Based on CNN's current projections, Joe Biden has 220 electoral votes while Donald Trump has 213 electoral votes.
Here's the latest look at where things stand:

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.
By Meg Wagner, Melissa Macaya, Veronica Rocha, Melissa Mahtani and Amanda Wills, CNN
From CNN's Allison Gordon
Based on CNN's current projections, Joe Biden has 220 electoral votes while Donald Trump has 213 electoral votes.
Here's the latest look at where things stand:

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.
From CNN's Kyung Lah
Arizona's largest county has processed and counted a total of 1,487,624 early votes out of a total of approximately 1.7 million early votes cast, according to the Maricopa County Elections Department.
There are roughly 248,000 outstanding early votes that have been signature verified but not yet fully processed. Election officials will start counting these remaining early votes Wednesday as well as an undetermined number of mail-in ballots that people delivered to voting centers in person that have not been processed in any way.
On Election Day, approximately 167,000 people voted in person at 175 voting centers within the county.
As of 12:40 a.m. local time with 75 voting centers reporting, a total of 74,485 Election Day votes have been counted.
From CNN's Josiah Ryan

Veteran Republican election lawyer Ben Ginsberg expressed dismay at President Trump's attacks on legitimate vote-counting efforts this morning, saying he had never seen a President behave in such a manner.
"It is a distressing moment for me as a long time Republican to see a call to disenfranchise so many people," said Ginsberg. "...What the President said tonight is not only unprecedented and it not only lacks any basis in the law, it really is a disservice to all the other men and women who are on the ballot as Republicans today."
When asked by CNN's Jake Tapper whether he'd every seen anything like this from a President, he replied, "No. Not even close."
Hear more from Ben Ginsberg:
From CNN's Kevin Liptak

President Trump attacked legitimate vote-counting efforts in remarks from the White House early Wednesday, suggesting attempts to tally all ballots amounted to disenfranchising his supporters.
"Millions and millions of people voted for us," Trump said in the East Room. "A very sad group of people is trying to disenfranchise that group of people."
His remarks were laced with misleading statements and outright falsehoods and amounted to an assault on the Democratic process. He insisted that states where vote tallies currently show him leading should be called in his favor, despite significant outstanding votes yet to be counted.
He said he was preparing to declare victory earlier in the evening.
"We were getting ready for a big celebration. We were winning everything. And all of a sudden it was just called off," he said.
Trump baselessly claimed a fraud was being committed.
"This is a fraud on the American public. This is an embarrassment to our country," Trump claimed.
"Frankly we did win this election," he said, despite millions of votes still outstanding.
Saying he would go to the US Supreme Court, Trump said he wanted "all voting to stop."
From CNN's Clare Foran

Pennsylvania Democratic Sen. Bob Casey projected confidence about Joe Biden’s chance of winning the key battleground state in an interview with CNN early Wednesday morning.
Asked what he thinks Biden’s odds are in the fiercely contested state, Casey said, “I think they’re good. I think he’s going to win. I think it’ll be really close.”
“I think if he wins Pennsylvania, which I think he will, and then he wins Michigan and Wisconsin, then it’s over. You win those three states that were lost last time, then it’ll be over,” Casey said.
Donald Trump won all three states in 2016, dealing a major blow to Democrats in the last presidential election.
As for the battle for the Senate, where Democrats have hoped to take back control from Republicans, who currently hold the majority, Casey described the fight as “difficult,” and said, “I just hope for the best as we get the final results.”
From CNN's Casey Tolan and Caroline Kenny
There are still plenty of uncounted ballots in Wisconsin, and many of the local officials say they’ll wrap up in the next few hours.
Here's what we know:
Milwaukee County, the state's most populous, Democratic stronghold:
All in-person, Election Day ballots have been counted, a spokesperson for the county clerk’s office told CNN. The county is still waiting on 169,341 early and mail ballots from the city of Milwaukee, which are expected to be done around 4 a.m. ET. Also outstanding are a total of about 75,000 ballots from four other suburban municipalities within the county – Oak Creek, Franklin, Wauwatosa and West Allis, which are expected to come in before the city of Milwaukee.
Brown County, includes Green Bay:
All municipalities are fully reporting except for Green Bay. Currently, no results from Green Bay are reporting, Brown County Clerk Sandy Juno told CNN. They are not going to report results from Green Bay until they finish the absentee count, then they will report the absentee and the in-person Election Day results together all at once. That will likely be between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. ET. They don't have a total ballot number for how much is outstanding but it's about 32,000 absentee plus more in-person.
Waukesha County, Milwaukee suburbs and a typical GOP stronghold:
Waukesha County Clerk Meg Wartman told CNN that all results will likely be reported by 2 a.m. ET, though that time has come and gone already. They are still waiting for about 40,000 absentee votes from Brookfield and New Berlin.
Outagamie County:
Now at 93% of expected vote, despite the problems CNN reported earlier with them having to transfer data from about 13,500 misprinted ballots to new ballots.
Dane County, includes Madison, a Democratic stronghold:
Dane is now completely done counting, according to a tweet from clerk Scott McDonell.
Rock County:
The county is totally done counting, the clerk told CNN.
From CNN's MJ Lee
We heard Joe Biden say that the campaign feels “good about where we are.” That wasn’t spin. As we head into the early hours of the morning after Election Day, the Biden camp is cautiously optimistic.
As one Biden ally put it – “Still rather be us than them.” Put simply, the Biden campaign still believes they’ve got a more realistic path to 270 at this point than Trump does.
To be clear, this certainly hasn’t panned out to be the anywhere near the best case, sweep scenario that some on team Biden had dared to fantasize about – Florida is gone; Ohio is gone; Texas is gone. All three are states that Biden had made a push for in the end, even knowing that they would be very competitive or reaches.
But as Biden himself said, the campaign is very much still counting on and feeling good about states like Pennsylvania, and counting on the "Blue Wall" states to come through for them. They also believe they are in the game in Georgia – a win there, of course would be huge.
Bottom line: Team Biden believes that they are on track to win this election. It is just anybody’s guess when that official call will actually come.
President Trump picked up Iowa and Texas, and Joe Biden carried Rhode Island, CNN projects.
Based on CNN's current projections, Biden now has 220 electoral votes while Trump has 213 electoral votes.
Here's the latest look at where things stand:

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.

President Trump is expected to speak soon from the East Room in the White House.
He tweeted earlier that he would be speaking.