Wisconsin is among the three ‘Blue wall’ states that Donald Trump flipped en route to winning the White House in 2016.

‘The Badger State’ has been a Democratic bastion for over three decades, having voted for the Democrat candidate for the last seven elections, all the way back since 1988.

Although the races in 2000 and 2004 went down to the wire, the streak stunningly broke on election night in 2016 when Trump edged Hillary Clinton by a margin of 0.7% despite trailing in the polls for months prior.

The last Republican candidate to win the state before Trump was Ronald Reagan in 1984.

Hence, with an eye to win back the 10 electoral votes up for grabs in Wisconsin, Biden has ramped up his campaign’s presence in the final few days before the election, holding rallies with former president Barack Obama to rebuild the mostly White, working-class voter base in Wisconsin and the other midwestern states.

Trump is also eyeing to hold back this key battleground and has visited the state five times in recent weeks, most recently on Monday, when he hosted one of his final ‘MAGA’ (Make America Great Again) rallies in the lead up to the election.