It's the final countdown
Good morning Daily Briefing readers, Election Day is nearly here. Are you ready? It’s Jane Onyanga-Omara, bringing you today’s news.
President Donald Trump and Joe Biden enter the home stretch of one of the most divisive U.S. elections in history. Johnny Depp lost his libel suit against British tabloid newspaper The Sun. And, a refrigerator-sized space rock will likely zoom past Earth. No need to mind your head, though — it has only a 0.41% chance of entering the atmosphere, according to NASA.
Here’s Monday’s news:
Tomorrow is Election Day
One day before the most anticipated presidential election in recent history, President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden plan to make their final push for votes on Monday. Trump has another long day ahead, revisiting North Carolina and Michigan, and also making stops in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Trump appears to need another last-minute surge to win Michigan with a new poll showing him 7 percentage points behind Biden. Meanwhile, Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, will “fan out across all four corners” of Pennsylvania on Monday, according to the campaign. The state is among the most important of a half-dozen battlegrounds because its 20 Electoral College votes could be the decisive tipping point for either candidate to reach the 270 needed to win the White House, according to political experts. Biden is also scheduled to stop in Cleveland, Ohio, as polls indicate a tight race in the state.
- Voting is a patriotic duty, but it can be a confusing one. Here are some important terms to brush up on
- Democrats led early voting after Trump's attacks on mail-in ballots. Now Trump needs to dominate Election Day
Federal hearing determines fate of drive-thru Texas votes
A federal judge is scheduled to hold an emergency hearing Monday to review a bid by Texas GOP figures seeking to discard drive-thru votes, arguing that the voting method is prohibited by state law. The group, consisting of three Texas Republican candidates and a GOP activist, had a similar bid rejected Sunday by the Texas Supreme Court, which turned away an effort to toss out almost 127,000 votes cast in drive-thru lanes in Harris County, an emerging Democratic stronghold. Democrats have argued the GOP lawsuit, which was filed two weeks after early voting began and three months after the county announced plans for drive-thru voting, could disenfranchise voters who voted legally.
- North Carolina Board of Elections: 97% of ballots to be tallied and reported on election night
- Texas smashed early-voting records. Which party will benefit?
More election news:
- Live election updates: Biden campaign to 'barnstorm Pennsylvania'; Trump vows to go 'in with our lawyers'
- Will your vote be safe? Computer experts sound warnings on America's voting machines
- 'Clear but unspoken preference': As America votes, the world is watching with bated breath
- Watch: Crowd chants 'fire Fauci,' Trump says after election
- Stores brace for post-election unrest and possibility of violence, damage to businesses after presidential results
- Election Day deals: Get a free Krispy Kreme donut, Planet Fitness workout plus a McDonald's freebie
Eta intensifies into the season's 12th hurricane
Eta, which swirled to life over the weekend in the Caribbean, intensified into the 12th Atlantic hurricane of 2020 on Monday. Eta is the 28th named storm of a historic season, which has tied 2005 for most storms on record. The slow-moving system, which is expected to hit Nicaragua on Tuesday, could cause life-threatening flash flooding over portions of Central America, the National Hurricane Center said. Eta's path after it lashes Central America is uncertain. The storm could dissipate, according to weather.com, or linger and move back over the western Caribbean and re-intensify later this week.
- Tropical Storm Eta forms: Eta forms in Caribbean, ties record for most named storms
- Why are we having such an active hurricane season?
Johnny Depp loses libel suit against UK tabloid
A 2018 article in British tabloid The Sun that branded Johnny Depp a "wife beater" was not libelous, a judge ruled Monday morning. British Judge Andrew Nicol delivered his verdict in writing without a hearing — due to the coronavirus — at the High Court in London, dismissing Depp's complaint against The Sun. "The Claimant has not succeeded in his action for libel," read a court summary released Monday to USA TODAY. "Although he has proved the necessary elements of his cause of action in libel, the Defendants have shown that what they published in the meaning which I have held the words to bear was substantially true." In July, Depp and his ex-wife Amber Heard had a dramatic three-week legal showdown that exposed ugly accusations of verbal and physical assault, drug and alcohol abuse and tumultuous private life for the celebrity couple, who met on the set of 2011 comedy “The Rum Diary," married in Los Angeles in 2015, separated the following year and divorced in 2017.
- Johnny Depp sues: The star says feces in bed was last straw in marriage to Heard
- Depp vs. Heard: All the nasty bits of the UK trial — and it's all nasty
More news you need to know:
- Coronavirus updates: New York to require COVID test for travelers; California reports 79th inmate death; England to go on four-week shutdown
- 'Out of harm's way': US Marshals Service leads recovery of 27 missing children in Virginia's 'Operation Find Our Children'
- Actor Eddie Hassell, 30, who appeared in 'The Kids Are All Right,' shot and killed in Texas
- More conservative Supreme Court faces major dispute pitting religious freedom against LGBTQ rights
- 'It's certainly going to get worse': Businesses plan more layoffs, hiring freezes in 2020 as COVID-19 escalates
And finally: 6.5-foot asteroid may 'buzz-cut' Earth
A refrigerator-sized asteroid will likely zoom past Earth on Monday — just before Election Day. Never fear, the 6.5-foot space rock is "not big enough to cause harm," said astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. "So if the World ends in 2020, it won’t be the fault of the Universe," Tyson said. NASA has been tracking the asteroid since it was discovered in 2018 by the Zwicky Transient Facility at Palomar Observatory in California. The asteroid has only a 0.41% chance of entering Earth's atmosphere, NASA said, "but if it did, it would disintegrate due to its extremely small size."
- Fact check: Chance of an asteroid hitting Earth on Nov. 2 is not higher than dying of COVID-19
- This isn't your typical space rock: There's a metal asteroid out there worth $10,000 quadrillion