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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
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 —
CNN —Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor has made clear she has no plans to step down, according to people close to her, despite calls from some on the left that President Joe Biden should try to name a successor before President-elect Donald Trump takes office. “She’s in great health, and the court needs her now more than ever,” said one person close to the justice. Some progressives have suggested Sotomayor, the most senior liberal on the conservative Supreme Court, should step down so that Biden could try to name a replacement in the short window before Trump takes office in January. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said Sunday that he doesn’t think Sotomayor should step down from the court. In May, Sotomayor told an audience at Harvard University that she sometimes cries after the court hands down its decisions.
Persons: Sonia Sotomayor, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, “ She’s, , Sotomayor, Biden, Trump, Vermont Sen, Bernie Sanders, doesn’t, , ” Sanders Organizations: CNN, Democrats, Press, Supreme, GOP, Harvard University, University of California, School of Law Locations: Vermont, Berkeley
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
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
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
CNBC Pro combed through the most recent Wall Street research to find companies analysts really like heading into 2025 based on potential Trump policies. They include General Motors, Ford Motor, Robinhood , Coinbase , GE Aerospace and Goldman Sachs. "We see F and GM as the main beneficiaries from the Trump administration," analyst John Murphy wrote. GE Aerospace The aerospace company has pricing power, according to Deutsche Bank analyst Scott Deuschle, who says GE can benefit under a Trump administration. "Additionally, we think GE could be among the largest beneficiaries of this potential trend within our aerospace coverage," Deuschle said.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Goldman Sachs, Trump, John Murphy, Murphy, Robinhood Needham, John Todaro, Todaro, Coinbase, Scott Deuschle, Deuschle, Coinbase – Needham, – Needham, HOOD, Wells Organizations: White, CNBC, General Motors, Ford Motor, GE Aerospace, Ford, General Motors Bank of America, Trump, GM, Senate, Deutsche Bank, GE, GOP White House, GM – Bank of America, SEC, GE Aerospace – Deutsche Bank, GS Locations: Mexico
Neither Wiles nor Trump’s transition team immediately responded when asked if Wiles would soon step away from her position at Mercury. “The clown car can’t come into the White House at will,” the source said. She worked on Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign and then in his White House. He then gave her nearly unfettered leeway to operate his Florida campaign as she saw fit. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio posted on social media: “President Trump has chosen a strong, intelligent woman to serve as White House Chief of Staff.”
Persons: Donald Trump, America’s, , Dana White –, Susie Wiles, Wiles, Trump’s, Trump, Susie, ” Trump, , Chris LaCivita, ” Michael Caputo, , , Jared Moskowitz, Charlie Kirk, Kevin McCarthy, “ Susie Wiles, ” Kirk, doesn’t, John Kelly, Reince Priebus, you’ve, Kelly, Mick Mulvaney, Mark Meadows, Pat Summerall, Jack Kemp, Kemp, Ronald Reagan’s, Rick Scott, Jon Huntsman, Huntsman, Mitt Romney, Brian Ballard, Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, , Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, James Blair, Blair, Mark Cuban, Florida Sen Organizations: Palm Beach , Florida CNN, Fighting, White, Trump, CNN, Mercury, Swisher International, Ballard Partners, carmaker, Motors, Military Management, Children’s Hospital Association, Staff, US Capitol, of Justice, Sunshine State, NFL, Rep, New York Giants, Utah Gov, Florida, Republican, Electoral College, Republicans Locations: Palm Beach , Florida, Pennsylvania, Washington, Mar, Florida, DC, America, Trump, Jacksonville, Manhattan
The attention on potential Supreme Court vacancies has so far been driven entirely by forces outside the court – and rampant speculation based on a series of murky clues and past practices. “No questions could even be raised about their physical or mental health.”Ed Whelan, a former Supreme Court clerk and legal commentor, said he agreed with Leo’s take. The process of moving a Supreme Court nominee takes considerable time – often several months. The Supreme Court did not respond to a request for comment. It is also fairly common when a new administration comes to town to talk about these things.”’CNN Chief Supreme Court Analyst Joan Biskupic contributed to this report.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito –, Sonia Sotomayor, Joe Biden, Trump, “ Alito, Mike Davis, Stephen Breyer, Biden’s, , Bill Clinton, Thomas, Alito, Leonard Leo, Charles Cooper, scoffed, ” Cooper, ” Ed Whelan, Leo’s, ” Whelan, Davis, Leo, ” Davis, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Amy Coney Barrett, Roe, Wade, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Barack Obama’s, Biden, John Roberts, George W, Bush, Breyer, Anthony Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, , Andrew Oldham, Neomi Rao –, Judge James Ho, Martha, Ann Alito, Washington –, Ann Alito’s, Martha Alito, Roberts, Josh Blackman, ” ’, Joan Biskupic Organizations: CNN, III, Supreme, GOP, Trump, DC Circuit, Circuit, Washington, South Texas College of Law Houston, ” ’ CNN Locations: Washington, Trump, New Orleans, Virginia, New Jersey
As President-elect Donald Trump doubles down on his mass deportation plan, some Republicans are trying to assuage fears amid growing questions of who will be forced out of the country. The prospect of mass deportations is generating fear and apprehension among families with noncitizen members and businesses that employ undocumented workers. The president-elect has also said he would withhold federal grants to police that don’t cooperate in his mass deportation plan as well as use the National Guard to carry it out. But not long ago, some Republicans have resisted Democratic administrations' attempts to prioritize certain immigrants over others for deportation. “If he deports violent criminals, gang leaders and drug leaders, people who committed violent crimes like rape or murder, isn’t that mass deportation?” Muniz asked.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, “ It’s, they’re, , Joe Biden's, , Maria Elvira Salazar, Salazar didn't, Sen, Marco Rubio, Obama, Biden, ” Trump, noncitizens, Greg Abbott, Salazar, Rubio, Abbott, Artemio Muniz, Muniz, , ” Muniz Organizations: NBC News, Time, Florida Republican, Miami, GOP, NBC, Center, Administrations, Department of Homeland Security, National Guard, Texas Gov, Trump, Customs, Democratic, DHS, Supreme, Federation of Hispanic Republicans, Texas GOP, Republican Locations: Trump, U.S, Florida, Dade, , United States, Texas, Louisiana
In today’s edition, chief political analyst Chuck Todd explains why the results of the 2022 midterm elections were a mirage for the Democrats . Democrats did well in the 2022 midterms despite Biden, not because of him or his pro-democracy messaging. But Democrats managed to hold onto Senate seats in two states Trump carried, Michigan and Wisconsin. In the House, Republicans had a 212-201 lead, with 22 races yet to be called as of Friday afternoon. Read more →Trump won Nevada, NBC News projects — the first time a Republican presidential candidate has done so since 2004.
Persons: Chuck Todd, Kristen Welker, Donald Trump, Adam Edelman, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Clinton, Obama, Biden, ’ “, Court’s Dobbs, Dobbs, Trump, Chuck →, , , It’s, ” Trump, , I’m, , We’re, Donald Trump’s, Gavin Newsom, JB Pritzker, Illinoisans, Kathy Hochul, Read, abi Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Democratic, GOP, Democrats, Trump, Black, Asian, Senate, Republicans, NBC News, Nevada Senate, House, Gov, , New York Gov, Initiative Locations: Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona , Nevada , Michigan, Wisconsin, West Virginia , Montana and Ohio, Michigan, Arizona , Pennsylvania, Nevada, South America, In California, California, ” Illinois
With the glaring exception of the presidential race, North Carolina Democrats had a good 2024 election. Those results largely comport with decades of political trends in North Carolina. For decades, voters in North Carolina have shown a propensity to elect Republicans for federal office while supporting Democrats in downballot statewide races. North Carolina, which holds its races for governor in presidential election years, has voted for the Republican presidential candidate in every election but one since 1980. “Welcome to the political legacy and history and trajectory of North Carolina politics.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Mark Robinson’s, , Mark Robinson, , Josh Stein, Robinson, Rachel Hunt, Republican Hal Weatherman, Stein, Jeff Jackson, Republican Dan Bishop, Elaine Marshall, Republican Chad Brown, Democrat Maurice Green, Republican Michele Morrow, Republican Catherine Truitt, Morrow, Republican Jefferson Griffin, Allison Riggs, Democrats downballot, Sam Newton, Newton, Weatherman, didn’t, Trump, It’s, Michael Bitzer, ” Newton, Bitzer Organizations: North Carolina Democrats, Republicans, Republican, Gov, North, North Carolina GOP, Democrat, Democrats, Associated Press, Democratic, NBC, Democratic Governors Association, CNN, National Democrats, Democratic National Committee, Catawba College, Trump Locations: North Carolina, downballot, Carolina, Charlotte
WASHINGTON — Republicans are gearing up to lock in their remake of the judiciary under President-elect Donald Trump and a new Senate majority, including potentially installing several more conservative Supreme Court justices. Conservatives are prepared for Supreme Court retirements, with the most attention on Justice Samuel Alito, 74. GOP won't pursue Supreme Court ethics rulesTrump already transformed the federal courts in his first term, appointing 54 appeals court judges and 174 district court judges, many of whom are closely linked with the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group. Biden has made his own mark on the judiciary, appointing 210 district and appeals court judges in total, including 44 appeals court judges, falling just short of Trump’s total. “We’ll quit beating up the Supreme Court every time we don’t like the decision they make,” he said.
Persons: Donald Trump, — Trump, Trump, Samuel Alito, Alito, , Mike Davis, “ That’s, — John Thune, John Cornyn, , ” Cornyn, Thune, Trump’s, Clarence Thomas, Roe, Wade, John Malcolm, Franklin D, Roosevelt, — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett —, Biden, Davis, Thomas, Don McGahn, , you’ve, Sonia Sotomayor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Trump's, Barrett, “ Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, Alex Aronson, Sotomayor didn’t, Chuck Grassley, Sen, Grassley, Josh Hawley, Trump hasn’t, Malcolm, Andrew Oldham, Amul Thapar, JD Vance’s, Usha Vance, Thapar, Judge James Ho, Neomi Rao, Patrick Bumatay, Joe Biden hasn’t, Russell Wheeler, Leonard Leo, Leo, Mitch McConnell, shepherded, “ We’ll Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republicans, Democratic, Senate, Trump, GOP, Heritage Foundation, , White, NBC, NBC News, Committee, Circuit, Appeals, U.S ., District of Columbia Circuit, Republican, Institution, Federalist Society, Supreme, Court Locations: West Virginia , Montana and Ohio, Texas, Iowa, New Orleans, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Ky
The reality is that both parties learn lessons from losing elections that apply only in the short term — say, from one presidential election to the next midterm or from one midterm to the next presidential election. Not anymore — it’s why Democrats usually overperform in special elections, with more devoted “every election” voters right now. Meanwhile, in the non-battlegrounds, which were more affected by the basic “mood music” of the election, Democrats were shellacked. The seeds of discontent with this version of the Democratic Party can be traced back a decade to Obama’s decision to anoint Hillary Clinton as his successor. Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., at the CNN Democratic presidential primary debate in New York City on April 14, 2016.
Persons: inbox, It’s, Donald Trump, Devin Yalkin, doesn’t, Karl Rove, Barack Obama, Joe Biden’s, Biden, Bill Clinton, Obama, Clinton, Harris, Court's Dobbs, Dobbs, Trump, I’m, Kamala Harris, Morry Gash, hadn't, misfired, Deb Fischer, Dan Osborn, Osborn, Josh Shapiro, wasn’t, Harris wouldn’t, They’ve, Franklin D, Roosevelt, John F, Kennedy, Lyndon B, Johnson, Hillary Clinton, he’d, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Justin Sullivan, Democratic Party didn’t, Sanders, Bernie Bros, Joe Rogan, , didn’t, nitpick, , Bob Dole, Al Gore, John Kerry, John McCain, Mitt Romney, What's, Elon, MAGA, Michael Dukakis Organizations: NBC, Trump, Democratic, Democratic Party, Biden, GOP, Democrats, Social Security, Senate, Electoral, Massachusetts Democrat, San, San Francisco Democrat, CNN Democratic, Clinton, Obama, Trump bros Locations: West Palm Beach, Fla, Plenty, , Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona , Nevada , Michigan, Wisconsin, Madison, Wis, America, Texas, Massachusetts, San Francisco, New York City, Trump, Iowa, Clinton
The U.S. Capitol building November 6, the President-elect Donald Trump was declared the winner of the presidential election. GOP leaders have been dreaming of another major tax package, as many tax provisions are set to expire at the end of 2025. Remember: With Republicans winning control of the Senate, delivering on Trump’s agenda will come down to whether the GOP retains a majority in the House. Even with unified GOP control, there would be challenges ahead for Republicans. One issue is the political math: House Republicans believe if they do hold onto the majority, it won’t be by much.
Persons: Donald Trump, Leah Millis, Joe Biden’s, Mike Johnson —, , Danya Gainor Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Republicans, GOP, Trump, CNN, Democrats, Biden White, House, Republican Locations: Washington, Pennsylvania, Michigan
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
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
CNN —Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett stands apart. And that is why Barrett has become the best hope for what remains of the liberal wing, particularly after Trump’s election victory. As Trump returns to the White House, the Supreme Court may be even more positioned to check the balance of powers. Nonetheless, progressives have few options, and an uncertain horizon, and cannot help but imbue Barrett with hope. “As Justice Barrett said…,” is a common Kagan refrain, too.
Persons: Amy Coney Barrett, Donald Trump’s, Barrett, Trump, imbue Barrett, Sandra Day O’Connor, Reagan, Anthony Kennedy, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Barrett homed, Sotomayor, , Kagan, Kagan interjected, , Richard Glossip, Brett Kavanaugh, Thomas, Roberts, Kavanaugh, Adam Feldman, Jake Truscott, Republican centrists O’Connor, Kennedy, Lewis Powell, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Dobbs, Antonin Scalia, Scalia’s, Scalia, Jesse, Warren Burger, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, they’ve, Gorsuch, ” Barrett, Jackson, Alito, ” Alito, Biden, Justice Roberts, CNN Kagan, Barrett’s, Roe, Wade, , ’ Barrett, Adrian Zackheim, Justice Barrett, ” Zackheim, Sentinel publicists, Sen, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Barack Obama’s, Merrick Garland, Ginsburg Organizations: CNN, Republican, White, Republicans, Representatives, Notre Dame, Trump, Democratic, Glossip, Jackson, Health Organization, New York, Association, Harvard, ., Biden, Capitol, of Education, Ronald Reagan, Sentinel, Penguin Random, Wall Street, University of Louisville McConnell Center Locations: America, Oklahoma, , . United States, New Orleans, Washington, Haiti, Idaho, California, Louisville
Generative AI wasn't part of the lexicon for most of us during President-elect Donald Trump 's first four years in the White House. At a high level, generative AI is a cutting-edge form of technology that will shape the next decade and beyond. While the AI field has been around for decades, generative AI applications can create new content, including computer code, human-like text and images, in response to user prompts. Those that lead in generative AI will very likely shape the world as we know it. With 5G, Trump didn't just hope the U.S. could just fun faster than everyone else.
Persons: Donald Trump, ChatGPT, Kamala Harris, Trump, Elon Musk, OpenAI, JD Vance, Vance, Joe Biden's, Trump's, OpenAI's Sam Altman, Alphabet's Sundar Pichai, Jim Cramer, it's, Jim, they're, Jim Cramer's, Callaghan Organizations: Trump, Billionaire, Republican, Big Tech, Republican Party's, GOP, 5G, Mobile, Sprint, Verizon, Nvidia, Microsoft, Huawei, Biden, Deutsche Bank, South China, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Apple, Washington, Intel, Eaton, Trust, CNBC, Convention Center, Callaghan O'hare Locations: Ohio, U.S, United States, America, We've, China, Taiwan, South, Beijing, Palm Beach, West Palm Beach , Florida
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
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
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
Millions of Americans risk losing subsidies next year that help them pay for health insurance following President-elect Donald Trump’s election win and Republicans’ victory in the Senate. Even Democratic control of the House likely won’t save the subsidies, he added. As of Thursday afternoon, House Republicans had won 209 seats, just nine short of the majority, according to an NBC News tracker. In 2024, more than 20 million people got health insurance through the ACA, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “This means fewer people will know their rights under the law and many will not sign up for ACA health care plans.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Trump, Chris Meekins, Raymond James, , , Meekins, Cynthia Cox, Cox, ” Cox, Lawrence Gostin, ” Gostin, Gostin Organizations: Republicans ’, Senate, American, Republicans, White House, GOP, HHS, NBC, Centers, Medicare, Services, Congressional, Trump, CBO, Congress, O’Neill Institute for National, Global Health Law, Georgetown University, ACA Locations: Southern, KFF
“The fact that there could have been a South Asian woman in the White House … we’re not there yet, but it would have been very nice. “There’s a great deal of disappointment in that sense,” said Shakeel Syed, executive director of the nonprofit South Asian Network. She steeped her daughters in all things South Asian, said Harris, who grew up eating South Indian food, like potato curry and masala dosa, and hearing Gopalan speak Tamil. Like many young and progressive Asian Americans, she said Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip has been an important issue for her. In the meantime, South Asian voters say they have no choice but to keep pushing.
Persons: they’re, Kamala Harris ’, Harris, Donald Trump, , Anjali Bhatt, we’re, ” Bhatt, Trump, she’s, Sumati Thomas, Harris ’, I’ve, Kamala Harris, ” Harris, Joe Biden, Biden, There’s, Shakeel Syed, Gopalan, , P.V, Thomas, Bhatt, they’d, Harris didn’t, Syed, ” Syed, Harris wanes, Usha Vance, Vivek Ramaswamy, “ It’s, ” Thomas Organizations: South, D.C, Republican, Harris ’ Democratic, South Asian, Democratic, South Asian Network, Democratic National Convention, University of California, Civil Rights Movement, DNC, , American, Trump, White, Indian American Locations: South Asian, Washington, America, In Mississippi, South, India, California, Chennai, Indian, Berkeley, U.S, Gaza, Southeast Michigan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, American
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