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Trump’s transition team includes close to 100 people, with some working at Mar-a-Lago and others at the campaign office in Palm Beach and in Washington. Andrew Harnik/Getty ImagesInside Trump’s transitionTrump’s transition effort had begun with relatively orthodox choices — including Wiles, who led Trump’s campaign, as chief of staff. Much like his defense secretary pick, Trump had also grown frustrated with his options for attorney general. The role of attorney general has long been viewed by Trump as one of, if not the, most important positions he would fill. CORRECTION: This story has been corrected to properly reflect the process by which Donald Trump considered candidates for attorney general.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Pete Hegseth, Tulsi Gabbard, Matt Gaetz, , Trump, firebrands —, elect’s, MAGA, , , ” Trump, Joe Biden, Mike Johnson, South Dakota Sen, John Thune, Elon Musk, Tesla, he’d, strode, Chris Christie’s, Susie Wiles, Wiles, Donald Trump, Andrew Harnik, Monday Trump, Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Gabbard, Steve Bannon, ” Bannon, Donald Trump Jr, Richard Grenell, Rubio, Tony Hinchcliffe denigrated, JD Vance, Vance, Brian Snyder, Department —, Kamala Harris, Mark Paoletta, Andrew Bailey, Justice Department —, Jeff Sessions, William Barr, Department’s, Kevin McCarthy, Todd Blanche, Blanche, Nathan Howard, Gaetz, McCarthy, ” Gaetz, Gaetz’s, “ We’re, ” Johnson, Trump’s, Alaska Sen, Lisa Murkowski, Justice Department . Maine Sen, Susan Collins, Texas Sen, John Cornyn, Thune, Sen, Mike Rounds, ” Rounds, Kaitlan Collins, Annie Grayer, Danya Gainor, Holmes Lybrand, Dana Bash, Haley Talbot, Jeremy Herb, Katie Bo Lillis, Ted Barrett, Manu Raju, Sarah Ferris, Pamela Brown Organizations: CNN, Fox News, Hawaii Democratic, Republican, , Wednesday, Washington, Hill, South, GOP, Elon, House Republicans, DC, SpaceX, Department of Government, Trump, New, New Jersey Gov, Mar, Hyatt, Monday, Democratic, Army National Guard, US Army Reserve, America, Florida Republican, Tony Hinchcliffe denigrated Puerto Ricans, State Department, Base Andrews, Reuters, Department, Justice Department, White House, Republicans, Capitol, U.S . Capitol, Senate, Justice Department ., Texas, South Dakota Republican Locations: Florida, Washington, South Dakota, Trump’s, New Jersey, Palm Beach, Washington ,, Syria, Russia, Tony Hinchcliffe denigrated Puerto, Madison, Maryland, U.S, Missouri, Manhattan, Trump, Alaska, Justice Department . Maine
In today’s edition, national political correspondent Steve Kornacki breaks down the blue areas across the country where Donald Trump expanded his coalition. These five jurisdictions help tell the story of where and how Trump expanded his coalition the most dramatically. When Trump ran in 2016, he was crushed in Lawrence, an old mill city on the Merrimack River, by 66 points. Trump transition watchPresident-elect Donald Trump is continuing the process of building out his administration, tapping allies for key posts. DeSantis does not have to listen to Trump, after the two men saw their relationship fray amid DeSantis’ national rise and his failed 2024 presidential campaign.
Persons: Steve Kornacki, Donald Trump, Matt Dixon, Trump's, Sen, Marco Rubio, Trump, Steve Kornacki Donald Trump, Biden, Harris, Loudoun, Democrats ’, Kristi Noem, Noem, Rubio, Mike Huckabee, Mike Waltz, Waltz, Christopher Wray, Wray, Kash Patel, Ron DeSantis, Lara, wouldn’t, Lara Trump, Trump’s, James Uthmeier, Commerce Wilbur Ross, Uthmeier, Read Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Trump, Puerto Ricans, Puerto Rico, GOP, Democrats, Democratic, Republican, South Dakota Gov, Department of Homeland Security, Foreign Relations, Intelligence, Arkansas Gov, Russia, CIA, Trump’s Cabinet, Florida Gov, Senate, State Department, Commerce Locations: Florida, Osceola County , Florida, Orlando, Puerto, Trump’s, Trump’s Puerto Rican, Lawrence , Massachusetts, Massachusetts, Lawrence, Merrimack, Loudoun County , Virginia, Rockland County , New York, New York City, Rockland, America, McKinley County , New Mexico, McKinley, New Mexico, Marco Rubio of Florida, U.S, Israel, China, Ukraine, Matt Dixon TALLAHASSEE, Fla
President-elect Donald Trump is planning to nominate South Dakota Republican Gov. Kristi Noem to serve as the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, according to four sources familiar with the decision. As Homeland Security secretary, Noem would oversee a number of key federal agencies including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the U.S. Secret Service, TSA and the Coast Guard. Noem has criticized President Joe Biden's handling of the border, echoing arguments made by Trump that violent criminals are flooding into the country. Similar to Trump's other allies, Noem had signaled support for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kristi Noem, Noem, Joe Biden's, Jan, Mike Pence Organizations: South Dakota Republican Gov, Department of Homeland Security, Homeland, . Immigration, Customs, . Customs, Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, Secret Service, TSA, Coast Guard, Oglala Sioux Tribe, Trump, Press, White, CNN Locations: U.S, Mexico, Texas, Oglala, South Dakota
In Trump’s second term, czars will reign
  + stars: | 2024-11-12 | by ( Kayla Tausche | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
CNN reported on Friday that Burgum was under consideration for a role as energy czar. “It’s sort of the conservative version of [the Biden administration’s senior climate advisor] John Podesta,” one of the sources said. Burgum had been in contention for a Cabinet-level position, like running the department of Interior or Energy, CNN previously reported. It also means those candidates – not burdened by a lengthy Senate confirmation process – can launch their work on day one. Alex Wong/Getty ImagesThe term “czar” has come to refer to a political appointee with a specific problem to solve.
Persons: , Doug Burgum, Donald Trump’s, Burgum, John Podesta, , ’ ”, Alex Wong, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, czars, Trump, Trump’s, Elise Stefanik, Stephen Miller, Tom Homan, Homan, , ” Trump, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, you’re Organizations: CNN, Trump, North, Biden, Interior, Energy, North Dakota Gov, Republican National Convention, State, Treasury, Republican, United Nations, White, Customs, Department of Homeland Security, Former ICE, Border Control, Trump Administration, Aviation Security, Truth, Locations: North Dakota, Milwaukee , Wisconsin, Guantanamo, Trump
CNN —President-elect Donald Trump has selected South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as his next secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, according to two people familiar with the selection. Noem will be tapped to take over the agency as two key immigration hardliners — Stephen Miller and Tom Homan — are slated to serve in senior roles, signaling Trump is serious about his promise to crack down on his immigration pledges. With his selection of Noem, Trump is ensuring a loyalist will head an agency he prioritizes and that is key to his domestic agenda. The department saw an immense amount of turmoil the last time Trump was in office.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kristi Noem, — Stephen Miller, Tom Homan —, Trump, Noem Organizations: CNN, South Dakota Gov, Department of Homeland Security, Trump, DHS, Customs, Border Protection, Customs Enforcement, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Service, The Guardian Locations: South Dakota
CNN —Plenty of House Republicans are privately jockeying for President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet. “I have 10 colleagues who think they’re going to the Cabinet,” one House GOP lawmaker quipped, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal dynamics. But you’re not going to let three or four go.”Inside the House GOP, many lawmakers and senior aides have long assumed Stefanik would go to the Cabinet. She and Texas Rep. Ronny Jackson, Trump’s former physician, are considered to have some of the tightest relationships between Trump and the House GOP. And privately, Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Cory Mills have also expressed interest, according to a Florida GOP source.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, There’s, Mike Johnson can’t, Elise Stefanik, Mike Waltz, Mike Rogers, Sam Graves —, won’t, Johnson, , Kelly Armstrong, , Mike, that’d, we’ve, you’re, Ronny Jackson, George W, Bush, Trump, Matt Gaetz, Brian Mast, Byron Donalds, Carlos Gimenez, Greg Steube, Anna Paulina Luna, Cory Mills, Garret Graves, Matt Rosendale, Florida Sen, Marco Rubio, Bill Hagerty, Mike Lee of, Tom Cotton of, Eric Schmitt of Organizations: CNN, of, Republicans, Trump, Monday, New York, Florida, Armed, GOP, North, , Texas, Green Beret, Florida GOP, Transportation, Department of Veterans Affairs, Eric Schmitt of Missouri Locations: Washington, North Dakota, Afghanistan, East, Africa, Florida, Garret Graves of Louisiana, Matt Rosendale of Montana, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Sens, Tennessee, Mike Lee of Utah, Tom Cotton of Arkansas
Pushing the funding fight to next year would put Trump in position to have far greater say. Congress faces a jam-packed to-do list of critical legislative items, including the annual defense policy bill. The next Trump loyalty test – who will lead the Senate GOP? The new Senate GOP leader will be elected by secret ballot, meaning no one will know who voted for which candidate. The House and Senate are only expected to be in session for two weeks before leaving for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Persons: Donald Trump won’t, Trump, Mike Johnson, Johnson, , Kelly Armstrong, , Trump’s, Dusty Johnson of, “ I’m, Mitch McConnell, John Thune of, John Cornyn of, Rick Scott, McConnell, , ” Thune, Cornyn, ” Scott, Scott, Sens, Marco Rubio, Tommy Tuberville, Bill Hagerty, Ron Johnson, they’d, haven’t, Elon Musk, Musk, Hakeem Jeffries, There’s, Alayna Treene Organizations: CNN, White House, Capitol, Republican Party, GOP, Trump, North, Republican, Senate, Florida Republican, Democratic, Republicans, National Defense, Department of Defense Locations: North Dakota, Dusty Johnson of South Dakota, Sens, John Thune of South Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, Florida, Marco Rubio of Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Washington, United States
Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the campaign trail, the White House and Capitol Hill. In today’s edition, senior political editor Mark Murray breaks down how 2024 was the sixth "change" election in a row as voter dissatisfaction with the direction of the country remains high. They culminated in the nation’s sixth straight “change” election, in which either the White House or at least one chamber of Congress switched party control. Trump won those “change” voters by 50 points, 74% to 24%. Read more →Trump’s win has sparked fresh concerns among his critics that he may enter office looking for retribution.
Persons: Mark Murray, MAGA, Donald Trump’s, , Barack Obama, Trump, Joe Biden, Trump’s, Kamala Harris, , Sahil Kapur, Matt Dixon, Julie Tsirkin, Donald Trump’s “ MAGA ”, Mitch McConnell, John Thune of, Sen, John Cornyn of, Rick Scott of Florida, ” Scott, , Scott —, Scott, leapfrog, hasn’t, , Read, Elise Stefanik, Lee Zeldin, Tom Homan, Stephen Miller, 🗞️, : the, lea Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Republican, Senate, GOP, Republicans, White, Trump, Democratic, Voters, McConnell, NBC News, House Republican Conference, United Nations, Environmental Protection Agency, . Immigration, Customs Enforcement, rit, upr Locations: Kentucky, John Thune of South Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, New York
Pennsylvania's hotly contested Senate race hangs in the balance nearly a week after Election Day, with Republicans declaring victory and Democrats holding out hope that the remaining batch of outstanding ballots will allow them to close the gap. A McCormick victory would further pad Republicans' newfound majority in the Senate, where they will hold at least 52 seats after the election. But even before the new Congress is sworn in next January, the outcome of the Pennsylvania race could have implications for the Senate leadership elections Wednesday. Pennsylvanians can cast provisional ballots when officials are unclear about their eligibility or there were issues with their returned mail-in ballots. McCormick’s campaign filed two lawsuits Friday challenging an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 provisional ballots in Philadelphia that may have issues, such as missing signatures.
Persons: Pennsylvania's, Democratic Sen, Bob Casey, Dave McCormick, McCormick, Casey, Sen, Casey's, Maddy McDaniel, Donald Trump's, Mitch McConnell, Chuck Schumer, John Thune of, Schumer, ” Sen, Tom Cotton, Alex Nguyen, Ruben Gallego, Republican Kari Lake, McCormick’s, John Fetterman, Republican Mehmet Oz, What’s, Kamala Harris Organizations: NBC News, Democratic, Associated Press, GOP, Fox News, Senate, Republicans, Arizona Democratic, Republican, NBC, U.S, Supreme, Pennsylvania, Trump Locations: Washington, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, John Thune of South Dakota
Elon Musk wants Rick Scott to be the next Senate majority leader. "Rick Scott for Senate Majority Leader!" Rick Scott for Senate Majority Leader! Both Cornyn and Thune served as deputies to McConnell when he was Senate majority leader. AdvertisementPresident-elect Donald Trump has yet to endorse a candidate, but wrote in an X post on Sunday that the next Senate majority leader should support his recess appointments.
Persons: Elon Musk, Rick Scott, Scott, John Cornyn, John Thune, Mitch McConnell, , Elon, Sen, Rick Scott of, lpT34yHTKk — Elon, John Thune of, John Cornyn of, Mitch McConnell of, Cornyn, Thune, McConnell, Donald Trump, Musk, — Donald J, Scott's, Trump, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Zelenskyy Organizations: Service, GOP, Musk, Business, Republican Party clinched, United States, Trump, SpaceX, America PAC, PAC, The New York Times Locations: Rick Scott of Florida, John Thune of South Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Turkish, Ukraine
Democrats are, meanwhile, coming to terms with the massive fallout of their failure to stop Trump’s return to power, even as they dissolve into self-recrimination. They lack a clear leader to revive their message or a platform of power if Republicans retain control of the House. Establishing dominance over Washington Republicans: Trump has been mostly behind closed doors since his victory rally last week. Trump is promising to return to the volatile foreign policy that defined his first term — and then some. The conundrum facing US allies was laid out by French President Emmanuel Macron, who rode the Trump first-term rollercoaster.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Mike Pompeo, Nikki Haley, Elise Stefanik, rouser Elon Musk, Volodymyr Zelensky —, Joe Biden —, Susie Wiles, Pompeo, Haley, Roger Stone, MAGA, , ” Trump, Tony Carrk, Elect Trump, Florida Sen, Rick Scott —, Vivek Ramaswamy —, Dakota Sen, John Thune, Texas Sen, John Cornyn, Thune, Cornyn, , Washington, trepidation, Jim Jordan, Dana Bash, Jordan, Jack Smith, Musk, Trump —, Vladimir Putin, Emmanuel Macron, Macron, ” Macron Organizations: CNN, White, Republicans, GOP, United, New York, Trump, Pentagon, Overseas, peerless, CIA, South Carolina governor’s, Washington Republicans, Republican, United States, Democrats, Union, Ohio Republican, SpaceX Locations: Florida, United Nations, Europe, Taiwan, Iran, Russia, United States, Arizona, Washington, South Carolina, New York, ., Dakota, Texas, “ State, China
Elon Musk and other MAGA figures are onto a new fight: Who will be the next Senate Majority Leader. John Thune and John Cornyn. AdvertisementWith President-elect Donald Trump now on his way to the White House, his allies are settling on a new target: Getting a loyalist installed as Senate Majority Leader. Ahead of Mitch McConnell's long-awaited retirement from leadership, Republicans are set to choose a new leader on Wednesday of this week. John Thune of South Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, and Rick Scott of Florida.
Persons: Elon Musk, MAGA, Sen, Rick Scott, Sens, John Thune, John Cornyn, Trump, , Donald Trump, Mitch McConnell's, John Thune of, John Cornyn of, Rick Scott of, Scott, Tucker Carlson, Robert F, Kennedy, Jr, Scott isn't, Kevin McCarthy, there's Elon Musk, Musk, Elon, Trump's, Cornyn, they'll, McConnell, that's, That's Organizations: Service, White, Republicans, Trump, GOP, Business, Senate Trump, Capitol, Republican, Punchbowl News Locations: Sens, John Thune of South Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, Rick Scott of Florida, Florida, Texas, Ukraine
"Any Republican Senator seeking the coveted LEADERSHIP position in the United States Senate must agree to Recess Appointments (in the Senate! One of the demands he outlined is the ability to make recess appointments, which would allow the president to appoint people to senior administration positions and bypass Senate confirmation. In 2020, during the throes of the Covid pandemic, Trump threatened to unilaterally adjourn Congress so he could make recess appointments, but the threat never materialized. Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images fileScott quickly weighed Sunday, writing on X that he agrees with Trump about recess appointments. “The Constitution expressly confers the power on the President to make recess appointments,” he wrote in the post.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Barack Obama, Mitch McConnell of, de, GOP Sens, John Cornyn of, Rick Scott of Florida, John Thune of, Sen, Rick Scott, Bill Clark, Scott, Cornyn, , ” Thune, , Schumer, McConnell, Republican Sens, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Tommy Tuberville, Marco Rubio, Bill Hagerty, Josh Hawley, Thune, Mike Lee, Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer Organizations: United States, Senate, adjourn, GOP, Inc, Getty, Trump, Democrats, Republican, CNBC, NBC News, White, Republicans Locations: Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, John Cornyn of Texas, John Thune of South Dakota, Alabama, Marco Rubio of Florida, Tennessee, Utah
During Trump’s first term, for example, he was blocked by the Senate from using recess appointments to replace then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Florida Sen. Rick Scott on Sunday quickly posted on X endorsing Trump’s post : “100% agree. The question of recess appointments will now throw a major wrench in the Senate GOP’s leadership election when senators return to Washington this week. Recess appointments were once controversial, last-ditch efforts for presidents to install their nominees after facing long confirmation odds in the Senate. When senators left town, the Senate held a “pro forma” session to prevent any recess appointments.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , , , ” Trump, , Jeff Sessions, Florida Sen, Rick Scott, Elon Musk, Dakota Sen, John Thune, who’s, Schumer, ” Thune, Sen, John Cornyn of, Biden’s, George W, Bush, John Bolton, Harry Reid, Mitch McConnell, Barack Obama, CNN’s Ted Barrett, Sarah Ferris Organizations: CNN, GOP, Trump –, Republican, United States, Capitol Hill, Sunday, Florida Republican, Republicans, Democratic, United Nations, Democrat, Senate, Supreme Locations: Florida, , Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, Washington, United
In terms of the Electoral College, Trump is on track to win 312 electoral votes if his lead in Arizona holds. It would be a better showing than either his or Joe Biden’s 306 electoral votes in 2016 and 2020, respectively. But it would be far short of Barack Obama’s 365 electoral votes in 2008 and 332 in 2012. Bill Clinton never reached 50% in the popular vote because both of his presidential elections featured a strong third-party candidate in Ross Perot. But Clinton did run away with the Electoral College vote, winning 370 electoral votes in 1992 and 379 in 1996.
Persons: CNN — Donald Trump, , he’ll, Trump, it’s, Joe Biden’s, George W, Barack Obama’s, Bill Clinton, Ross Perot, Clinton, Ronald Reagan’s, Reagan, Walter Mondale, Richard Nixon, Lyndon B, Johnson, Sen, George McGovern, Nixon, Grover Cleveland Organizations: CNN, Republicans, Representatives, University of Florida, Electoral College, Trump, Electoral, Democratic, DC, Democrat, House, Senate, White, White House, Republican Locations: California, Washington and Utah, Arizona, Washington, Minnesota, South Dakota, Massachusetts
For the second time in eight years, the highest, hardest glass ceiling survived millions of tiny cracks, once again testing the optimism of those who hope to see the first female president elected. The late Rep. Shirley Chisholm, a former New York congresswoman, became the first Black woman to seek the office in 1972. “I’m ready for a female president, I just don’t think that most of America is yet, and I don’t know why,” she said. In the Senate, Angela Alsobrooks will be the first Black woman to represent Maryland and Lisa Blunt Rochester will be the first woman to represent Delaware. Together, the two Democrats will be the first two Black women to serve in the chamber at the same time.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Janet Edwards, Harris, “ I’m, ” Edwards, , Donald Trump, Shirley Chisholm, ” Harris ’, Chisholm, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Clinton, Joe Biden, , Trump, Clinton –, Melinda Corey, , ” Priya Lewis, Kamori Thomas, Howard University – Harris, alma, Thomas, ” Thomas, ” Lewis, Harris –, “ We’ve, Kelly Dittmar, Dittmar, Harris ’, Nadia Brown, Brown, Angela Alsobrooks, Lisa Blunt Rochester, Republican Julie Fedorchak, Sarah McBride of, David Axelrod, , I’ve, Axelrod, – Harris, who’d, ” Harris, Christina Reynolds, doesn’t Organizations: CNN, Howard University, , White House, Victoria, Equal Rights Party, Democratic, Trump, Center for American Women, Georgetown University, “ Research, House, Republican, Democratic National Convention Locations: Washington, Italy, North Macedonia, Mexico, New York, America, , Maryland, Delaware, Sarah McBride of Delaware, DC
Commentators and academics have been weighing in on why Donald Trump won the US election. The images of him bleeding after a failed assassination attempt became the symbol of what supporters saw as a campaign of destinyHow Mr. Trump won is also the story of how Ms. Harris lost. Laurel Duggan, UnHerdWhy white women stuck with TrumpAdvertisementThe abortion issue had seemingly little impact on Republicans's performance with white women in this cycle. Nate Silver, founder of FiveThirtyEight and author of the Silver Bulletin newsletterSilver republished a lengthy blog post from late October with the new title "24 reasons that Trump won." Nate Silver offered up 24 reasons why Trump won.
Persons: Donald Trump, , There's, Donald Trump's, They've, Kamala Harris, Frank Bruni, Let's, Harris, aren't, Hannibal Lecter, Trump, Allysia Finley, Taylor Swift, Taylor, Swift, they'd, I'd, Sarah Baxter, Mueller, Francis Fukuyama, Ankush Khardori, Politico Trump, Shane Goldmacher, Maggie Haberman, Jonathan Swan, MAGA, Biden's, John Burn, Alexandra Ulmer, Gram Slattery, Elon Musk, Jim VandeHei, Mike Allen, Axios, David Weigel, Annie Lowrey, Biden, Gerard Baker, Hitler, Laurel Duggan, UnHerd, Sen, Chuck Schumer, Todd Landman, Evan Vucci Steve Hanke, Ronald Reagan, Steve Hanke, Reagan, Steve Hanke Nate Cohn, Tina Fordham, Trump's, Nate Silver, FiveThirtyEight, AP Matthew Yglesias, Yglesias, overperform electorally, Dominic Sandbrook, Sandbrook, Hillary Clinton, Tom Williams, Eric Cortellessa, Musk, Eric Cortellessa's Organizations: Service, Democratic, The New York Times Democrats, Trump, Street, Democrats Get, demeaned, Democrats, Financial, Republican, Biden, The New York Times, Trump Won, Republican Party, Britain's, Reuters Trump, White, Republicans —, Trump Republicans, Semafor, The Atlantic Voters, The, Democrat, Republicans, University of Nottingham, AP, Johns Hopkins University, Silver Locations: Trump, Ukraine, White, London, Florida, South Dakota, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Washington, New York City, San Francisco, Israel, California
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump’s dramatic victory has scrambled next week’s three-way contest to replace Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, the chamber’s longest-serving leader who is stepping down at the end of the year. One ally of both Scott and Trump, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., urged Trump to endorse Scott, a former Florida governor who cruised to re-election in the Senate on Tuesday night. “If you’ve got any influence with President Trump, ask President Trump to come out publicly and say he wants to work with somebody as accomplished as Rick Scott to accomplish his agenda. Cornyn joined Trump at a rally in Reno, Nevada, last month for Republican Senate candidate Sam Brown, whose race is currently too close to call, according to NBC News projections. "As I told President Trump, I'm interested in getting the band back together again," Cornyn told Fox News host Neil Cavuto on Monday.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Mitch McConnell, McConnell’s, John Thune, Sen, John Cornyn, , Rick Scott, John, John Barrasso, McConnell, Scott, Trump, ” Scott, , ” Trump, Ron Johnson, you’ve, President Trump, We’ve, ” Johnson, , — it’s, it’s, Mike Lee, Bernie Moreno, Tim Sheehy of Montana, Jim Justice, Thune, ” Thune, he’s, ” Thune’s, Tim Scott, Cornyn, Trump’s, Sam Brown, I'm, Neil Cavuto, MAGA, Ted Cruz Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republican, Republicans, GOP, GOP Conference, Trump, NBC News, McConnell, Fox Business, United States Senate, CNBC, NBC, Fox News, National Republican Senatorial, Senate, Texas Republican Locations: South Dakota, Texas, Florida, Wyoming, Washington, Utah, Bernie Moreno of Ohio, West Virginia, Lago, Reno , Nevada
Traditionally Republicans have been more significant friends of the oil and gas industry. Increasing domestic oil production would theoretically achieve several goals for the new administration: increase domestic economic activity and employment, increase domestic energy security, and lower oil and gas prices. Interestingly, oil and gas production in the United States right now, the world's largest producer, has never been higher, and oil and gas prices, while well above pre-COVID levels, have stabilized. The incoming Trump administration will likely reduce federal regulations on drilling, pipeline development, and environmental protections that limit the expansion of oil and gas projects. This infrastructure investment benefits the oil services industry by enabling more accessible transport and new development projects, which Biden canceled.
Persons: Trump, Kamala Harris's, Biden, YTD We'll Organizations: Republicans, Trump, Keystone XL, Dakota, Schlumberger, Schlumberger Ltd, HAL, CNBC, NBC UNIVERSAL Locations: Pennsylvania, United States, North, Halliburton, North America
Matt Wurnig is the creator of the online series 50 Dates 50 States. Wurnig, 28, has been on a date in every state at least twice. He told BI his favorite date spots around the country include hot air ballooning in New Mexico. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Wurnig is the creator of the online series 50 Dates 50 States, which, yes, is exactly what it sounds like.
Persons: Matt Wurnig, , Wurnig, Melissa Hobley Organizations: Service, Pew Research Center, Bismarck Larks, YouTube Locations: New Mexico, Los Angeles , New York, Miami, Dallas, North Dakota, Montana
But over four successive election cycles — the 2018 midterms, the 2020 election, the 2022 midterms, and this year's election — Trump has steadily remade the party in his image. Related Video Chaos reigns at GOP debate as Trump skips out"This Republican Party is not the Republican Party of 2010," said Daniel Schuman, a Congress expert and the Executive Director of the American Governance Institute. While Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell's disdain for Trump is well known, his two most likely successors — Sens. That includes all but two of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach him after January 6. One proxy for this divide is the issue of Ukraine: Just over half of House Republicans voted against a more than $60 billion Ukraine aid package last year, while most Senate Republicans voted for it.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, — Trump, Daniel Schuman, It's, Paul Ryan, Mike Johnson, Ryan, Johnson, he's, Mitch McConnell's, — Sens, John Thune of, John Cornyn, Ryan Williams, Mitt Romney's, Schuman, Brent Griffiths Organizations: Republicans, Trump, Service, GOP, Republican, Republican Party of, American Governance Institute, Senate, Republican Party Locations: Manhattan, John Thune of South Dakota, Texas, Congress, Ukraine
Constitutional amendments to protect or expand abortion passed in seven of the 10 states where they appeared on the ballot Tuesday, NBC News projects. Voters in Arizona and Missouri approved ballot initiatives that will effectively protect abortion rights until fetal viability and undo existing abortion laws on the books. But voters in Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota rejected proposed amendments that would have done the same — becoming the first pro-abortion-rights ballot measures to fail since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022. The other amendment, that would have enshrined abortion rights until fetal viability in the conservative state’s constitution, was rejected. The defeats of the amendments in Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota ended what had been an unbroken winning streak for ballot measures backing abortion rights in the 2½ years since the fall of Roe.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Organizations: NBC, Voters, Locations: Arizona, Missouri, Florida , Nebraska, South Dakota, Maryland , Montana , Nevada, New York, Colorado, In Nebraska, In Florida, Florida
Montana voters approved a ballot measure enshrining abortion in the state constitution, NBC News projects, delivering a victory to advocates for reproductive rights in a Western red state. The amendment will not change current law on abortion in Montana: Abortion is legal in the state until fetal viability, around the 23rd or 24th week of pregnancy, backed up by a 1999 ruling by the state Supreme Court. But advocates for the ballot measure wanted to guard against potential changes by the Legislature or state Supreme Court justices in the heavily Republican state. The measure also prevents the government from “penalizing patients, healthcare providers, or anyone who assists in exercising their right to make and carry out voluntary decisions about their pregnancy.”The ballot measure required a simple majority to pass. Nine other states considered constitutional amendments concerning abortion rights in this election: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New York and South Dakota.
Organizations: NBC News Locations: Montana, , , Arizona , Colorado , Florida , Maryland , Missouri , Nebraska , Nevada , New York, South Dakota
South Dakotans voted down a ballot measure that would have put abortion rights in the state constitution, instead keeping the state’s near-total ban on abortion. Voters have overturned state abortion bans in a number of red states since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, but South Dakota is an extremely conservative state. Life Defense Fund first sued Dakotans for Health in June, challenging the abortion petition signatures the organization submitted to the state. A judge dismissed the motion, which prompted Life Defense Fund to file an appeal in state Supreme Court. A state Supreme Court justice kicked it back to a lower court.
Persons: Dakotans, , Roe, Wade, Court’s Dobbs, Donald Trump Organizations: Health, Life Defense Fund, Life Defense Locations: South Dakota
Missouri voters approved a ballot measure enshrining abortion rights in the state constitution, NBC News projects, effectively undoing the state’s near-total abortion ban and delivering a victory to abortion rights activists. In early September, a circuit court judge ruled that the campaign did not meet legal requirements to qualify for the ballot. But the state Supreme Court soon stepped in, reversing that judgment and clearing the way for the amendment to go before voters. Missouri joins a string of red states where voters have acted to expand abortion rights after state legislatures passed bans following the 2022 Dobbs decision. Nine other states considered constitutional amendments concerning abortion rights in this election, including Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York and South Dakota.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Dobbs Organizations: NBC News, U.S, Supreme, Missouri Locations: Missouri, Arizona , Colorado , Florida , Maryland , Montana , Nebraska , Nevada , New York, South Dakota
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