There are five electoral votes at stake in New Mexico. 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.
10:28 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020
Catch up: Here's where things stand in the House and Senate races
Based on CNN's current projections, this is how the balance of power in Congress is shaping up:
Democrats have 40 seats in the Senate so far. Republicans have 38. Either side needs 51 seats to have a majority.
In the House, Democrats have 84 seats. Republicans have 119.
You can follow live updates on the congressional race here.
10:35 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020
How the huge rise in pre-Election Day voting could affect when we get solid results
From CNN's Marshall Cohen
Diane Spiteri clutches her absentee ballot before dropping it off at the city clerk's office in Warren, Michigan, on October 28. David Goldman/AP
Because of unprecedented levels of mail-in ballots and early voting due to the coronavirus pandemic, it still may take some time until we get results tonight and final results may look different to what early results are showing.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, supporters of Democratic nominee Joe Biden have shown a strong preference for mail-in voting. Most of President Trump's supporters said they wanted to vote on Election Day. States count these different types of votes in very different ways.
As a result, in some of the most competitive states – including Texas — early results may look too rosy for former Vice President Joe Biden, before falling back down to earth and becoming more representative of the true outcome. In other states — particularly Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin — Trump could see early leads that slowly narrow as more ballots are counted.
This won't be a sign of fraud or irregularities. Rather, it's just a reflection of how states count votes. Some states process early ballots first, and will report those early in the night, while others save them for last.
CNN's Dana Bash said the close race in Florida was an early harbinger that tonight would likely not be the landslide Democrats had hoped for.
"There is no landslide that we are looking at," she said. "No way given the numbers that we've seen particularly when you start the night in Florida when it's as tight as Florida tends to be."
Bash went on to explain that the Biden campaign appears to have underperformed with Latino voters because of the Trump campaign's work to paint Biden as a socialist had been effective.
"I'll tell you what [the Biden campaign] thinks went wrong is that the Trump attacks have worked," said Bash. "Calling the Democrats socialist worked with people in that area, in particular."
CNN's Abby Phillip concurred, saying turnout among Latino voters will likely be the area of study for Democrats, once the election is settled.
"What is happening in Florida, I can tell you, Democrats are not happy about it," said Phillip. "At the end of the day, the situation in Miami-Dade is something that in the autopsy of this election they will be looking back at and trying to figure out what went wrong."
CNN's Dana Bash, Abby Phillip and Jake Tapper explain:
10:09 p.m. ET, November 3, 2020
Trump campaign blurs the lines between politics and government on White House grounds
From CNN's Jim Acosta and Betsy Klein
Members of the media report outside of the White House in Washington on Tuesday. Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images
On Election Night at the White House, the Trump campaign is running the show inside the White House grounds, even at the President's election night party — further blurring the lines between political activity and official government business.
Ahead of an expected appearance from President Trump around an election night watch party, the campaign is also setting the guest list – including which journalists can attend.
Rather than inviting the White House press corps, the list was limited to a handful of favored conservative outlets, including Fox News, One America News, Newsmax, Daily Caller, Washington Examiner, JustTheNews.com, and Breitbart. Reporters from Washington Post, Univision, USA Today, and McClatchy were also invited.
As of 9:30 p.m. ET, those reporters have not yet been told when they will be taken inside and are told to expect to see the President.
Members of CNN’s technical staff were part of a production pool to facilitate video transmission.
White House spokesperson Judd Deere defended the event, claiming the White House was merely the venue and not the host. "Just like convention it’s a campaign event. White House is the venue,” Deere said.
The campaign was responsible for that guest list, and not the White House, though the journalists were administered Covid-19 tests by White House doctors.
Former Trump aide Kellyanne Conway said Tuesday that the President is expected to “address the nation later from the East Room,” which is one of the rooms being used for the event.
Approximately 400 people were invited to the White House watch party, though only about 200 to 250 are expected to attend the indoor event, which will be held in the East Wing. And over in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, steps away from the West Wing, the campaign has set up a war room with aides monitoring results. CNN reporter earlier that war room at the White House is being funded by the Trump campaign.