Joe Biden will deliver remarks in Wilmington at 12:30 a.m. ET, the campaign tells reporters.
Presidential election results 2020
By Meg Wagner, Melissa Macaya, Veronica Rocha, Melissa Mahtani and Amanda Wills, CNN
Biden is expected to speak soon
Nevada voting results not expected to begin posting until after 12:30 a.m. ET
From CNN's Erica Hill and Stephanie Becker

No voting results can be posted in Nevada until all polling locations have closed, says Jennifer Russell, a spokeswoman for the Nevada Secretary of State's office.
Russell tells CNN that 13 out of 17 counties are completely done being counted and the plan is for the state to begin posting results around 12:30 a.m. ET.
Those results will include early voting, Election Day voting in the smaller counties and whatever mail ballots they have at the time. Russell says Clark County results will take longer.
Per a court order late this afternoon,Clark County, home to nearly 70% of active voters in the state, extended voting at 30 of its 125 locations by one hour until 8 p.m. PT, thought voters in line at closing would still be allowed to vote as longs as they showed up by the new closing time. Lines here have been steady all day in the county.
Clark County Registrar Joe Gloria spoke a short time ago, and said most of the issues which lead to late openings were technical, the majority being connectivity issues.
He said keeping the locations open later will not impact results, except to say that they will likely come in later. Gloria cautioned the county is still counting mail-in ballots. Voters could drop them off today at all polling locations.
As long as ballots are post-marked by today and received by Nov. 10, they will be counted in the state.
CNN Projection: Trump wins Idaho
President Trump will win Idaho, CNN projects.
There are four electoral votes at stake in Idaho. It takes 270 electoral votes to win the 2020 presidential election.
Who won in 2016: President Trump carried the state and won the general election.
It's just after midnight ET. This is where things stand.
CNN just projected President Trump will win must-have state of Ohio and picked up 18 additional electoral votes. Based on CNN's current projections, Trump now has 132 electoral college votes while Joe Biden has 205 electoral college votes.
Here's the latest look at where things stand:

Reminder: Each candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.
CNN Projection: Trump wins Ohio

President Trump will win Ohio, CNN projects.
There are 18 electoral votes at stake in Ohio. It takes 270 electoral votes to win the 2020 presidential election.
Who won in 2016: President Trump carried the state and won the general election.
CNN's John King is at the magic wall:
Virginia has become increasingly Democratic over recent election cycles
From CNN's Gregory Krieg

CNN projects Joe Biden will notch a win in Virginia. In 13 of the 14 presidential elections before 2008, Virginia went for the Republican nominee. But Barack Obama’s arrival coincided with a shift in the commonwealth’s electorate, powered by suburban voters with college degrees.
Not quite liberal, Virginia has become increasingly Democratic – in the 2018 midterms, Reps. Jennifer Wexton, Elaine Luria and Abigail Spanberger all flipped GOP seats as the party reclaimed a House majority – and its moderate politics mirror Biden’s.
Virginia was a state in which Trump appeared to have an early lead, but it dissipated as the returns painted a fuller, bluer picture.
CNN Projection: Biden wins Virginia
Joe Biden will win Virginia, CNN projects.
There are 13 electoral votes at stake in Virginia. It takes 270 electoral votes to win the 2020 presidential election.
Who won in 2016: Former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton carried the state, and President Trump won the general election.
Does tonight feel most like 2016, 2018 or 2020?
From CNN's Josiah Ryan
As votes continued to trickle in from across the country late this evening, the presidential race was felt familiar to past elections.
CNN's Jake Tapper said he was unsure if the results so far were most reminiscent of the presidential contest in 2016 when then-candidate Donald Trump outpaced the polls, or 2016 when Democrats congressional victories took days to solidify.
"I don't know if this feels like 2016 when Donald Trump pulled this huge upset and surprised everybody, or feels like 2018, where Democrats had a really good night, it just took longer than a night," said Tapper.
CNN's Dana Bash, however, presented a third option, saying the results, so far, feel very much like they belong in the year 2020.��
"It feels like 2020 because... going into tonight, in most of these battleground states, the candidates were within the margin of error," she said. "That by definition means it is a close race in all of these states and that is what we're seeing play out right now."
Tapper concurred, adding, "it's a divided country. It's a close election."
Where things stand in Michigan and Pennsylvania
From CNN's Leinz Vales

In Michigan and Pennsylvania officials are calling for patience as they deal with a record turnout of voters.
The states make up the “blue wall” that President Trump captured in 2016.
Michigan: “Across the entire state, they’re expecting record turnout," CNN's Miguel Marquez said, reporting from Detroit, Michigan. "It is not clear how that will affect the vote count for either candidate. We also know they are still counting."
"Those absentee ballots are being counted as well," Marquez added. "We should be seeing some of those votes coming very soon as well."
Marquez went on to report that officials believe in the "next 24 hours or so we’ll have unofficial result of who will win Michigan.”
Pennsylvania: “There is a lot of outstanding votes in the Keystone State and this will not be a process that moves particularly fast," Sara Murray said, reporting from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
"We know that there's a lot of these big counties, Philadelphia County, Bucks County, Chester County ... they’ll be counting all night long," Murray added.
At news conference held by the Pennsylvania secretary of state, Kathy Boockvar, Murray said she told reporters that "we need to stay patient and you also need to be prepared for these vote totals to come through overnight in fits and starts."
CNN's Miguel Marquez and Sara Murray walk through the latest: