Presidential elections are close and so both the candidates are seen gearing up for it. As President Donald Trump gains from the coronavirus, Joe Biden is realizing on having the campaign path broadly to himself by knocking risky swing states and financing in longtime Republican bastions that he hopes might expand his path to victory. The Democratic presidential nominee made his second trip to Florida in a little over two weeks on Monday. His visit to Miami was planned to infringe on some of Trump’s turf, even waving through Little Havana, a typically conservative area known for its strong opposition to the communist government that Fidel Castro installed in Cuba. Corona restrictions to be reimposed in New York He’ll follow up with a trip later this week to Arizona, which hasn’t supported a Democratic presidential candidate since 1996. Even Biden’s former primary rival, Bernie Sanders, has resumed in-person campaigning for the first time since the coronavirus outbreak in March. The following Vermont senator held socially distanced demonstrations in the swing states of New Hampshire and Michigan and declared, “We need Joe Biden as our president.” Former Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari convicted in corruption case Biden is complementing the extended operations travel with a late-stage ad push, reserving more than $6 million in television airtime in Texas for decades deeply red through the end of October, according to an analysis of CMAG data as per a leading daily. He also intends to spend $4 million on advertising in Georgia, another Republican-leaning state that Democrats are feeling bullish about. Trump, meanwhile, has scaled back advertising in both states and has started doing the same in Ohio, which he also won in 2016. Testing in Australia's state Victoria increases rapidly