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CNN —Republicans flipped the Senate, but Democratic candidates often outran the top of the ticket, winning at least four battleground states that Vice President Kamala Harris lost. Harris lost all seven swing states to President-elect Donald Trump, while her party’s Senate candidates narrowly held Wisconsin, Nevada and open seats in Michigan and Arizona. In some races, the differences between the Senate candidates’ and Harris’ performances were more pronounced among subsections of the Democratic coalition. While Trump won independents by 2 points, Rosen won the group by 6. Overall, Democratic Senate candidates received more votes than Harris in about half of this year’s races, including in less competitive states such as Minnesota, Virginia and Missouri.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Donald Trump, Trump, Elissa Slotkin –, Michigan Sen, Debbie Stabenow –, Sen, Tammy Baldwin, Republican Eric Hovde, Jacky Rosen, Republican Sam Brown, Ruben Gallego, Kyrsten Sinema, Republican Kari Lake, Gallego, , Rosen, Brown, – Jon Tester, Sherrod Brown, Ohio –, Tester, Republican Tim Sheehy, Republican Bernie Moreno, , , Matt Bennett, Moreno, Sheehy, Larry Hogan, Hogan, Angela Alsobrooks, Mike Berg, ” Berg, Joe Manchin, Manchin, Democratic Sen, Bob Casey, Dave McCormick, Republican Mitt Romney, Maine Sen, Susan Collins, Biden, Barack Obama, ” David Bergstein, Democrats ’, Republicans ’, Joe Biden, Baldwin, Casey, Slotkin, ” Rosen Organizations: CNN, Republicans, Democratic, Senate, Republican, Trump, Michigan, Lake, Montana, Trump voters, Overall, Gov, National Republican Senatorial, Center, Politics, University of Virginia, Democrats, Biden, Law, Convention, White, Democratic Senate Locations: Wisconsin, Nevada, Michigan, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Michigan , Wisconsin, In Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, Virginia, Missouri, Maryland, West Virginia, Maine, Casey, Las Vegas
For some who’ve run afoul of Trump, the election results have sparked fresh worries that he may enter office looking for retribution. During the campaign, Trump has made different statements about whether he might target people who’ve upset him. Rep. Jim Jordan, a staunch Trump ally in Congress, said he doesn’t expect any of the prosecutors to face reprisals over Trump investigations. One former Trump White House official who has publicly spoken against Trump described feeling “scared” and declined to let their name be used. Now Fanone says he is hunkering down in his Virginia mountain-area home for fear that Trump could weaponize the police.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Olivia Troye, Trump, “ I’m, I’ll, ” Troye, , He’s, he’s, he’ll, Joe Biden, Biden, , haven’t, Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Jack Smith, Smith, Jim Jordan, ” Jordan, Richard Nixon, ” Nixon, Mark Zaid, ” Zaid, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Alvin Hellerstein, who’ve, yank, JD Vance, Joe Biden’s, Hunter, Vance, podcaster Joe Rogan, ” Larry Pfeiffer, won’t, aren’t, ” Trump, Schiff, Pelosi, Dan Goldman, Trump’s, ” It’s, it’s, Michael Fanone, Fanone, “ I’ll, Hunter Biden, what’s, “ We’re, they’re, John Bolton, Bolton, Ronald Reagan’s, I’m, Susie Wiles, Pat Summerall, Jared Moskowitz, Aquilino, ” Gonell, Kamala Harris, Gonell Organizations: Trump, Democratic, White, Fox News, Sunday, CNN, Washington, CIA, Los Angeles Times, New York Democrat, Joe Biden weaponized, Department of Justice, Justice, Trump White House, D.C, Washington Post, Justice Department, NFL, , U.S . Capitol, Capitol Locations: United States, America, California, Manhattan, U.S, Virginia
Meet the Press – November 10, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +56 min
ANNOUNCER:From NBC News in Washington, the longest-running show in television history, this is Meet the Press with Kristen Welker. In a Meet the Press interview during his 2016 run, he suggested that his insurgent bid could generate cross-party appeal. AMY WALTER:Yeah, and the other thing that, you know, Democrats have been dining off the anti-Trump coalition now since 2017. RAMESH PONNURU:I think Democrats wildly overestimated the power of the abortion issue to drive candidate choice as opposed to referendum. There would be pressure on the president, President Biden, to not run for reelection.
Persons: KRISTEN WELKER, DONALD TRUMP, PRES, JD VANCE, Donald Trump, KAMALA HARRIS, Kamala Harris, JOE BIDEN, John Barrasso of, Bernie Sanders, Garrett Haake, Amy Walter, Ramesh Ponnuru, María Teresa Kumar, it’s, Kristen Welker, Trump, SEN, TED, JOHN MORENO, JD Vance, MIKE JOHNSON, Biden, they've, NANCY PELOSI, Kamala, DEBBIE DINGELL, RITCHIE TORRES, DAVID AXELROD, ALEXANDRIA OCASIO, unquote, JON FAVREAU, Joe Biden's, JON LOVETT, Joe Biden, , “ It's, … they're, I'm, Steve Kornacki, STEVE KORNACKI, Kristen, , Trump's, That's, You've, Donald Trump's, Harris, Barack Obama, John McCain, it's, Steve, They're, you've, Barrasso, Press . SEN, JOHN BARRASSO, Bill Clinton “, ” Donald Trump, JOHN, We've, He's, we've, that's, Lindsey Graham, He'll, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Trump hasn't, Susie Wiles, we're, President Trump, John Kennedy, Bobby, Sanders, BERNIE SANDERS, Let's, Nancy Pelosi, I’m, James Carville, JAMES CARVILLE, I've, Sotomayor, Garrett, he's, GARRETT HAAKE, John Barrasso, Paul Ryan's, Amy, AMY WALTER, – KRISTEN WELKER, It's, , María Teresa, David Noriega, Mario, DAVID NORIEGA, MIREYA ALVAREZ, MARIO ALVAREZ, MARÍA TERESA KUMAR, Ramesh, RAMESH PONNURU, Richard Nixon, Aaron Burr, didn't, he'd, They've, TERESA KUMAR, María, – MARIA TERESA KUMAR, Dobbs, should've, Harris would've, ” KRISTEN WELKER, We'll Organizations: Republicans, Senate, Vermont, NBC, Capitol Hill, National, Press, NBC News, Arizona, Democratic, Republican, REP, Twitter, Trump, Republican Senate, Supreme, White, National Political, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Biden, Senate Republican, Press ., Trump's, United States Senate, Justice Department, Democrat Party, Security, Social Security, FDR, they're, California, Mr, Trump swiped, Democrats, , Veterans Locations: United States of America, United States, John Barrasso of Wyoming, Washington, American, ALEXANDRIA, CORTEZ, USA, America, California, New York, Wisconsin, Madison , Wisconsin, Milwaukee County, Harris, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Mexico, Vermont, Nancy, Congress, U.S, Texas –, Texas, Philadelphia
Across the country Tuesday, counties moved toward Trump by a median of 3.1 percentage points compared to the 2020 election. But in the top 10% of counties ranked most difficult for buying a home, the median shift was 4.5 percentage points. In Passaic County, New Jersey, with a population of more than 500,000, voters flipped for Trump by nearly 19 percentage points. Nearby in Pennsylvania, Northampton County — which narrowly tipped red with a shift of 3 percentage points — has a similar story. But not all high-challenge housing counties swung toward Trump.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, wasn’t, , Robert Shapiro, Harris, ” Shapiro, It’s, , Bernard Fraga, Fraga, Joe Biden, ” Fraga, Organizations: NBC, Trump, Republicans, Columbia University, “ Voters, Democratic, Emory University Locations: Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Passaic County , New Jersey, America, In Passaic, Northampton County —, Northampton, Mesa County, Mesa,
Arab and Muslim voters moved away from the Democratic Party this year in ways that led some community leaders to warn of a lasting shift from a voting bloc that has been reliably Democratic for two decades since it abandoned the GOP. Muslim voters backed Republican George W. Bush in 2000, but fled the GOP in response to the Bush administration’s post-9/11 military interventions abroad and anti-terror policies at home, which they felt unfairly targeted people of Islamic faith. In the two decades since then, Muslim Americans have broken roughly 2-to-1 for Democrats, while groups representing the community institutionally aligned themselves with Democrats, much like other groups representing voters of color. Nationally, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, one of the largest Muslim advocacy groups in the country, which has been sharply critical of Biden’s foreign policy, conducted its own postelection survey of Muslim voters. “Our pleas, demands and warnings were ignored by President Biden and then by Vice President Harris.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Layla Elabed, Joe Biden’s, Republican George W, Bush, Trump, Jill Stein, Harris, Stein, Bill Bazzi, Biden, , Robert S, McCaw, Benjamin Netanyahu, Dearborn, You’re, ” Sen, John Fetterman, Rania Batrice, President Biden, ” Trump, Tiffany Trump’s, Rabiul Chowdhury, Ruwa, Abdullah Hammoud Organizations: Democratic Party, GOP, Trump, Democratic, Republican, Democrats, Green, Islamic, American, CAIR National Government, Palestinian, Palestinian American Democratic, Democratic National Convention, Muslim Democratic, Palestinian American Democrat Locations: Gaza, American, Dearborn , Michigan, , Dearborn, Dearborn Heights, Arab, Palestinian American, Lebanese, Pennsylvania , Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia
Philip Wiseman and his wife moved to Idaho because they were fed up with California's politics. AdvertisementThis as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Philip Wiseman, a 70-year-old retiree who moved from California to Idaho with his wife in 2021. Data compiled by Idaho officials showed 78% of voters who moved from California to Idaho registered as Republicans between 2020 and 2023. We miss our California and what California used to be. I used to love California but things changed as I got olderI moved to California when I was around 30.
Persons: Philip Wiseman, , Monte Sereno, Biden, couldn't, we've, We've, We're, I'm Organizations: Republican, Service, Idaho, Biden Locations: Idaho, Eagle , Idaho, California, Northern California, Silicon, Monte Sereno, Los Gatos, California . California, Nevada, Texas, Arizona , Nevada , Tennessee, Florida, Boise, Eagle, Oregon, Seattle
Wisp, an online pharmacy, said sales of birth control surged after Donald Trump's election win. AdvertisementWisp, an online pharmacy focused on sexual and reproductive health, says sales of birth control and emergency contraception have surged in the United States in the last week. Wisp, which serves over 1.2 million patients nationwide, reported a 1,000% increase in emergency contraception purchases from November 5 to November 6. In the 24 hours after Election Day, Wisp said it saw a 1,650% increase in new patients purchasing emergency contraception. There was a 600% increase in medication abortion sales and a 50% increase in birth control sales.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, , Donald Trump, Monica Cepak, Cepak, Roe, Wade, Wisp, Amy Hagstrom Miller, Hagstrom Miller, Kimberly Inez McGuire Organizations: Service, Business, Democrats, Reproductive, Gender Equity, White Locations: United States, Texas , Indiana, Oklahoma, California, New York
Georgetown University, University of Michigan and s3mc.orgGeorgetown University, University of Michigan and s3mc.orgWhat also stands out in the charts over time is the lack of a sustained narrative about either candidate. On average, over the 20 weeks The Breakthrough survey was fielded this year, roughly 76% of US adults said weekly they’d heard at least some news about Trump. In the 15 full weeks of data following Harris’ entry into the race, a slightly smaller share – about 71% on average – said they’d heard something about her. Sentiments expressed by political independents when talking about the news surrounding Trump were negative throughout the campaign. Their sentiment when discussing what they’d heard about Harris, which was close to neutral at the start of her candidacy, declined modestly throughout the fall, undercutting her advantage over Trump on that metric.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump’s, Joe Biden, Harris, , Harris –, SSRS, Trump, Gallup’s Frank Newport, , , Hillary Clinton, they’d, Biden, , undercutting, Jennifer Agiesta, Edward Wu Organizations: CNN, Trump’s, Trump, Georgetown University, University of Michigan Locations: Puerto Rico
CNN —Pick one word to describe Republicans and Donald Trump, the focus group moderator asked, and one word to describe Democrats and Kamala Harris. “Donald Trump is a uniquely more popular figure, but what is it about him that makes him that way? Former President Donald Trump gestures during a campaign rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, 2023. But what Democrats face is much deeper than the usual finger-pointing by a losing campaign or speculation about the next set of presidential primary candidates. It goes beyond easy comments about talking more to the working class when Democrats lost ground among nearly every demographic in the presidential race.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , , hadn’t, Harris, Joe Biden, she’d “, what’s, Hillary Clinton, JB Pritzker, “ Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Obama, Leah Millis, Vermont Sen, Bernie Sanders, David Plouffe, Biden, Jen O’Malley Dillon, Stephanie Cutter, ’ ”, Pat Ryan, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, Republican she’d, “ It’s, ” Gluesenkamp Perez, ” Harris, Hannah McKay, weren’t, Joe Rogan, Rogan, Trump, Sanders, – Pritzker, Tim Walz, Gavin Newsom, Hakeem Jeffries, Angie Craig, we’ve, Craig, She’s, ’ ” Craig, Gluesenkamp Perez, Joe Morelle, Josh Shapiro’s, Chris Deluzio, Democratic Sen, Bob Casey, ” Deluzio, David Goldman, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, hasn’t, George W, Bush’s, Levi Strauss, Daniel Lurie, London Breed, Harris ’, Oprah Winfrey, Ryan Organizations: CNN, Trump, Democratic, Gov, Biden, Lone Star, Electoral, Reuters, New York Democrat, Republican, Howard University, Tuesday, Trumpism, California Gov, Minnesota, Twin, Democrats, New York Rep, Pennsylvania Gov, Pennsylvania, London, Democratic Party Locations: Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, Lone Star State, Washington, , Texas, Waco , Texas, Vermont, Hudson Valley, , Wilmington , Delaware, America, Minnesota, Twin Cities, Pittsburgh, Dearborn , Michigan, Grant Park, New York
Here are five takeaways on the voters Trump won and what it means moving forward:The Latino realignmentA trend with the potential to remake the American political landscape is the huge shift in Latino voters toward Trump. Trump’s 1.5-point win in Osceola County flipped a location that President Joe Biden won by 14 points four years earlier. Trump’s performance similarly improved in Orange County, home of Orlando, where Biden won by 23 points in 2020 but Harris won by just 5.6 points this year. Trump’s gains are explained in part by his appeals to Black men, and his efforts to reach out to Arab American voters. Harris won by 10 points and 85,000 votes — short of the 14-point, 114,000-vote win Biden had notched there in 2020.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Harris ’, Joe Biden, Biden, Harris, Anna Moneymaker, hadn’t, Hillary Clinton, Republican Sen, Ted Cruz, Vicente Gonzalez, he’d, Henry Cuellar, John Moore, she’d, Rebecca Cook, Reuters Harris, Nikki Haley, Liz Cheney, hasn’t, Andy Beshear, resoundingly Organizations: CNN, Trump, Democrats, they’ve, GOP, Republican, Sunshine State, Latino, Trump National Doral, Club, Texas borderland, Democratic, Democrat, Republicans, Detroit, voters, Reuters, South Carolina Gov, Wyoming, Nevada —, Independents, Democratic Party Locations: Florida, Miami, Dade County, Cuban, Orlando, Puerto Rican, Madison, Osceola County, Orange County, Doral , Florida, Rio Grande, Texas, Starr County, Starr, United States, Arizona, Yuma County, Rio, El Paso , Texas, Detroit, San Francisco, York City, Wayne County, New York City, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Oakland County, Macomb County, Nevada, Las Vegas, Trump’s, Missouri, Kentucky, In Missouri
Americans are doom spending
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( Erika Tulfo | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
While this kind of catharsis might work to temporarily allay worries, experts say doom spending poses a danger to consumers’ long-term financial health. Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesThat financial gloom is powering doom spending and, in turn, driving up credit card debt. Beyond the economy, experts say that internet habits play a significant role in driving doom spending, especially for younger consumers. But Alev says that she anticipates a pop in spending whether Americans feel positively or negatively about the outcome of the election. How do you curb doom spending?
Persons: , Gen, “ We’re, Courtney Alev, , Alev, Donald Trump, Trump, Kamala Harris, , Sertan Kabadayi, Joe Raedle, Bankrate, Aja Evans, ’ ” Evans, hasn’t, ” Alev, Jeff Roberson, Biden, Evans Organizations: CNN, Wheaton College senior, YouTube, Credit, Gallup, Fordham University’s Gabelli School of Business, Federal, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Finance, Brookings Institution Locations: Massachusetts, Miami , Florida, West Palm Beach , Florida
Harris would have secured the presidency if she had won Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Related VideoHere's why Harris ultimately faltered in the trio of blue wall states. Related storiesTo secure the presidency, candidates must win at least 270 Electoral College votes, and Harris won 226 to Trump's 312. AdvertisementHarris spent considerable time campaigning throughout the blue wall states, but her 107-day candidacy was a sprint. In Wisconsin, Trump won 51% of union households, compared to Harris' 49%, according to Edison Research.
Persons: Harris, Donald Trump, , Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Trump, Tim Walz, ANGELA WEISS, Harris didn't, Alex Brandon Harris, Biden, Dane County, Trump's, EVELYN HOCKSTEIN, wasn't Organizations: White, GOP, Service, Democratic, House, Office, Minnesota Gov, Getty, Electoral, Michigan, Trump, Pennsylvania, AP, Edison Research, Oakland County, Republicans, Arab, Detroit, Teamsters, International Association of Fire Fighters, Democrats Locations: Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, West Allis , Wisconsin, The Milwaukee, Wisconsin , Michigan, Oakland County, Detroit, Montgomery County , Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Dane, Madison, Waukesha County , Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Bucks County , Pennsylvania, Saginaw County , Michigan, Gaza, Dearborn —
A resistance movement was born in the wake of Donald Trump’s 2016 victory, sending thousands of people into the streets wearing pink hats and signs with punchy slogans. “I think that folks are very angry and are going to be turning out,” Rachel O’Leary Carmona, the executive director of Women’s March, told NBC News. “We have a heavy focus on absorption,” O’Leary Carmona said. “It’s also not enough to dust off the 2016 ‘resistance’ playbook. We can’t fold like picnic chairs because we fielded a loss,” O’Leary Carmona said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump’s, Trump, ” Rachel O’Leary Carmona, Women’s, It’s, O’Leary Carmona, , , ” O’Leary Carmona, “ It’s, Maurice Mitchell, Mitchell, MAGA, Rahna Epting, ” Epting, “ Trump Organizations: NBC, Women’s, Washington, Working Families Party, NBC News, Trump, Families Party Locations: Seattle , Chicago, Philadelphia, Berkeley , California, New York, Washington, There’s
President-elect Donald Trump raised eyebrows when he decided to hold a campaign rally in the Bronx in late May. Results so far show Trump winning more than 27% of the vote in the Bronx, shrinking his margin of defeat there significantly. Not only did the Teamsters decline to endorse, Murtaugh noted, but they also released polling in swing states, including Pennsylvania, that showed Trump winning over large numbers of their members. ‘We have no easy path here’For one Democratic policy aide, the biggest concern was movement among younger voters. And what happened [Tuesday] was a Louisville Slugger baseball bat going upside the head of the Democratic Party for not telling people the truth.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Ritchie Torres, , ” Torres, “ Donald Trump’s, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, It’s, Torres, , Harris, Nancy Mace, Trump’s, , Court’s Dobbs, ” Mace, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Tulsi Gabbard, Elon Musk, ” Trump, ” There’s, Biden, Mike Berg, ” Tim Murtaugh, Murtaugh, MAGA, , you’re, ” —, we’re Organizations: The New, Democratic, Trump, Republican, Democrat, Democratic Party, NBC, GOP, , National Republican Senatorial, NBC News, Teamsters, Voters, Republicans, Pennsylvania Democrat, Louisville Slugger, Party, county, Democrats Locations: Bronx, The New York City, Manhattan, America, Pennsylvania , Michigan, Wisconsin, Hawaii, Pennsylvania, New York , New Jersey, Illinois, , New York
Gen X and younger voters shifted right in recent polls, favoring Trump more than they did in 2020. Democrats lost a lot of ground with Gen Z, while Republicans won Gen X by a much wider margin than in 2020. Gen Z favored Vice President Kamala Harris by 11 points, compared to 24 points for President Joe Biden. Gen X already disapproved of Biden the most among generations, per late 2023 polling from NPR, PBS NewsHour, and Marist. Are you a Gen Z who shifted right or a boomer who shifted left?
Persons: X, Gen Xers, Joe Biden, , Gen Z, Gen, millennials, Zers, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Millennials, Harris, Andrew Heyward, Trump, Joe Rogan, Jason Brennan, Brennan, Z's Gen, Gen X, Biden, Amy Walter Organizations: Trump, Service, Democrats, Republicans, Democratic, Boomers, Gallup, Walton Family Foundation, CBS News, New York Times, GOP, Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business, NPR, PBS, Marist, jkaplan
How CNN readers feel about the outcome of the 2024 election
  + stars: | 2024-11-09 | by ( Cnn Staff | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +20 min
CNN —We asked you how you were feeling about the outcome of the election. …” – Ashley in Florida“I feel scared. I’m scared for my trans friends who will find it harder to get their medications. I feel betrayed by the women who voted for him.” – Laura in New York“As a 30-something woman, I’m scared. I’m scared about how many of us turned a blind eye to the misogyny, racism, and hatred of the man.
Persons: CNN —, Jason Lancaster, Trump, ” – Clifford Wayne Irwin Jr, Donald Trump, Harris, , Matthew Trovato, Phoenix “ I’m, ” – Matt, , I’ve, – DaMarcus, Michael Petry, ” – Cameron McClellan, Cassie, ” – Sharon, Kamala, Robin Bridgewater, Texas, ” – Sandra, I’m, ” – Cecilia, … I’m, ” – Marcelino, … She’s, She’s, ” – Ashley, I’ll, I’d, Katie, Jeff Lenhart, … ” – Cara, Colorado, ” – Grayson, ” – Lea, it’s, Mary Clifton, Laura, ” – Meigs, ” – Danny Lopez, ” – Daniel Baca, Sherri Emmons, ” – Andrew Dunlay, ” – Christina, won’t, Tim M, ” – Marcella Anderson, ” – Michael Farris, Rachel Pearl, fearfully, – Visha Rao, , can’t, ” – Delaney, Amy, who’ve, ” – Kaylen Garcia, ” – Helen Engle, ” – Sophia Organizations: CNN, Biden, Army, West Virginia “, Trump, Democratic, Republican, America, Immigrants, Cuyahoga Falls , Ohio “ Locations: Anchorage , Alaska “, America, Phoenix, New Jersey, Ocean Springs , Mississippi, – DaMarcus Powell, Biloxi , Mississippi, West Virginia, Beka, Virginia, , Chapel Hill , North Carolina, Ohio “, Europe, Austin, Michigan, Tennessee, Portland , Oregon, Florida, Connecticut, Iowa, Dubuque , Iowa, Pennsylvania, Colorado “, Texas, Texas “, Salt Lake City , Utah, New York, Orlando, Orlando , Florida, South America, Glendale , Arizona, Maine, Tucson , Arizona, United States of America, Los Angeles, Trump’s America, Cuyahoga Falls , Ohio, Cuyahoga Falls , Ohio “ America, LA, Saratoga , California, Napa , California, Minnesota, Brockton , Massachusetts, Chicago
Russia's hybrid warfare tactics against the US and Europe are reaching new levels. AdvertisementRussian disinformation and interference — hybrid warfare tactics — are on the rise and again showed up in the US presidential election, but this is a problem for more than just America. Russian tactics were on full display in the 2024 US presidential election. AdvertisementMore than an American problemThis hybrid warfare is a broader problem for other Western countries, too. Moldova's pro-EU incumbent president, Maia Sandu, won reelection despite Russian efforts to sway the election.
Persons: , Mark Rutte, Clinton, Mikhail Svetlov, it's, Doug Livermore, Donald Trump, Lev Radin, Trump, Livermore, Russia's, Maia Sandu, Daniel MIHAILESCU, Harris, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, aren't Organizations: Service, NATO, FBI, State, intel, Getty, Irregular Warfare, National Intelligence Council, US intel, Infrastructure Security Agency, Ukraine, Moldovan, Union, Xinhua News Agency Locations: Europe, Russia, Moscow, Russian, Washington, China, Iran, US, Republic of Georgia's, France, Germany, AFP, Beijing, North Korea, America
Prediction markets swung in favor of Trump in the weeks before his victory, as polls showed a virtual tie. Proponents point to a number of factors that make betting markets more accurate. That was still hours before major news outlets called the electionPrediction site founders and researchers have long argued that betting markets are more accurate than traditional polling. I think this is the dawn of a new era for prediction markets, and prediction markets are here to stay," Mansour said. If they don't improve, the betting markets could replace them entirely, he predicted.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Trump, They've, Tarek Mansour, Mansour, Harry Crane, Northwestern University's Thomas Miller, Miller, Biden, Harris, Crane, Davide Accomazzo Organizations: Trump, Service, Rutgers University, BI, Northwestern, Pepperdine Graziadio Business
Incumbent governments have been punished in Britain, France, India, Japan, South Korea, and elsewhere. The near-universal shift away from Democrats echoes voters' rejection of incumbent political parties across the world this year. South Africa's African National Congress (ANC) party lost its majority. Similarly, Deutsche Bank's Reid wrote that voters are disappointed by how slowly their lives are improving amid cooler economic growth. He said they don't buy that incumbents can tackle immigration, some incumbent governments have had scandals, and voters have become "much more willing to change their vote from election to election."
Persons: Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, , Donald Trump, Biden, Harris, Narendra Modi, Korea's Democrat Party snagged, Jim Reid, Tina Fordham, Louis Perron, Deutsche Bank's Reid Organizations: Service, Democratic, Britain's Labour Party, Conservative Party, Rally, Japan's Liberal Democratic Party, Indian, Korea's Democrat Party, National Congress, ANC, Deutsche Bank, Fed, Bank of England, European Central Bank, CNN, Win, Deutsche Locations: Britain, France, India, Japan, South Korea, London, Tokyo, Seoul, Cape Town, Washington, Gaza, country's, South, Ukraine
ChatGPT denied 250,000 requests for deepfake images of candidates in the last month, OpenAI said. AdvertisementIn the run-up to this week's presidential election, OpenAI fielded thousands of requests to generate fake images of candidates. OpenAI said ChatGPT rejected an estimated 250,000 requests to generate images of the candidates using DALL-E, the company's AI art generator, in the month before the election. OpenAI also said that on Election Day, it would answer questions on election results by referring users to news organizations like the Associated Press and Reuters. "Around 2 million ChatGPT responses included this message on Election Day and the day following," the company said in Friday's blog post.
Persons: ChatGPT, OpenAI, , deepfake, Joe Biden, Trump, Harris, Vance, President Biden, Governor Walz, Elon Musk's Organizations: Service, National Association of, State, Associated Press, Reuters Locations: New Hampshire
Minimum wage hikes passed in two red states, and one voted against pay cuts for tipped workers. Economic concerns, like inflation, might drive voters to support pay increases despite party lines. It's happened before: In 2020, Florida voters wholeheartedly embraced Trump — and voted to hike the minimum wage to $15 by 2026. AdvertisementGeorgetown University Professor Jason Brennan told BI that it isn't strange many Americans who vote Republican also vote for a higher minimum wage. Did you vote for Trump and a higher minimum wage?
Persons: , Donald Trump ., Trump, trounce Kamala Harris, It's, Yannet Lathrop, David Cooper, Lathrop, Cooper, he'd, JD Vance cosponsored, Jason Brennan, Brennan, they're Organizations: Service, Republican, Trump —, National Employment Law, Research Network, Institute, GOP, Georgetown, Trump Locations: Donald Trump . In Missouri, Alaska, Arizona, Florida
Landlords, realtors, and some pro-housing groups opposed the measure, but the California Democratic Party, tenant groups, and some unions supported it. California voters did, however, vote to enshrine a state constitutional right to marry regardless of sex or race and to issue bonds for natural resource conservation. Related storiesThough Lurie is a Democrat, he received the support of some Republican groups in San Francisco who have criticized Breed's handling of crime, drug use, and homelessness in the city. AdvertisementOther signs California was turning more redBefore Election Day, there were some signs the state's electorate had shifted to the right. California is still tallying its votes, so exactly how much the presidential vote changed from 2020 to 2024 is unclear.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom's, Voters, Allen J, Incumbent San Francisco Mayor London Breed, Daniel Lurie, Lurie, Levi Strauss, Mark Farrell, George Gascón, Gascón, Nathan Hochman, Harris, Joe Biden Organizations: Service, Democratic, SpaceX, Republican, Trump, State, Democratic Gov, realtors, California Democratic Party, Los Angeles Times, Getty, Incumbent San Francisco Mayor London, Democrat, The San Francisco Republican, Los, Public, Institute of California Locations: California, Texas, Coachella, San Francisco, The, Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, Illinois , New Jersey , New York , Connecticut, Maryland
Newsom is far from the only Democratic governor preparing to take on Trump. In blue states like Illinois, Massachusetts and New York, officials are already vowing to mount legal and policy fights against the incoming Trump administration on issues like abortion rights, environmental regulations, gun control, immigration enforcement and more. But the second Trump era will offer Democratic officials opportunities to showcase their own leadership as they position themselves for potential future runs. A less combative toneSome Democratic governors, including those widely seen as potential 2028 presidential contenders, did not immediately take aim at Trump’s incoming administration. “Finally, let’s root for the success of the new administration and keep working together to get things done.”Pennsylvania Gov.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Gavin Newsom, , ” Newsom, Newsom —, , Newsom, Kamala Harris, Harris ’, Joe Biden’s, J.B . Pritzker, , ” Pritzker, Kathy Hochul, Letitia James, Maura Healey, Wes Moore, ” Moore, Gretchen Whitmer, Harris, Josh Shapiro, , Tim Walz, JD Vance, he’s, ” Walz, Andy Beshear, Beshear, we’re, Trump —, ” Beshear, ” Josh Stein, don’t Organizations: CNN, Democratic, California Gov, Republicans, Trump, Democratic Party, Illinois Gov, New York Gov, MSNBC, Maryland Gov, ” Michigan, Minnesota Gov, Arizona voters, , Democrats Locations: California, Illinois , Massachusetts, New York, Illinois, Washington, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, “ Minnesota, Arizona, ” Kentucky, North Carolina
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
But some are pointing to an issue with far less power in American politics: transgender rights. Between the 2020 and 2024 elections, transgender rights have become a political flashpoint in the nation’s culture wars. And perhaps nothing stoked more conversation than the issue of transgender girls and women competing in girls and women’s sports. “Please do not blame trans issues or trans people for why we lost,” he wrote on X on Thursday. Brianna Wu, a prominent transgender Democratic activist, told NBC News in an interview that the debate over trans rights has “radically shifted” in recent years.
Persons: Joe Biden, Tom Suozzi, , Seth Moulton, I’m, Moulton, Tom Williams, Gilberto Hinojosa, ” Hinojosa, Brad Pritchett, Hinojosa’s, ” Pritchett, , Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Bud, Lia Thomas, Thomas ’, Imane Khelif, Rich von Biberstein, Harris, “ Kamala, Trump, ” Harris, Hallie Jackson, Sam Alleman, Brianna Wu, Wu, ” Wu Organizations: , New York Times, , Suozzi, Inc, Getty, Texas Democratic, Democratic, Equality, NBC News, NBC, American Civil Liberties Union, Corporate America, University of Pennsylvania’s, NCAA, Paris Games, University of Pennsylvania, AP, Republicans, AdImpact, NFL, Democratic National Convention, Congress, khakis Locations: Texas, Equality Texas, Algeria
Total: 25