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President-elect Donald Trump has carried Nevada over Vice President Kamala Harris in the presidential race, NBC News projects. Trump announced the proposal at a Las Vegas campaign rally in June. Harris visited Las Vegas several times, too, after she became the Democratic nominee in the summer. Trump won Nevada after six Republican “fake electors” were indicted last year on forgery charges over their alleged submission of fake certificates to Congress declaring Trump the winner in the state four years ago. Nevada relies heavily on mail-in voting, which Trump and Republican allies railed against in the 2020 election and since.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, — Trump, Joe Lombardo —, Republicans hadn’t, Harris, , Democrat Aaron Ford Organizations: NBC, White, Trump, Republican Party, Republican, GOP, Republicans, Las Vegas, Culinary Union, Democratic, Nevada, Democrat Locations: Nevada, Las Vegas
It faced a June 2025 deadline to complete the project, according to the federal indictment outlining grand jury charges against Lumumba, Owens and Banks. Lumumba faces five charges, including one count of federal program bribery and another count of money laundering. Banks has been charged with one conspiracy to commit federal program bribery, honest services wire fraud and money laundering, in addition to a count of federal program bribery. At least seven people have pleaded guilty in relation to the scandal. “This indictment is a horrible example of a flawed FBI investigation,” Owens told reporters after he pleaded not guilty Thursday.
Persons: JACKSON, , , Chokwe Antar Lumumba, , Lumumba, Jody Owens, Owens, Aaron Banks, Angelique Lee, Barbara Gauntt, Banks, Owens ’, Sherik Marve Smith, ” Smith, “ Banks, Jackson, ” Todd Gee, Ward, ” Owens Organizations: Miss, City, Democrat, Department of Housing, Urban, Banks, Jackson City, Clarion, Ledger, USA, Democratic, NBC, Authorities, Federal, Justice Department, FBI, Courthouse, , Southern, Southern District of, Locations: Mississippi’s, Jackson, Hinds, Nashville , Tennessee, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Owens, U.S, Southern District, Southern District of Mississippi, Africa
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — A Mexican national who is in the U.S. illegally was sentenced Thursday to 39 years in a Michigan prison for killing his girlfriend, a crime that suddenly was thrust into the U.S. presidential race because of the man’s immigration status. I apologize with the utmost respect to all immigrants from all walks of life,” Brandon Ortiz Vite told a judge in Grand Rapids. Ortiz Vite, 26, pleaded guilty in September to murder and other crimes. Ruby Garcia was found shot to death on the side of a Grand Rapids highway. “You, sir, are a cold-blooded murderer,” Judge Mark Trusock told Ortiz Vite.
Persons: ” Brandon Ortiz Vite, Ortiz Vite, Ruby Garcia, Donald Trump, Biden, it’s, Trump, Mark Trusock, ” Ortiz Vite, Organizations: U.S, AP Locations: GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, , U.S, Michigan, Grand Rapids, Grand
Trump is also wary of special elections to replace sitting lawmakers, especially in the Senate. has conveyed that he is not interested in entering the Trump administration, according to three sources familiar with the decision. Sessions, an adviser to Trump in 2016, was one of his earliest supporters when Trump elevated him from the Senate to run his Justice Department. The special election to replace him also turned into a centerpiece of Democratic organizing against Trump. Though the GOP won the special election narrowly, Republicans lost Price's congressional seat in the midterms and then watched Georgia turn blue in 2020.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Steven Mnuchin, Ben Carson, Jeff Sessions, recusing, Tom Price, Ryan Zinke of, Roy Moore, Moore, Sen, Eric Schmitt, Marco Rubio, Tom Cotton, Mike Waltz, Mike Pompeo, Trump’s, Cotton, Bill Clark, Donald Trump Jr, , Rubio, , I’m, ” Rubio, Pompeo, Sessions, Price, Zinke, Rick Scott's Organizations: White, Treasury Department, of Housing, Urban, Republican, Trump, CIA, Getty, Trump Jr, coy, NBC’s, Senate, Congress, Justice Department, GOP, Republicans, Interior Department Locations: Alabama, Ryan Zinke of Montana, United States, Georgia
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
Immune, immune, immune.”Justice Department ‘problem’But just how far that immunity extends is murky. The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision left many questions unanswered and lower courts have not yet wrestled with them. But the Supreme Court majority ruled that a president’s power to direct the Justice Department’s investigative and prosecutorial work is within his exclusive constitutional authority. While the Supreme Court granted former presidents wide immunity, the ruling made no such promises to aides in the White House or Justice Department. Even the conservative Supreme Court and several lower courts repeatedly blocked Trump, who according to a study last year had the worst win rate at the high court of any modern president.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith “, Joe Biden, , , Neil Eggleston, Obama, John Roberts, Biden, chafed, Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, Smith, It’s, Smith’s, Trump’s, Richard Painter, George W, Bush, Painter, ” Biden, Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Mark Meadows, ” Rod Rosenstein Organizations: CNN, White, , Navy, Department, Trump, Justice Department, Supreme Court Locations: Georgia
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
Trump has praised the leaders of many of these nations, especially Hungary’s far-right prime minister Viktor Orbán. Those angles include attacking journalists, discrediting their reporting, applying pressure on media owners to induce self-censorship, launching legal challenges, and leveraging wealthy allies to buy up media outlets to turn them into government mouthpieces. Those outlets were then centralized into the powerful media conglomerate, the Central European Press and Media Foundation (KESMA). That hub now controls roughly 500 outlets, Wójcik said, “consolidating the majority of pro-government media under a single entity.”The few remaining independent media outlets that continue to operate in the country “face challenges, including legal obstacles and broadcast license denials,” Wójcik said. Kamenchuk also expressed optimism that the “levers and limits” on the executive branch enshrined in US law will work to protect the free press.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Sharon Moshavi, “ It’s, , Viktor Orbán, , Moshavi, ” Moshavi, Olga Kamenchuk, Kamala Harris, Harris, ” Kamenchuk, ” Anne Applebaum, ” Applebaum, who’s, Orbán’s, Anna Wójcik, Orbán, Wójcik, ” Wójcik, Mikhail Zygar, Der Spiegel, Vladimir Putin, ” “ Putin, , Putin, A.G . Sulzberger, ” Sulzberger, Applebaum, it’s, Kamenchuk Organizations: New, New York CNN, International Center for Journalists, Northwestern University, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Kozminski University, , Central European Press and Media Foundation, “ Journalists, CBS, New York Times Locations: New York, Europe, United States, Russia, Hungary, India, Poland, Washington, authoritarians, Russian
In an election season in which both parties sought out any possible edge, Democrats clung to one seemingly clear-cut advantage: Celebrities including Taylor Swift and Bruce Springsteen broke hard for that party, even as voters did not. The result was a split-screen of American celebrity — two sets of famous people for two halves of the country. But by and large, the biggest names in entertainment said Vice President Kamala Harris should be elected to the nation’s highest office. Ms. Harris was decisively defeated on Tuesday, despite the backing of a megastar like Beyoncé. “America is tired,” wrote Albert Pennachio, an independent voter who lives in Statesville, N.C. “And we don’t care what celebrities think anymore.”
Persons: Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen, Donald J, Trump, Kanye, Mel Gibson, Jon Voight, Kamala Harris, Harris, , Albert Pennachio Locations: America, Statesville, N.C
Over 200,000 people looked up the “4B movement” on Google on Wednesday, making it one of the top trending topics on the online search engine. Of the female voters, 91% of Black women voted for Harris vs. 7% who voted for Trump, and 57% of college-educated white women voted for Harris vs. 41% who voted for Trump. Of the male voters, 37% of white men voted for Harris vs. 60% who voted for Trump, and 47% of college-educated white men voted for Harris vs. 50% who voted for Trump. Aleisa Mora, 30, posted a TikTok about the 4B movement in March after reading the English translation of the book “Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982” by Cho Nam-Joo, which is largely credited as the book that began the 4B movement. However, she said those comments only underscore her belief in why the 4B movement is needed in the United States.
Persons: Donald Trump, Meera Choi, , Choi, Kamala Harris, , Harris, Joe Biden, ” Choi, Yoon Suk Yeol, Aleisa Mora, Kim Jiyoung, Cho Nam, “ We’ve, Ahn Young, we’re, ’ ” Mora, Marykate Cecilia, , Cecilia, ” Cecilia Organizations: Google, Yale University, South, , Trump, NBC, Data, World Bank, U.S Locations: TikTok, South Korea, South Korean, United States, Seoul
“Our Executive Slaves will come get you in a Brown Van,” the message read, “be prepared to be searched down once you’ve enter the plantation.”A text message received by Monét Miller. But that day, with the climate and everything going on, I genuinely felt scared.”Black social media users across the country said they have received text messages similar to Miller’s. Various Clemson University students reported receiving the text messages, prompting a public statement from the school. It is unclear who is behind the mass text messages, what motivated them or how they obtained phone numbers for swaths of Black people. Although college students seem to be the most targeted with the texts, Black people of varying ages have reported receiving the messages.
Persons: Monèt Miller, Donald Trump, , Monét Miller, Monet Miller Miller, ” Miller, Domonique, ” Valles, “ TextNow, , Brian Hughes, Trump, ” Hughes, Corryn Freeman, ” Freeman, John Anthony, ” Anthony, ‘ let’s, Miller Organizations: White, Ohio State University, Clemson University, University of Southern, Missouri State University, NBC News, Kappa Alpha Psi, FBI, U.S . Department of Justice, & Safety, Police, , NAACP, Democrats weren’t, Black Republican, Federal Communications Commission Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Brown, South Carolina, University of Southern California, Domonique Valles, Virginia, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Illinois, Trump
In today’s edition, senior national political reporter Jonathan Allen explains why Democrats need to retool their economic message during Donald Trump's second term. Plus, senior national politics reporter Matt Dixon writes that the battle to succeed Trump in four years is already underway. How Trump broke both parties — and where Democrats go from hereBy Jonathan AllenOver the course of the last decade, President-elect Donald Trump broke both national political parties. Before Trump, Democrats nominated — and the country twice elected — Barack Obama, a candidate who ran against leaders that walked the country into forever wars and a finance-and-housing crisis that nearly toppled the economy. Harris’ economic policy offerings were largely expansions of Biden proposals, such as more generous homebuyer and child tax credits than he called for.
Persons: Jonathan Allen, Donald Trump's, Matt Dixon, Trump, Kristen Welker, Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s, , — Barack Obama, Cheney, Trump’s, Ronald Reagan, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Bill Buckner, omez Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Democratic Party, Trump, Democratic, Democrats, District of Columbia, Republican Party Locations: Minnesota
Donald Trump’s return to the presidency has done something no political opponent could: put an end date on his time atop the Republican Party. Trump single-handedly remade the Republican Party in his own image, not only becoming its unquestioned leader but also rewiring what the Grand Old Party stands for. “We are getting four more years of Trump and then eight years of JD Vance!” Trump Jr. said last week as he campaigned for Ohio Senate candidate Bernie Moreno. He had a shaky start, but he has steadied himself,” a veteran Republican operative said. “A Trump win means [the 2028] field will be slower to develop,” a longtime Republican operative said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, MAGA, Trump, , “ Trump, Reagan, JD Vance, Vance, Gene J, Donald Trump Jr, ” Trump, Bernie Moreno, “ JD, steadied, , Ron DeSantis, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Vivek Ramaswamy, Brian Kemp, Nikki Haley, Glenn Youngkin, Sen, Ted Cruz of, Tim Scott of, Ronald Reagan, ” DeSantis, I’m, “ Huckabee Sanders, , Huckabee Sanders, Ramaswamy, Haley, ” Haley, Dave McCormick can’t, Donald Trump Organizations: Republican Party, Trump, Old Party, Republicans, Republican, Trump Republicans, Reagan Democrats, Ohio, White House, Florida Gov, Georgia Gov, South Carolina Gov, Virginia Gov, Trump Republican, Gov, GOP, Trump ” Republicans Locations: Trump, Butler , Pennsylvania, Bedford , Pa, Arkansas, Georgia, Virginia, Ted Cruz of Texas, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Florida, Iowa, Ohio, South Carolina, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
An NBC News poll at that time showed that at least 20% of Black men would support Trump — an alarming number for Democrats. Harris introduced an Opportunity Agenda for Black Men, outlining what her administration would do to support that voting constituency that seemed movable. But that effort was one of the few that addressed Black men directly, he added. Black men younger than 30 and older than 65 were the most likely to support Harris at 78% and 87%, respectively. We must avoid casting Black men as scapegoats and saviors.”Jones added that the numbers should be considered with nuance.
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s, Kamala Harris, Harris, Alvin Tillery, , ” Tillery, Tillery, , Black, ” Darius Jones, ” Jones, Trump, ” Marcus Hans, Harris ’, ” Hans, ” Harris, NFL standouts Antonio Brown, Le’Veon Bell, Kamala ’ isn’t Organizations: NBC, Trump, Biden, Northwestern University, PAC, For Black Equity, Black, NBC News, National Empowerment, Action Fund, Democratic Party, Democrats, Howard University, NFL Locations: Tuesday’s
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden, addressing the nation after Donald Trump’s decisive victory over Vice President Kamala Harris, urged Americans on Thursday to “accept the choice the country made” while encouraging his supporters to “get back up.”“We accept the choice the country made,” he said in brief remarks from the White House Rose Garden. Instead, Trump expanded his base and captured several battleground states that Biden flipped in 2020: Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin. Biden also called Trump and congratulated him on his victory. “President Biden expressed his commitment to ensuring a smooth transition and emphasized the importance of working to bring the country together,” the White House said. “He also invited President-elect Trump to meet with him in the White House.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump’s, Kamala Harris, , , “ I’ve, Biden, Harris, Trump Organizations: WASHINGTON, White, Trump, Howard University Locations: America, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin
In the final weeks of the campaign, Trump kept supporters at a Michigan rally waiting for hours after he detoured to Texas to record Rogan’s show. And then many of them suddenly found themselves running Harris’ campaign. “This has been an historic partnership in which these teams have worked together extraordinarily well,” said a White House official who has been there from the beginning. “Not enough people understand the importance of that,” a Trump campaign official said of the Kennedy nod. It was the first energizing move that the campaign had since the switch-out.”A Democrat close to the Harris campaign said: “Brat summer had to end.
Persons: Barron Trump, Alex Bruesewitz, Trump, , Andrew Schulz, Theo Von, Mark Calaway, Joe Rogan, detoured, Harris, , Rogan, Harris ’, I’d, Ro Khanna, Biden, , Jesse Ferguson, Jen O’Malley Dillon, Obama, David Plouffe, Stephanie Cutter, Mark Cuban, Liz Cheney, Joe Biden’s, ‘ He’s, Ezra Levin, Trump’s, Robert Hur, indignantly, “ Nobody, ” Harris, Shuran Huang, Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, ’ ”, Joe Biden, “ Joe Biden, ” Biden, , Robert F, Kennedy Jr, jolt Trump, Tulsi Gabbard, Elon Musk, Kennedy, Biden’s, Word Organizations: Harris, Democratic, Trump Republicans, Trump, “ Staff, Democrat, Biden, DNC, White, Howard University, NBC News Biden, White House, RFK, McDonalds Locations: Michigan, Texas, , Pennsylvania,
Trump's second term likely means changes are on the way that will impact retailers. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementDonald Trump's return to the White House is likely to usher in sweeping changes that will impact retailers like Walmart, Target, and Costco — ranging from new tariffs to tax cuts and a new regulatory environment. Trump's campaign promises, along with his prior term record, offer some insights into what major retailers can expect from his second term. Advertisement"That's actually very unhelpful for a lot of retailers, especially in areas like technology, which a lot of retailers are involved," he said.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Donald Trump, Neil Saunders, it's, John David Rainey, Trump, Chris Walton, Walton, Jonathan Gold, Johns, Tinglong Dai, Saunders, He's, Lina Khan Organizations: Service, Walmart, Target, Costco, TractorTractor, Dick's Sporting Goods, Data, Omni, National Retail Federation, Trump, Pew Research, Federal, FTC, Kroger, Albertsons, Republican Locations: China, Johns Hopkins, Washington
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty ImagesDonald Trump's election victory over Vice President Kamala Harris marks a historic return to the White House — an extraordinary political comeback that is likely to have seismic ramifications for the global economy. The former president's litany of campaign pledges include steep tariffs, tax cuts, deregulation and a push to withdraw from key global agreements. Trump's favorite wordTrump has previously described "tariff" as his favorite word, calling it "the most beautiful word in the dictionary." And we don't see Trump's secondary tariff pledge — that baseline tariff, which would hurt European companies — as being all that feasible," Galbraith said. Analysts have warned that Trump's plan to impose universal tariffs are highly likely to raise prices for consumers and slow spending.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Trump, Lizzy Galbraith, Abrdn, Galbraith, CNBC's, Donald Trump, Ben May, Mitchell Reiss Organizations: Nurphoto, Getty, European Union, Bloomberg, Trump, Oxford Economics, Signum Global Advisors, Macquarie Group, Royal United Services Institute Locations: Binzhou, China, Florida, U.S, Mexico, Greensboro , North Carolina, Ukraine, Europe, Asia, Qingdao Port, Shandong province, Qingdao, American
The wealth of the world’s 10 richest people also soared by a record amount, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index. The biggest gainer was Elon Musk, the world’s richest person and one of Trump’s most outspoken and dedicated supporters, whose wealth jumped $26.5 billion to $290 billion Wednesday, according to Bloomberg. Truth Social owner Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump’s social media company, also cashed in with shares skyrocketing in value after CNN and other media outlets projected Trump won. Trump is the dominant shareholder in the conservative social media company, which has scant revenue and is losing money. The president-elect’s 114.75 million shares were worth about $5.3 billion briefly based on those early gains, up from $3.9 billion when trading ended on Election Day.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Kamala Harris, Larry Ellison, Trump, Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Warren Buffett, , Michael Block Organizations: New, New York CNN, Wednesday, Bloomberg, Amazon, Oracle, Microsoft, Berkshire Hathaway, Democratic, Social, Trump Media & Technology Group, CNN, Trump Locations: New York, Washington
Donald Trump's election win boosted tech stocks the next day, with Tesla leading the gains. Trump's past policies reshaped tech; his second term may impact Big Tech similarly. So what has the stock market told us so far about which Big Tech companies might be winners and losers during a Trump second term? Google gainsGoogle is somewhat surprising as a big stock gainer in the past two trading days. 'Shock absorber for the consumer'Slowinski highlighted other Big Tech stocks this week in his note to investors.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Tesla, , Donald Trump, Trump, Tim Cook, Ben Thompson, TSMC, Elon Musk, Elon, Ana Altchek, Stefan Slowinski, Mark Zuckerberg, Slowinski, Thompson, Slowinsky Organizations: Big Tech, Service, Trump, Apple, Google, Alphabet, BNP, Trump's, Democratic, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft Locations: China, Taiwan, Stratechery, North America
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
Democrats called for a full party reckoning on Wednesday, as they attempted to pick up the pieces of their shattered organization a day after Vice President Kamala Harris’ loss to former President Donald Trump. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., put out a statement blasting "big money interests and well-paid consultants who control the Democratic Party." "It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them," he said Wednesday. Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images“People needed to pick who was going to go after him,” the Harris ally said of prosecutors and Democrats. One Harris aide called for more diversity among decision-makers, pointing to a far too-white leadership makeup of Harris’ campaign and Biden’s former campaign.
Persons: Kamala Harris ’, Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s, It’s, , Nikki Budzinski, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Biden, Harris, Obama, , impeaching, Brendan Smialowski, can’t, That’s, Trump, They’ve, Jen O’Malley Dillon, O’Malley Dillon, weren’t, prepping Harris, , ’ ”, O'Malley Dillon, Harris ’, Sheila Nix, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Cedric Richmond, Vermont Sen, Peter Welch, , Welch, James Carville, Josh Shapiro, Gretchen Whitmer, JB Pritzker, Adam Jentleson, we’ve, what’s, ” Wade Randlett, “ Trump, Joe Biden, Joe, We’ve Organizations: Republicans, Trump, Illinois Democrat, Democratic Party, Democratic, Biden, Howard University, Wednesday, Getty, Democrat, Keystone Pipeline, America, Longtime, longtime Democratic Locations: Illinois, Trump, AFP, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Michigan, California
In today’s edition, we explore how Republicans are eyeing maintaining their current House majority and expanding their newfound Senate majority after Donald Trump's victory. But given Trump’s decisive victory over Vice President Kamala Harris, House Republicans are feeling bullish about their chances of preserving their slim majority. The party that will hold the majority in the House of Representatives in January 2025 has yet to be determined. Republican Tim Sheehy defeated Democratic Sen. Jon Tester in Montana, NBC News projected Wednesday morning, giving the GOP 52 Senate seats. And the races in Nevada between Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen and Republican Sam Brown and in Pennsylvania between Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and GOP challenger Dave McCormick are too close to call.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Scott Wong, Sahil Kapur, Kyle Stewart, Donald Trump, Will Trump, that’s, Trump, Mike Johnson, ” Johnson, Hakeem Jeffries, ” Jeffries, , Republican Tim Sheehy, Democratic Sen, Jon Tester, Tammy Baldwin, Eric Hovde, Elissa Slotkin, Mike Rogers, Ruben Gallego, Kari Lake, Jacky Rosen, Republican Sam Brown, Bob Casey, Dave McCormick, Read, → Harris, Natasha Korecki, ” Harris, Harris Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Kyle Stewart Republicans, White, Senate, Representatives, NBC News, House Republicans, , Republicans, Biden, Congressional, Democratic, GOP, Republican, Democratic Rep, Trump, Pennsylvania, mater Howard University Locations: Washington, West Palm Beach , Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, D, Virginia, Alabama, Louisiana, New York, Arizona , Oregon, Iowa, Southern California, Montana, Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada
Trump’s win came about with the help of Musk and his wealthy tech friends including investors Peter Thiel and David Sacks. They boosted Trump with financial contributions, fundraising help and public endorsements on subjects such as the economy and deregulation. Few other major tech executives publicly endorsed in the presidential race, though some of them made vague comments praising one or the other candidate. Trump has a complicated history with many tech CEOs. In their social media posts, several tech CEOs used the word “decisive” to describe Trump’s victory and they employed popular buzzwords like “innovation” in an apparent attempt to identify common ground.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy, Trump, ” Zuckerberg, ” Trump, Zuckerberg, , Musk, Trump’s, Peter Thiel, David Sacks, Bezos, Reid Hoffman, — wouldn’t, , bitcoin, Musk’s, Parler, Jeff, Mike Davis, Ivan Raiklin, Cook Organizations: Tech, Trump, titans, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, The Washington, Democratic, Trump’s, Pentagon, The Washington Post, III, Trump Tower, Google Locations: Silicon Valley, Butler , Pennsylvania, Tesla, Coinbase, County, State
For many Democratic voters, Vice President Kamala Harris' loss to Donald Trump was disappointing but not surprising, they said in interviews, agreeing that their party hadn't done enough to talk about the economy and lamenting lingering racism and sexism. Voters in Dearborn, America's only Arab-majority city, broke decisively for Trump over Harris, a departure from Joe Biden’s beating Trump there in 2020. "I was really praying that she would get it," said Deborah McKinnon, 68, a Black Democratic voter from Pittsburgh. "It just underscores that Black women are the most loyal Democrats, and they were the power behind Kamala Harris' campaign," Allison said. John Park, 37, a Black Democratic voter in suburban Atlanta, said that as a warehouse worker for an automotive company, he initially liked Trump's "pro-America" approach.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, Trump, Laytza Hernandez, , Hernandez, Sami Khaldi, Joe Biden’s, Khaldi, Biden, Luis Muza, Symone Sanders, Townsend, Sanders, “ Kamala, they're, Angela Weiss, MJay Hawkins, Hawkins, wasn’t, , Deborah McKinnon, Hillary, Clinton, Gary Tate, Tate, Aimee Allison, Allison, George W, Bush, John Park, Trump's, Steve Harvey's, Harvey, Park, Luis Cortés, Esperanza, Harris didn't, Cortés Organizations: Democratic, NBC, Trump, Arizona State University, Biden, Howard University, Washington , D.C, Getty, , Puerto Ricans Locations: Gaza, Dearborn , Michigan, Dearborn, America's, New York , Illinois, California, Milwaukee, Pennsylvania, Washington ,, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, America, Philadelphia
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