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Nick Begich III, the Republican son of a prominent liberal political family in Alaska, has defeated Representative Mary Peltola to win the state’s sole House seat, according to The Associated Press, ousting one of the nation’s most vulnerable Democrats and adding to Republicans’ slim House majority. This time, Mr. Begich benefited from a G.O.P. Ms. Peltola, the first Alaska Native elected to Congress, staked her campaign on her working-class appeal and presented herself as a solutions-focused pragmatist fighting for the state’s future. Before Ms. Peltola, the last Democrat to represent Alaska in the House was Nick Begich Sr., Mr. Begich’s grandfather. Former Young aides called Mr. Begich deceitful and disloyal to their boss and chose to back Ms. Peltola instead.
Persons: Nick Begich III, Mary Peltola, Begich, Peltola, Sarah Palin, Don Young, Nick Begich, Begich’s, Young, Young’s Organizations: Associated Press, , Caucus, Republicans, Alaska, Republican, Congress, Mr Locations: Republican, Alaska, Anchorage
Mr. Gaetz, the former congressman from Florida who resigned this week, is best known for leading the effort to oust former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, whom he still frequently taunts. He has also turned his megaphone on Republican senators who are now in charge of the effort to vet and confirm him. Given the G.O.P.’s slim Senate majority, Mr. Gaetz can afford to lose the support of only three Republicans (assuming all Democrats vote against him) if he wants to be confirmed. So far, at least five have indicated they are skeptical that Mr. Gaetz could win confirmation. They include Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, Joni Ernst of Iowa, Kevin Cramer of North Dakota and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.
Persons: Matt Gaetz, Donald J, Trump, Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins of, Joni Ernst of Iowa, Kevin Cramer of North, Thom Tillis Organizations: Republicans Locations: Florida, Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, North Carolina
Representative Don Bacon of Nebraska, one of the most politically vulnerable Republicans in the country, has defeated his Democratic challenger and won a fifth term, according to The Associated Press. His victory denies Democrats one of their best opportunities this year to pick up a seat and bolsters his party’s drive to hold its majority. The race was the second matchup between Mr. Bacon and Tony Vargas, who came within 6,000 votes of unseating the congressman in 2022. Mr. Vargas came up short again on Friday evening, even after top Democrats including Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the minority leader, and Gov. The contest between Mr. Bacon, 61, a former brigadier general in the Air Force, and Mr. Vargas, 40, a former public-school teacher who is the son of Peruvian immigrants, featured debates over national issues including abortion rights, taxes and public safety.
Persons: Don Bacon of Nebraska, Bacon, Tony Vargas, Vargas, Hakeem Jeffries, Tim Walz, Biden Organizations: Democratic, Associated Press, Air Force Locations: Minnesota, Omaha
Senator Sherrod Brown, a Democrat in a solidly Republican state, has established an image as a stalwart supporter of working-class voters. Bernie Moreno, a wealthy Colombian-born businessman, was the choice of Mr. Trump, not Ohio's G.O.P. establishment.
Persons: Sherrod Brown, Bernie Moreno, Trump Organizations: Republican Locations: Colombian
Voting has now wrapped up in all seven swing states and most others. But no swing states have been called, and the race will hinge on their results. Bomb threats roiled polling places in swing states, including Georgia, Arizona and Michigan. Though the election is by no means over, Mr. Trump is showing strength, winning states like Texas and Florida easily. Democrats will have to run the tables in the Republican states of Ohio and Montana to maintain their one-seat control of the Senate.
Persons: Lisa Blunt Rochester, Angela Alsobrooks, Donald J, Trump, Kamala Harris, Jonathan Weisman, Harris, , Ms, Rick Scott, Larry Hogan, Jim Justice, Joe Manchin III, Organizations: Electoral, Mr, Republican, Senate, Republicans, Democratic National Committee, Washington , D.C Locations: Delaware, Maryland, Ohio, Montana, — Arizona , Wisconsin, Georgia, North Carolina , Pennsylvania, Michigan, Nevada, Arizona, Texas, Florida, Mar, Washington ,
Opinion | Vote to End the Trump Era
  + stars: | 2024-11-02 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Opinion | The Editorial BoardYou already know Donald Trump. Listen to those who know him best. Mr. Trump will use thegovernment to go after opponents. Another Trump term willdamage the climate, shatter alliancesand strengthen autocrats. The New York Times editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values.
Persons: Donald Trump, Roe, he’s, won’t, Trump Organizations: New York Times Locations: autocrats
Ms. Harris starts out with 226 likely electoral votes compared with 219 for Mr. Trump, with 93 votes up for grabs. Scenario 6 Or by winning Pennsylvania, Michigan and either Georgia … Or by winning Pennsylvania, Michigan and either Georgia … Scenario 7 … or North Carolina. Ms. Harris and Mr. Trump have been campaigning hard and often there, and Democrats hope that the favorable governor’s race could help them. Scenario 5 … like Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin … … like Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin … Scenario 6 … or Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania. The Harris campaign is taking a similar approach, focusing on white college-educated women, who currently favor Ms. Harris by 29 points.
Persons: Brandon Bell, Harris, immovably, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Biden, Trump, Trump’s, Harris –, Trump’s resiliency, Harris’s, William Frey, Michael Dukakis, Josh Shapiro, JD Vance, Mr, Bill McInturff, there’s, , Joe Rogan’s, Doug Sosnik, Bill Clinton Organizations: Trump, Electoral, Democrats, Republicans, Democratic, Mr, Sun, Electoral College, NBC, Black, Brookings Institution, Michigan, , Republican, Biden Locations: Virginia, Minnesota, Georgia, Arizona , Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona , Georgia, Nevada , North Carolina , Pennsylvania, Wis, Mich, Pa, Nev, N.C, Ariz . Ga, Ariz ., Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin . Pennsylvania, , … Georgia, Arizona , Michigan, Pennsylvania , Michigan
For years, Republican activists have huddled in video meetings to talk about remaking democracy and plan for the election. They successfully lobbied for new state election laws and procedures, diving deep into the intricacies of election regulations. Earlier this year, Ms. Mitchell said she was called by God to shift her attention to the possibility that noncitizens were voting. They were involved in recent attempts to make it easier for State Election Board members to hold up certification while they conduct inquiries into the vote. Ms. Mitchell has talked about a federal elections overhaul should Republicans win the White House and Congress.
Persons: Donald J, Cleta Mitchell, Rebecca Dunn, Richard Uihlein, , Mark Meadows, Russell T, Trump, Mitchell, Trump’s, John Eastman, I’ve, Donald Trump, badgered, illegals ”, , ” Ms, , ” Patrice Johnson, Mike Johnson, Chip Roy, Ron Armstrong, Richard Silvestri, Matthew Seifried, Seifried, Claire Zunk, Janine Iyer, Elizabeth Ayoub, “ Janine, Johnson, Ned Jones, John Richards Jr, don’t, Jim Womack, Mr, Jones, I’m, we’ve Organizations: Republican, The New York Times, Trump, Network, Republican National Committee, Bradley Impact Foundation, Conservative Partnership Institute, Trump White House, Citizens, Gateway Pundit, Federalist, Republicans, United States, Tea Party, Michigan, Mr, Republican Party, Michigan Fair, North, United Sovereign Americans, American Legislative Exchange Council, White House Locations: America, In Nevada, Georgia, Texas, United, Michigan, Ron Armstrong , Michigan, chimed, Trump, Georgia , Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina
Opinion Guest Essay The 21 Slivers of America That Could Decide the Election Sebastian Siadecki for The New York TimesIn almost every presidential battleground state, polling suggests something close to a dead heat between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. For Ms. Harris and Mr. Trump, each could be a crucial building block in a winning swing-state coalition. In 2016, with Mr. Trump in the race, these areas began to march to national trends: Rural areas trended Republican, while Milwaukee’s well-off, close-in suburbs zoomed left. Still, loyalties remain potent in Wisconsin, from Democratic-leaning, ancestrally Scandinavian voters in the state’s rural west to middle-class suburban Republicans outside Milwaukee. Mr. Trump lost Nash County by just 0.2 points in 2020 and Wilson County by three points.
Persons: Sebastian Siadecki, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump ., Harris, Trump, Nate Silver’s, Joe Biden, Badger State . Arizona Battlegrounds, Mark Kelly, Biden, Trump’s, Patrick Ruffini Organizations: The New York Times, Pennsylvania, Keystone, Philadelphia, Democratic, Milwaukee —, Washington, Mr, Republican, Republicans, Milwaukee, Badger State, Senate, Northampton, “ Party of, Populist Coalition Locations: America, Pennsylvania, Appalachia, Philadelphia, Philadelphia’s, . Wisconsin, Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Milwaukee — Waukesha, Ozaukee, Badger, Badger State . Arizona, Arizona, Phoenix, Florida and Texas, . North Carolina, North Carolina, Southern, Nash, Rocky, Wilson, Wilson County, Nash County, Northampton, Erie, Bethlehem, Georgia, Brown County, Green Bay, Outagamie County, Appleton, Winnebago County, Oshkosh, Maricopa County
But Pennsylvania stands apart as the state that top strategists for both Ms. Harris and Mr. Trump have circled as the likeliest to tip the election. There are struggling industrial towns where Mr. Trump needs to maximize his vote, and smaller cities booming with Latino immigrants where Ms. Harris aims to make gains. Mr. Trump won the county in 2016 by 19 percentage points, only four years after Mr. Obama carried it narrowly. One X factor is the regional impact of the assassination attempt on Mr. Trump in Butler County. “You guys don’t know what the hell it is,” Mr. Trump said of the tax break.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Kamala Harris, Barack Obama’s, Harris, ” Mr, Trump’s, , Austin Davis, JD Vance, Sean Hannity, Melania Trump, Harris’s, Doug Emhoff, Jason Isbell, , Cliff Maloney, Haiyun Jiang, Davis, Josh Shapiro, Shonda Rhimes, Beth Hendrix, Bullishness, Doritos, Nick’s, Maddie McGarvey, Obama, Elon Musk, Abraham Reynolds, Butler, Reynolds, Mr, Michael Swensen, Andrzej Duda, fracking, Kenneth Broadbent, Broadbent, Tim Walz, Erin Schaff, Dan Kanninen, Ama Sarpomaa Organizations: Electoral, White, Pennsylvania, White House, Republican Pa, Mich, Wis ., N.C ., Democrat Republican Pa, Trump, Democratic, Fox News, Hispanic Heritage, Republican, Pennsylvania Chase, Democratic National Convention, The New York Times, Democrat, Pittsburgh Steelers, cheesesteaks, State Legislature, The New York, The New York Times Democrats, Senate, Republicans, Steamfitters, ., Google Locations: Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, United States of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, America, White, Ohio, Scranton, Reading, Wilkes, Barre, Illinois, Johnstown, Moon Township, Kittanning, Pa, Bucks County, Luzerne County, Butler County, North East, Butler, Ukraine, Polish, Minnesota, Rochester, Indiana, Indiana County, , Puerto Rican, Dominican
In the past, such a drumbeat of controversy in the final weeks of the campaign might have given voters pause, even prompting shifts in the race. “We are on overload with wild stories every news cycle,” said David Kochel, a longtime Republican strategist and a veteran of several presidential campaigns. You can’t keep up with it all, so a lot of people just tune it out.”Adding to it all was a moment far outside his control: Mr. Trump faced a second assassination attempt. It is unclear what — if anything — could reshuffle the race in such a fiercely polarized nation. In fact, views of Mr. Trump have improved from earlier this year when he was leading Mr. Biden, with more voters viewing him favorably now than they did several months ago.
Persons: , David Kochel, “ It’s, Trump, Biden, Harris, Trump’s Organizations: Communist
In attacking Democrats and Kamala Harris, Republicans have been making a legitimate point: One of our major political parties has worked to undermine America’s families. You’d think that would make it awkward for the Republican Party to preach family values. But with the same chutzpah with which Donald Trump reportedly marched into a dressing room where teenage girls were half-naked, the G.O.P. claims that it’s the Democrats who betray family values. Pressed on those remarks last month, he went further in a conversation with Megyn Kelly, saying that Democrats “have become anti-family and anti-kid.”
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, ” JD Vance, Megyn Kelly, , Organizations: Republican Party
Can the G.O.P. Really Become the Party of Workers?
  + stars: | 2024-08-24 | by ( Noam Scheiber | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The most surprising moment of this year’s Republican National Convention may have come on its first night, when the president of the Teamsters railed in prime time against corporate elites and denounced a “war against labor” by business groups. The gasps from some in the hall were almost audible on television. But in many ways, it was a little-noted speech the week before, by Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, that was more revealing about the party’s evolving relationship with organized labor. If anything, Mr. Hawley, a rising Republican star who is one of the Senate’s most conservative members, seemed to outflank the Teamsters’ leader. His speech, delivered at the National Conservatism Conference, criticized Republicans who “cheerleaded for corporate tax cuts and low barriers for corporate trade, then watched these same corporations ship American jobs overseas.” Mr. Hawley concluded that, “in the choice between labor and capital,” his party must “start prioritizing the workingman.”
Persons: Josh Hawley, Hawley, , Mr, Organizations: Republican, Convention, Teamsters, National Conservatism Conference Locations: Josh Hawley of Missouri
I prosecuted them in case after case, and I won.”A day earlier, the Harris campaign released a television advertisement highlighting her pivot. Her stance reflects a change in public opinion since Mr. Trump left the White House in 2021. The decision for the Harris campaign to frame her record as California attorney general as a “border-state prosecutor” stands in contrast to how she ran in the 2020 Democratic primary. “Donald Trump tanked the deal,” Ms. Harris said in Arizona as a crowd of more than 15,000 supporters booed. “Voters want to see folks be serious about actually fixing the broken immigration system and securing the border,” Ms. Cox said in an interview.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Biden’s, Harris, Donald J, Trump, , Ms, , Bill Clinton, Biden, Mr, ” —, Kamala, Chris DeRose, ” Mr, DeRose, “ There’s, “ Donald Trump, ” Ms, ” Jen Cox, Mark Kelly, Cox, Tom Suozzi, Suozzi, ” Harris, Mike Madrid, Harris’s, Obama, Madrid, Donald Trump, ” Michael Gold, Reid J, Epstein Organizations: Republicans, Democratic, Republican, White House, Biden, Trump, America, Democrats, Mr, , Democrat Locations: Arizona, U.S, United States, California, , Montana, Maricopa County, New York, Bozeman, Mont, Washington
For weeks, Republicans have pummeled Vice President Kamala Harris on immigration, blaming her for President Biden’s policies at the border. Now, Ms. Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, is seeking to neutralize that line of attack, one of her biggest weaknesses with voters, running a playbook that Democrats say has worked for them in recent elections and staking out her clearest position yet as a tough-on-crime prosecutor focused on securing the border. “I was attorney general of a border state,” Ms. Harris, who was once California’s top prosecutor, said on Friday at a rally in Arizona, a swing state where immigration is a top concern for voters. “I went after the transnational gangs, the drug cartels and human traffickers. I prosecuted them in case after case, and I won.”
Persons: Kamala Harris, Biden’s, Harris, Donald J, Trump, , Ms, Organizations: Republicans, Democratic, Republican Locations: U.S, Arizona
Before you were in politics, you ran the largest Baptist youth camp in the country, Falls Creek. That’s what my wife and I did for 22 years, to be able to just love on families and to encourage them. And in 2008 and 2009, we really felt a calling to be able to run for Congress in the central district. As I joke with some of my Democrat colleagues, we’re friends, but they’re wrong all the time. They vote wrong all the time, but we can still be friends in our conversation and relationship and try to be able to engage.
Persons: James, , It’s Organizations: Republican Party, Baptist, Republican Locations: Trump, Oklahoma
The group, set up by Charles Gantt, is funneling money to Republican operatives and funding paid ads, mail and text messages that praise his position on abortion rights. Democrat,” the piece of direct mail, sent to a Democratic voter in Philadelphia and viewed by The New York Times, reads in bold letters. A spokesperson for Mr. Kennedy has not responded, either. Those ads similarly highlight Mr. Kennedy’s position on abortion rights. counterparts, promoting Mr. Kennedy as a supporter of Mr. Trump.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Donald J, Trump, Charles Gantt, Gantt, Kamala Harris, , He’s, Organizations: Republicans, Democrats, Republican, PAC, , Democrat, Democratic, The New York Times, SAG, Trump, The Times, “ RFK, Kennedy, YouTube Locations: Philadelphia, Arizona, America, Michigan, Pennsylvania
As a Republican governor who has won four elections in a purple state, I’ve learned a thing or two about how to win. Catchy one-liners — calling Vice President Harris a “bum,” “not a serious person” and “bottom of the barrel” — might rile up the base, but they do little to connect with independent voters needed to close the deal in November. Independent voters are independent for a reason. They are not driven to the polls by personal attacks. The message from both sides must be inspirational, focused and about the results that can be delivered for the American people.
Persons: I’ve, Donald Trump, Harris, , Tim Walz, ” Don’t Organizations: Republican, Independent, Republican Party, Gov Locations: Minnesota
The gist, vis-à-vis relationship status, was that in every category more women than men identify as Democrats, with the biggest gap existing among divorced Americans. According to Gallup, Cox writes, “A majority (54 percent) of divorced men identify as Republican compared to 41 percent of divorced women,” the largest gender gap among divorced people in two decades. As my colleague Thomas Edsall noted in May, in recent years there’s also a yawning gender gap among young voters, with young women becoming increasingly Democratic and young men becoming increasingly Republican. Edsall quoted the Democratic pollster Celinda Lake, who cites Donald Trump’s “chaotic and divisive style” and lack of respect, among the reasons that young women have been fleeing the G.O.P. Young women, Lake said, “want stability and are very concerned about division and the potential for violence.”All this data was collected when Joe Biden was on course to be the Democratic presidential nominee.
Persons: , , Daniel Cox, Cox, Thomas Edsall, there’s, Edsall, Donald Trump’s, Lake, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, JD Vance Organizations: Republican Party, Trump, Survey Center, Gallup, Democratic Locations: Young
Kamala Harris and the Race for Congress
  + stars: | 2024-07-29 | by ( German Lopez | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
With President Biden out of the 2024 race, Democrats aren’t just hoping to win the presidency. He ran behind congressional Democrats in polls. He could have cost his party otherwise winnable House and Senate races by causing Democratic-leaning voters to stay home. “And so they might not have shown up.”Much of what Kamala Harris and Donald Trump would do as president depends on which party controls Congress. The race for the Senate favors Republicans, but if Democrats forestall a wipeout, they could at least limit the G.O.P.’s agenda.
Persons: Biden, aren’t, , Amy Walter, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump Organizations: Senate, Democratic, Democrat
Vice President Kamala Harris is putting new and potentially significant energy into holding Donald Trump responsible for overturning Roe v. Wade and attacking him and the G.O.P. over abortion, in what Democrats hope will lead to robust turnout by women for Ms. Harris in November. Among those groups is Students for Life, whose president, Kristan Hawkins, spoke with me in April 2023. We talked then about the failure of state-level ballot measures to limit abortion and her work to push the G.O.P. Jane Coaston: I know you’re not entirely happy with the 2024 Republican platform.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Roe, Wade, Harris, Trump, Kristan Hawkins, Biden, Jane Coaston Organizations: Supreme, Life, Republican Party, Republican
Senator Mark Kelly, an Arizona Democrat under consideration to be Vice President Kamala Harris’s running mate, knows this expanse well — a fact that even the state’s Republicans acknowledge. mayor of Douglas, recounted a phone call with Mr. Kelly two weeks ago, when the two men talked through progress on making the small city an official, expanded port of entry into the United States. The senator has pushed hard for the move, and Mr. Huish has embraced it. “What gets me about Senator Kelly is, yes, we’re in touch with staff on the issues, but he personally calls me on a regular basis, and I feel comfortable calling him,” said Mr. Huish, who identifies as a strongly conservative Republican. “I’m sure he’s taken some heat from some of his party concerning the border, but he understands it.”
Persons: Mark Kelly, Kamala Harris’s, Donald Huish, Douglas, Kelly, Huish, , Organizations: Arizona Democrat, Republican Locations: Douglas, Ariz, Mexico, Arizona, United States
You may have heard about JD Vance’s “childless cat ladies” riff. It’s a statement, as my colleague Jessica Grose writes, that shows the desperation of Republicans who are still “clinging to the tag line that the G.O.P. It’s the kind of comment that makes you wonder if Vance thinks that he has been nominated by the Republican Party to serve as the vice president of the Republic of Gilead. Sorry — yes — Vance knows that our nation is still called the United States of America. But there’s a real “Handmaid’s Tale” vibe to a lot of what we’re hearing from the right.
Persons: JD Vance’s, Vance, they’ve, Kamala Harris, It’s, Jessica Grose, — Vance Organizations: Senate, Republican Party Locations: America, Republic of, United States of America
In the three days since President Biden announced he was quitting the 2024 race, Mr. Trump has entered foreign territory. But within 24 hours, Democratic leaders unofficially crowned Ms. Harris and stamped out any notable opposition. His team considered mounting legal challenges to her campaign committee to make it harder for Ms. Harris to hit the ground running. And Mr. Trump is still cycling through nicknames for Ms. Harris — a sign that he hasn’t yet figured out how he intends to portray her. And some Trump campaign officials have telegraphed plans to “Willie Horton” Ms. Harris.
Persons: Donald J, Biden, Trump, It’s, Kamala Harris, Mr, Biden’s, Harris, , , viscerally, jostled, Erin Schaff, Brian Hughes, ” Mr, Biden’s “ Cackling, Laffin ’ Kamala Harris, , Kamala ”, Hillary Clinton, Kamala, Alex Castellanos, that’s, Kevin McCarthy, Mike Johnson, Doug Mills, ” Liam Donovan, ” Guy Cecil, “ Kamala Harris, David McCormick, Biden’s frailty, Willie Horton ” Ms, Michael Dukakis, Horton, Dukakis, Hilary Rosen Organizations: Republican National Convention, Democratic, Sunday, Black, Trump, The New York Times, Mr, Republicans, Republican, Indian, Indian American U.S, New York Times, National Republican, “ Republicans, Green, MAGA Inc Locations: Wilmington, Del, Indian American, Grand Rapids, Mich, Credit, Charlotte, , Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, California
Recent polling suggests nearly 9 in 10 Americans believe Mr. Biden’s decision to step aside was the right one. 65 called Mr. Biden’s withdrawal a coup or said it amounted to election interference. These statements have tended to argue that Mr. Biden’s decision to end his candidacy was not his own, was not democratic or both. Some of this language began to bubble up among Republicans even before Mr. Biden announced that he would drop out. One common line of attack, positing that Ms. Harris failed as a “border czar,” is misleading.
Persons: , Joe Biden, , Harris, Kamala Harris, Biden’s, Harris’s, Biden, Mr, Biden —, , ’ Thomas Massie, Trump, ’ Mark Alford, Josh Hawley, Donald J, Chris LaCivita, Trump’s, , I’m, Biden Harris, he’s, ’ Eric Schmitt, Roger Marshall Senator, Kan, Kat, ‘ Kamala Harris, ’ Ron DeSantis, ’ Jack Bergman, ’ Mike Johnson, ‘ Where’s Biden, Nancy Mace, S.C, ’ Markwayne Mullin, Okla, ’ Lauren Boebert, ” Harris, Greg Abbott Governor, ’ Elise Stefanik, Cackling Kamala, ’ Warren, ‘ Fran, ’ Mike DeWine, ’ Lindsey Graham, ’ Lisa Murkowski Organizations: Left, New York Times, White, The Times, ’ Thomas Massie Representative, Republican, Convention, Biden, Kat Cammack, Fla, House, Democrats, Colo, Far Left Democrats ’, ’ Warren Davidson Representative Locations: Delaware, Covid, Ky, Mo, Fla, Washington, Greg Abbott Governor , Texas, Ohio, Alaska
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