MINNEAPOLIS (NewsNation Now) — The battleground state of Minnesota began voting in the presidential election on Friday as polling stations opened in every county and local elections officials began mailing out absentee ballots.

The state got its early head start on voting on the same day that President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden scheduled dueling campaign stops in northern Minnesota.

Dozens of voters lined up early in the morning outside the voting center in Minneapolis, where officials said 44 people had voted in the first half-hour after the polls opened. Officials put coronavirus protections in place, including plexiglass dividers and plenty of hand sanitizer. Poll workers kept voting booths wiped down with disinfectant.

Minnesotans are also expected to vote by mail in record numbers. Secretary of State Steve Simon said nearly 99,000 residents have already requested absentee ballots. He said he expects around 1.2 million absentee ballots will be cast by election day with a total turnout of around 3 million to 3.1 million.

Watch Biden’s Friday address at a Minnesota union training center in the player below.

Under special pandemic rules, absentee ballots can be postmarked as late as election day. Officials will then have seven calendar says to count them as they trickle in, which means Minnesota won’t have complete results until Nov. 10.

Biden toured a union training center in Duluth and delivered remarks after.

Other states that kicked off early voting Friday include Virginia, South Dakota and Wyoming.