like the next logical step for me — not to mention, getting to know Vancouver in a whole new way proved, for me, to be the experience of a lifetime. As well, I got to know all of the candidates who were eventually elected to Vancouver City Council, which emerged as a humanizing experience for me. Quite honestly, I would recommend the experience to anyone.”

In 2020, Elke Porter has written — and, as of today, published — a new book, 75 German-Speaking Influential People in Western Canada, on the prominent difference makers of German descent from across western Canada who have contributed to making our nation what it is today.


Elke Porter's book launch, 75 German-Speaking Influential People in Western Canada

Click on the graphic above to purchase your copy of Elke Porter’s important new book

A necessary and invaluable compendium, a who’s who of the past and present regaling the stories of 75 Canadian citizens of German descent.

Thousands of Austrians, German and Swiss, were success stories in a variety of industries over the past 100 years. Some of them sold food and drink. Some founded real estate empires. There were artists, entrepreneurs, musicians, pastors, philanthropists, property developers, singers, writers and volunteers.

“David Oppenheimer, who opened the first wholesale grocery business in 1887 and became the second mayor of Vancouver is one of them,” says Porter. “Alvo von Alvensleben who bought a house and 20 acres in Kerrisdale in 1909 that took 13 servants to run, had his house taken by the Custodian of Enemy Property Act at the outbreak of World War I, which was then sold to the publisher of the Vancouver Sun, Robert James Cromie, and whose widow sold it to the Crofton Private School in 1942, for the sum of $15,000. Fritz Ziegler, started with a 1912 farmhouse in Fort Langley, added turrets, stucco and brick to it and ended up owning Canada’s only ‘castle’ that he named ‘Schloss Klipphaus.’ Ziegler, after throwing many ‘legendary’ parties, was eventually appointed the Consul General of Monaco.”

Schloss Klipphaus, the Fort Langley, replica castle built by Fritz ZieglerSchloss Klipphaus, the Fort Langley, replica castle built by Fritz Ziegler, featuring such age-of-chivalry elements as this knight’s hall.

“Some of the other prominent people you may know that are in my book are the Freybe family, who started what became a generational family business, dating back to 1844, pioneering a culinary experience around diverse products ranging from delectable salamis to traditionally crafted sausages. And the same thing with the Grimm’s family.”

So, now here we are mid-pandemic in 2020, and 75 German-Speaking Influential People in Western Canada has become a reality. VanRamblings asked Elke Porter, how and why did the book come together now?

“You know, it’s actually ‘thanks COVID’,” Ms. Porter says, laughing. “As a busy mom, I suddenly didn’t have to drive my kids to school. I couldn’t go out to restaurants, and found myself for the most part, housebound, except on those occasions when I went for a walk in the neighbourhood where, if you recall, I ran into you one day.”

“So, I just started writing when I had time. In addition, my mother proved to be an excellent editor, and my brother, Dr. Christian Klaue, the latter my maiden name — with his Phd in English — also emerged as an editor.”

“Given the work I’ve done with my West Coast German News periodical over the years, I found I’d interviewed a good number of the people who found their way into my book. Of course, there was a great deal of time spent at the library, in the archives. When I was writing the book, I was sent the Fred Herzog book, Photographs, and the Freybe family sent me their book. Much of the rest of the research for the book occurred through e-mail correspondence, which as a writer, as I’m sure you know, can be a most satisfying endeavour.

Now down to the nitty gritty: the book launch tomorrow afternoon at the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club. First up this book launch info graphic …

Elke Porter's book launch at the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club on Saturday, November 7, 2020

At this writing, there are a limited number of tickets available at $75 — 30 of 40 available tickets have been sold. Note should be made that strict COVID-19 protocols will be in place for the book launch. Donations made by clicking here will be designated as donations to the B.C. Cancer Agency.

As above, Elke Porter’s book launch — and fundraiser for the B.C. Cancer Agency — will be a COVID-safe event.

Elke Porter thanks you for your support of her, and her new book!

#USElection2020 | Elections Are Consequential | Broken America

President-elect Joe Biden has announced he'll rejoin the Paris Climate Accord

U.S. Election electoral college vote count as of 9am, Thursday, November 5thAs the mail-in and others votes not yet talled is completed and reported out on in Georgia & Nevada, most likely later today — with the likelihood that the vote count in Pennsylvania will not be completed until Friday, November 6th, or later — VanRamblings will update the graphic above, and reflect on the meaning of the changed vote count.

The fivethirtyeight.com video was recorded at 2:42pm Eastern Standard Time. As a new, updated fivethirtyeight.com video appears, VanRamblings will replace the video above.

All elections, including the one that is concluding in the United States, determine the character of the country for the next four years. And they have a lot to say about what the world will feel like too — that’s what it means to be a superpower, which is how many in the U.S. see the country. But this election may determine the flavour of the next four millennia — maybe the next forty, as VanRamblings will express in the words below.
That’s because time is the one thing we’ve just about run out of in the climate fight. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its 2018 report made it clear that we had until 2030 to make fundamental transformations in our energy system — which they defined as cutting by half the amount of carbon that we pour into the atmosphere.
Just yesterday, on Wednesday, November 4th, the United States officially became the only country in the world refusing to participate in global climate efforts, as Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement, an international pact to try to avert dangerous temperature increases that are already leading to more extreme weather and threaten to shrink world food supplies, force millions to flee their homes and deprive many of basic human rights. Trump set the U.S. exit in motion one year ago, but it didn’t automatically take effect until yesterday, November 4th.
Joe Biden would rejoin the accord and push lawmakers to spend big on green infrastructure to reverse the economic downturn from the pandemic.

On Thursday, November 5th, 2020, the vote count of mail-in continues in PhiladelphiaThe mail-in ballot count goes on in Philadelphia & Pittburgh, Thursday, Nov. 5th, 2020

When all the votes are counted, the presidential election may deliver defeat for Donald Trump. But it did not deliver defeat for Trumpism. Democrats had hoped that four years of turmoil, attacks on norms and institutions and mendacity — plus a pandemic that cost 234,000 lives, so far — would result in a quick, clean and overwhelming repudiation of the 45th president.

Donald Trump, the MAGA President

That would have been clarifying about the direction of the country, a warning to the Republican party that it must take its 2013 “autopsy” report off the shelf and reinvent itself. But on a miserable Tuesday night for pollsters, and for many of us who are progressives, it did not turn out that way. Trump proved resilient and increased his vote in Florida, Texas and other states. He found even more white working-class voters than last time and chipped away at Democratic support among Latinos. His cult-of-personality campaign rallies were as enthusiastic and rambunctious as ever.

“Sadly, the voters who said in 2016 that they chose Trump because they thought he was “just like them” turned out to be right. Now, by picking him again, those voters are showing that they are just like him: angry, spoiled, racially resentful, aggrieved, and willing to die rather than ever admit that they were wrong.” Tom Nichols, The Atlantic

As it turns out, Trump’s surprise victory in 2016, was no fluke attributable to Vladimir Putin or James Comey. In 2020 his sexism, racism and lie-telling have been legitimized and emboldened. When some Americans protested “This is not who we are”, Trump voters replied: “This is exactly who we are — and we’re not going anywhere.”

Trump voters: angry, spoiled, racist, resentful, aggrieved, willing to die

Eddie Glaude, Princeton professor, and Democracy in Black author …

2020 U.S. Election | The American Dream and Democracy in America Is Shredded

On December 14, 2020, when the College of Electors meet to determine who the next President will be, if Joe Biden emerges as the winner, his achievement — toppling an incumbent who manipulated the levers of government to try to gain an advantage, and made voter suppression a core campaign strategy — shouldn’t be discounted. Whoever takes the oath of office on January 20, 2021 will be tested by an historic set of challenges.
The COVID-19 pandemic will have continued its rampage across America virtually unchecked. The economic fallout from COVID-19 will have continued unabated, without benefit of federal aid. If Joe Biden does take office, he will confront a set of challenges like few Presidents before him.

“There was a substantial political divide in this country before Donald Trump was elected,” says Tom Ridge, former GOP Pennsylvania governor and Homeland Security Secretary, who endorsed Biden. “His presidency has exacerbated that divide to an almost unimaginable degree. But that did not begin with Donald Trump, and it will not end with him, either.”

Whatever the ultimate result, the 2020 U.S. election has exposed the shaky edifice of American democracy. From the antiquated governing institutions that increasingly reward the tyranny of minority rule, to the badly wounded norms surrounding the independent administration of justice, to the flimsy protections of alleged universal suffrage, to America’s underfunded and fractious election infrastructure, the presidency of Donald Trump has laid bare the weaknesses of American democracy, and system of governance.

#USElection2020 | Joe Biden Set to Become 46th U.S. President

Edward Munch's The Scream perfectly reflects the feelings of many on the 2020 U.S. election

Earlier today, Joe Biden flipped the critical Northern state of Wisconsin as several other key battlegrounds remained too close to call. Even before a winner was declared in Wisconsin, the Trump campaign said it would request a recount. Senator Susan Collins of Maine was re-elected, dimming Democratic hopes of winning control of the Senate.
Trump’s Path To Re-election Narrows With Key Victory in Wisconsin

Joe Biden | Donald Trump | College of Electors | Vote count effective 3:30pm, November 4 2020Update, as of 3:30pm. AP declares Michigan for Biden, who is 7 seats away from victory

The lingering uncertainty of the 2020 campaign is perhaps unsurprising in an election with record-breaking turnout where most ballots were cast before Election Day, but many could not be counted until afterward.
Mr. Trump’s chances of winning a second term depended on his ability to carry more of the undecided states, including several battleground Great Lakes states that he won in 2016 where Mr. Biden is now holding leads.

count-all-ballots.jpgDonna Akers, left, of Grand Prairie, Lucy Cantu of Grand Prairie, center, and her sister Guadalupe Neidigh of Georgetown, Texas, participate in protest organized by Dallas Alliance Against Racist & Political Repression outside Dallas City Hall. The results of the presidential election are not yet complete and they wanted to voice their concerns that every vote be counted. Photograph: Tom Fox/AP

With millions of votes yet to be counted across several key states — there is a reason that news organizations and other usually impatient actors were waiting to declare victors — Mr. Biden has held narrow leads in Arizona, Nevada and Michigan. If Mr. Biden can hold all those states, the former vice president could win the election even without Pennsylvania, which has long been viewed as a must-have battleground state.

“We feel good about where we are,” Mr. Biden told rattled supporters early Wednesday morning. “I’m here to tell you tonight we believe we’re on track to win this election. I’m optimistic about this outcome.”


As of 3pm, with the vote in the city of Detroit still to be counted, where the urban vote — and, most particularly, the black vote — of Michigan’s largest city is expected to be blue, before the end of the day, Michigan will be placed in Joe Biden’s column, moving him even closer to the 270 College of Electors vote count he’ll need to become the 46th U.S. President.
Update | 7:48pm | Biden Inching Ever Closer to Victory
Paths to victory remain in the U.S. presidential race for both Donald Trump and Joe Biden, but Biden has more ways to win and appears to be running stronger state to state, based on the places — cities, mainly — where large absentee votes have yet to be counted.

On Wednesday, November 4th, Joe Biden was named the winner in the state of Michigan

Biden leads the electoral college vote tally 264 - 214 after he was declared the winner in Michigan and Wisconsin midday Wednesday, and Trump gained one vote in Maine. Adding Alaska for Trump — which had not been called but where the result is not in doubt — gives the president 217.
From there, four states remained to be called as Wednesday evening approached in the U.S.: Nevada — where the final vote tally will be released on Thursday; North Carolina, Georgia — expected to complete a final vote count late on Wednesday night; and Pennsylvania, where the vote tally of mail-in ballots coming in from Philadelphia and Pittsburgh has Joe Biden inching ever closer to declaring victory in the state.
Update | 3:20pm | Biden Flips Michigan

biden-flips-win.jpg

It’s official: the AP has declared Joe Biden to be the winner of Michigan and its 16 electoral votes, flipping another “blue wall” state away from Donald Trump. Biden remains achingly close to a win in Georgia, while Nevada remains up for grabs. Stay tuned for further updates.

Kamala Harris to become first woman vice-president in American history

Not only will Joe Biden be declared the 46th U.S. President this upcoming Friday — if not sooner — California senator Kamala Harris will become the first woman vice-president of the United States, an historic achievement for a nation riven with division, offering hope not just for Americans, but for all of us, and most particularly our daughters and granddaughters, who will know that the highest and hardest glass ceiling has finally been shattered.

Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden Jr. started election night with many paths to 270 electoral votes, but by Wednesday morning Mr. Trump had won Florida, Ohio and Texas and was within striking distance of winning North Carolina. While the number of winning scenarios for Biden diminished on Tuesday, it was the former vice president, and not the president, who was on offence early Wednesday in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the once-reliable “blue wall” states, thanks to his big pre-election effort to encourage mail-in balloting and early voting. At noon today, Mr. Biden won Wisconsin and was tied in Michigan, with the largely Democratic vote in Detroit yet to be counted, giving him the edge to achieve the 270 College of Electors votes he’ll need to become the 46th U.S. President.

The U.S. electoral map, as of 4:26pm Wednesday, November 4, 2020Update | 3:30pm | College of Electors map has changed: Biden = 264 votes, Trump = 214

What follows are the top scenarios remaining for Joe Biden to win the 2020 election. Political strategists predict that Biden will win Nevada, a blue state where he remains narrowly ahead. At this writing, the remaining mail-in ballot vote in Pennsylvania is trending heavily & overwhelmingly for Biden.

The post-election vote count in Georgia continues on through November 4th, 2020Georgia mail-in ballot count continues Wed., Nov. 4. Final results expected by midnight.

One path involves Mr. Biden winning both Arizona and Georgia, Sun Belt states where he appears competitive with tens of thousands of votes left to be counted. Mr. Biden has the edge in Arizona, and a win there would take some pressure off him to rely entirely on the blue-wall states. He can afford to lose Pennsylvania (unlikely) if he wins Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin — he’s already won the latter, and appears on track to win the two others. If Mr. Biden prevails in Georgia and Arizona, he can reach 270 electoral votes — while losing Pennsylvania and either Michigan or Wisconsin, where as we write above, he’s already won, or is guaranteed to emerge as victor.

“Joe Biden’s path is largely unchanged since he entered this race,” Guy Cecil, the chairman of Priorities USA, a leading Democratic super PAC, said ony Wednesday. “There are still at least five competitive states giving him multiple paths to 270. It may take a couple of days to count the votes, and we may need to fight the Trump campaign in court, but Joe Biden remains the favourite.”

Meanwhile, in battleground Georgia, 100,000 votes remain to be counted.

Tomorrow’s VanRamblings’ coverage of #USElection2020 will focus on the Senate, and what a probable Republican Mitch McConnell majority will mean for the incoming Democratic President and Vice-President.
For today, though, we’ll leave you with this bit of heartening news …

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and "the squad" were re-elected to Congress on November 3, 2020

The 2018 U.S. election marked the beginning of a progressive movement that has shaken up the U.S. Congress. The outcome resulted in more than 100 women serving in the House of Representatives, an historic number. Throughout this last congressional term, four of the newly-elected women have attracted a great deal of attention: known as The Squad, representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) became the nucleus of a burgeoning progressive electoral movement across the United States.
Readers will be heartened to know that all four progressive Congresswomen were handily re-elected to Congress, and have added to their numbers …

Cori Bush. Set to become the first Black woman to represent Missouri’s first district in Congress, Bush — a nurse and Black Lives Matter activist who organized protests after the killing of Mike Brown — disrupted a 50-year family hold on the seat this year after losing her bid for seat in the 2018 Democratic primary.

Marie Newman. In Illinois, the AP and The New York Times projected that Marie Newman will win the third district. Newman beat a conservative, anti-abortion Democrat in her primary earlier this year and defeated Republican Mike Fricilone in the general.

Jamaal Bowman (D-NY), a former Bronx middle school principal, defeated a 16-term incumbent to win the Democratic primary. The progressive Congressman had a lot of support from young people, with the youth-led Sunrise Movement making 65% of the 1.3 million calls made for Bowman’s campaign. Bowman’s primary victory in July set the stage for Tuesday, which saw the AP and The New York Times project he’d win his race.

Let us not forget, either, the adjunct members of the U.S. Congress: Deb Haaland (D-NM) became one of the first two Native American women to serve in Congress when she won in 2018; Representative Sharice Davids (D-KS) joined Haaland in becoming one of the first two Native American women elected to Congress. Davids, a member of the Wisconsin-based Ho-Chunk Nation, is also the first openly gay congressperson from her state.

Representative Katie Porter (D-CA) may be best known for her viral exchanges during congressional hearings featuring her whiteboard. More than just shareable videos, her determination convinced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in March to agree to pay for coronavirus testing. Porter dominated California’s “jungle primary” for her seat this year, and the AP and The New York Times projected that she’ll keep her seat; Veronica Escobar (D-TX) who, alongside Sylvia Garcia was one of the first Latinas to represent Texas in the House. She’ll be back in the next Congress, the AP projected Tuesday night, and The New York Times projected early Wednesday morning.
VanRamblings will continue to update today’s post thru midnight tonight.

#USElection2020 | Nov. 3rd, 2020 | It’s All Over But the Counting

2020 U.S. Election | It's All Over But the CountingVanRamblings will update the site tomorrow afternoon, with updated election results

10:30pm PST | U.S. Election Night Update

Electoral College Update, 10:30pm, Tuesday, November 3rd 2020The electoral and College of Electors map of the U.S. | 10:30pm | November 3rd, 2020

Joe Biden addresses the U.S. electorate from Delaware late on 2020 election night

With many of the battleground states undecided, the Presidential race appears to be headed into a prolonged count, where the outcomes in states like Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania won’t be known until Friday, as these states, and others, continue a count of the millions of mail-in ballots that flooded into each of these states over the course of the past month.
Still, turnout across the U.S. was robust, reflecting the sense of urgency attending a presidential election conducted under an extraordinary shadow — a deadly pandemic, economic collapse, and a debate over racial justice.
President Trump and challenger Joe Biden battled early into Wednesday morning with no clear winner, as major contests remained too close to call and prospects grew that a decision in the presidential race would await an ongoing count of votes cast before election day. Trump misspelled the word polls in a tweet in which he asserted, without evidence, that Democrats were trying to steal the election, tweeting, “We will never let them do it.”

trump-steal-election.jpg

Misrepresentation: “Votes cannot be cast after the Poles are closed!”
The race to 270 College of Electors votes remains a nailbiter, late in the early morning hours of Wednesday, November 4th.
While President Trump is projected to win Ohio and the big battleground state of Florida, his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, insisted early Wednesday that “we believe we’re on track to win this election.” Biden cited Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan, where many votes — including an unprecedented number of mail-in ballots — were still being tallied in the bitterly contested presidential election that may take days to resolve.
“It ain’t over till every vote is counted,” Biden said. Around the same time, Trump fumed that “we are up BIG, while baselessly accusing Democrats of “trying to STEAL the Election,” as per the since deleted tweet above.
VanRamblings will continue our coverage of #USElection2020 tomorrow afternoon, and through until the last ballot is counted across the U.S, — and perhaps beyond that date (likely, this Friday, November 5th), as President Trump disputes the vote count in Pennsylvania, and has served notice that he intends to take the matter to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Nonetheless, VanRamblings remains confident that Democratic Presidential contender Joseph R. Biden will emerge victorious, at the end of the day, and go on to become the 46th President of the United States of America.
maga-trump.jpg
9pm PST | U.S. Election Night Update

Electoral College Update, 9pm, Tuesday, November 3rd 2020

As of 9pm, ABC News projects Republican wins in Florida (25 College of Electoral votes), Kentucky (6), North Carolina (9) and Ohio (12), with Democratic flips from 2016, wins in 2020, adding Arizona (9) & Kansas (3).
At 9pm, CNN calls California (55), Oregon (7) & Washington (12) for Biden.

tight-battleground-races.jpg

7:30pm PST | U.S. Election Night Update
As of 7:30pm PST, the crucial battleground states of North Carolina, Ohio, Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Virginia are too close to call. Based on the reported votes as of this hour, if Trump takes Michigan tonight, he wins the election, and returns to the White House.

Electoral College Update, 7:30pm, Tuesday, November 3rd 2020

The American networks have projected that Democratic Presidential candidate Joe Biden will win easily in Colorado, as the state has turned bluer with each passing election cycle. Meanwhile, the six combined electoral votes at stake in both North and South Dakota will go for Trump. Meanwhile, in good news for the Democratic Party, voters under 30 years of age across the Midwest are swinging towards Joe Biden in big numbers. In Connecticut, with seven electoral votes at stake in, Joe Biden wins easily.
CNN calls Michigan — which went for Trump in 2016 — for Joe Biden. Biden will also take the four electoral votes in New Hampshirey. Arizona, North Carolina & Iowa are projected to turn blue. As of 7:50pm, Joe Biden is projected to pick up the 20 electoral votes in Illinois. VanRamblings will update the site at 9pm PST, when more outstanding votes are counted.

Should Donald Trump loses his bid to remain President, he faces the prospect of prison

A feeling of alarm and fear about the future of American democracy, from voters across the political spectrum, has voters in its hoary grip, more worried about the state of their country in 2020 than about themselves.
Early on, some thought the catastrophe of Trump’s 2016 election could be a catalyst for aesthetic glory. “In times of artistic alienation, distress is often repaid to us in the form of great work, much of it galvanizing or clarifying or (believe it or not) empowering,” wrote New York magazine’s Jerry Saltz.
Since assuming power on January 20th, 2017, as Thomas Friedman writes in the New York Times, Donald Trump has made the whole world darker …

“There is no escaping it: America is on the ballot (today) — the stability and quality of our American governing institutions, the country’s alliances, how Americans treat one another, and our government’s basic commitment to scientific principles and the minimum decency that we expect from our leaders.

Trump maga crowd

Four more years of a president without shame, backed by a party without spine, amplified by a TV network without integrity, and the cancer will be in the bones of every institution that has made America America.”

What has the Trump presidency taken from Americans?
Innocence? Optimism? Faith?
Trump snuffed out American confidence, flickering but real, that as a people Americans could go only so low, and forgive only so much.
With Donald Trump in power the past four years, Americans went lower — or at least a damningly large percentage of Americans did. Many Americans gave Trump a bye on his florid cruelty, overt racism, rampant corruption, exultant indecency, the coddling of murderous despots, the alienation of true friends, the alienation of truth itself, and the disparagement of invaluable institutions and degradation of essential democratic traditions.

American author, philosopher, neuroscientist, Sam Harris: ‘The Key to Trump’s Appeal’

Throughout the past months, polls from across America have consistently showed that about 44% of voters approved of Trump’s job performance — even after he’d concealed aspects of his coronavirus infection from the public, shrugged off the larger meaning of it, and established the White House as its own superspreader environment, and cavalierly marched on.
Forty-four percent of Americans support the worst President in American history, and will blithely cast a ballot for him today, if they haven’t already.
What in God’s name have so many of our American neighbours become?

2020 U.S. election night graphic

We’ll pretty much know the answer to that question by 7:30pm PST.
Of course, there’s a good chance we won’t know who won the presidential election by later on this evening, given that more Americans than at any time in their country’s history voted by mail this year, due to the pandemic — not unlike many British Columbians last month — and as mail-in ballots take longer to count than ballots cast at polling places, and because each state has its own rules for how votes are to be counted and reported, some states will report results sooner than others … and yada, yada, yada
In fact, key battleground states have been counting mail-in and advance voting ballots for weeks, and by 7:30pm west coast time, we oughta know close to the final voting count in those states, as MSNBC political analyst Steve Kornacki, and NBC’s Meet the Press host, Chuck Todd, suggest below.

MSNBC’s Steve Kornacki on What to Expect On Election Night As Polls Start To Close

Chuck Todd: “I’ll Be Watching Florida, Georgia & North Carolina tonight” …

Ninety-five per cent of the entire vote in Florida, Georgia and North Carolina will be counted by 7:30pm west coast time tonight.
Here’s the crew from Nate Silver’s fivethirtyeight.com on when we can expect election result returns in every state in the union. And this …

If Biden wins any one of the battleground states above, he wins the election — and Trump is not only consigned to the dustbin of history, but is staring down the prospect of spending years in jail, given that he’ll no longer be able to use Justice Department staff as his personal lawyers.

Per journalists in the New York Times: “Seldom far from Mr. Trump’s thoughts, however, is the possibility of defeat — and the potential consequences of being ejected from the White House. In unguarded moments, Mr. Trump has for weeks told advisers that he expects to face intensifying scrutiny from prosecutors if he loses. He is concerned not only about existing investigations in New York, but the potential for new federal probes as well, according to people who have spoken with him.”

Should Democratic presidential contender Joseph R. Biden not secure an undisputed win tonight across Florida, North Carolina and Georgia, and leave us having to await the vote count in Pennsylvania later in the week, in tomorrow’s VanRamblings we’ll write a bit about the College of Electors, and how this is the final deciding body which chooses the next President.
Here’s hoping Biden sweeps the board tonight, to become #USPrez46.