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  • Zohran Mamdani will win New York City mayoral election, CNN’s Decision Desk projects

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    (CNN) — Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist whose focus on working-class issues and personal magnetism attracted a diverse coalition of volunteers and supporters to propel a once-underdog campaign, will win New York City’s general election race for mayor, CNN’s Decision Desk projects.

    Mamdani beat former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo for a second time, shattering the political scion’s hopes of a comeback after his loss to Mamdani in the June Democratic primary. Also running in the general election was Republican Curtis Sliwa, who refused to end his campaign despite pressure from Cuomo and his supporters.

    Mamdani’s win marks a victory for the progressive wing of the Democratic Party at a time when national Democrats are divided over how to counter President Donald Trump. The president is himself a native New Yorker who has falsely derided Mamdani as a “communist” and suggested he’d “take over” the city if he is elected.

    The results are likely to echo far beyond New York City, elevating both Mamdani’s profile and platform, including his proposals to freeze the rent for New Yorkers living in rent-stabilized apartments, make public buses free to ride and provide universal childcare by taxing the wealthy.

    Mamdani’s win completes a meteoric rise a year after the state assemblyman launched his bid for mayor, promising to make the most expensive city in the country affordable for its working class.

    Who is Zohran Mamdani?

    Mamdani is a three-term state assemblyman who entered the mayor’s race as one of several apparent also-rans to what appeared to be Cuomo’s race to lose.

    Born in Uganda and first raised in Cape Town, South Africa, Mamdani moved to New York City when he was 7. He attended the prestigious Bronx High School of Science and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bowdoin College. He is the son of Mahmood Mamdani, a professor at Columbia University, and Mira Nair, an Indian filmmaker whose credits include “Mississippi Masala” and “Monsoon Wedding.”

    Before becoming an assemblyman, Mamdani was a housing counselor and self-described C-list rapper who went by the name “Mr. Cardamom.” His short-lived music career was sometimes front and center in his opponent’s attack ads.

    The music video for “Nani,” a rap song where Mamdani pays homage to his grandma and New York City’s South Asian culture, also shows him shirtless, donning only an apron, looking directly at the camera while he rocks side to side. The image was plastered across anti-Mamdani campaign ads to poke fun at his past music career and his lack of governmental experience.

    Andrew Epstein, a campaign aide, noted that Mamdani’s rapping career helped him indirectly in his campaign.

    “An incredible asset for anybody seeking to run for office is bravery in the face of embarrassment and being able to push through the natural inclination many of us have not to kind of introduce themselves to strangers or do things in a kind of silly way in front of them,” Epstein told CNN.

    But Mamdani made a steady climb in the mayor’s race by producing a constant stream of social media videos, including interviews with voters who had supported Trump in 2024 due to the high cost of living. He ran a groundbreaking digital campaign in which he spoke in multiple languages and connected with supporters with a message anchored to affordability.  During the campaign, Mamdani, who natively speaks Urdu, released campaign videos in Bangla, Spanish, and Arabic.

    One of his most memorable viral videos tackled what the candidate referred to as “halal-flation.” He set out to interview street meat vendors about the high cost of running a street food business in New York City. With a mouthful of rice and halal meat, Mamdani detailed how an arcane permit system in the city is in part to blame for the prices of what should be cheap street food.

    “This was one of the coldest nights of the year, bitterly cold,” Epstein recalled recently. “We were downtown by Zuccotti Park near Wall Street and Zohran just asking people on the street, ‘Would you rather pay $10 or $8 for halal?’ People were pushing through trying to get home, you know, it was rejection over and over and over and over again, but it never fazed him.”

    Mamdani was cutting into Cuomo’s lead in public polling by the June primary. The city’s traditional power brokers, including the real estate and business sectors concerned with Mamdani’s democratic socialist identity, banded together in support of Cuomo and donated millions of dollars to anti-Mamdani super PACs. Business leaders argued Mamdani would drive wealthy New Yorkers out and discourage businesses from operating in the nation’s financial capital.

    Their push ultimately helped Mamdani cast his campaign as a fight between working-class people and billionaires.

    Still, his primary victory shocked much of the political world.

    “I don’t think the line is so much between progressives and moderates. It’s between fighters and fakers,” said city comptroller Brad Lander, who ran against Mamdani but allied with him under the primary’s ranked-choice voting system. “What Zohran is showing is that it’s worth putting up big bold ideas for change, standing up and fighting for them, and that’s pretty hopeful. Yes, he’s a democratic socialist, but he had a bold vision for the future of the city and that excited people.”

    The general election campaign

    After taking a vacation in Uganda to celebrate his wedding, Mamdani returned to a city mourning the deaths of New York police officer Didarul Islam and three others in a Midtown Manhattan shooting. He was confronted with his years of tweets criticizing the police, including references to law enforcement as racist and wicked and calling for them to be defunded.

    “I am not defunding the police. I am not running to defund the police,” he would tell reporters after meeting with Islam’s family, part of an overall shift away from anti-police rhetoric that culminated in recent weeks with his commitment to retain the current police commissioner, Jessica Tisch.

    He also reached out to New York’s Jewish community, roiled by his criticisms of Israel’s government and questions about democratic socialism. Mamdani is an outspoken advocate for  Palestinian rights, a supporter of the movement to boycott and divest from Israel and a fierce critic of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    “I hate my choices,” said Cydney Schwartz, a 33-year-old liberal Democrat who has lived in Israel and was in line to cast an early vote. She declined to say who she chose.

    The last days of the campaign

    In the closing days of the campaign, Mamdani referred to the race as a choice between “oligarchy and democracy.”  His omnipresence on the campaign trail was on display during the last days of the race and in the lead-up to the last weekend of early voting in the city.

    As more than half a million New Yorkers turned out to cast their votes early, Mamdani was everywhere: He was in church in the morning, calling into radio shows midday, stopping into ethnic supermarkets in the outer boroughs, popping up on influencer live streams, joining a Union Square freestyle rap battle and capping off his Saturday with a whirlwind tour of the city’s nightclub scene.

    Paying homage to the city that never sleeps, Mamdani appeared to hardly do so either, stopping at six nightclubs in Brooklyn just to do it all over again on the last Sunday of early voting. He attended a church service with his parents, met campaign volunteers before stopping on the sidelines of the New York City Marathon, went to Queens for a meet-up with Gov. Kathy Hochul to cheer on the Buffalo Bills, and popped up in the nosebleeds of Madison Square Garden for a New York Knicks game.

    Cuomo also campaigned across the city. Notably, he tried to cut into Mamdani’s core support of South Asian and Muslim voters by highlighting Mamdani’s opposition to criminal penalties for prostitution. He also laughed when a radio host suggested Mamdani would cheer another 9/11 attack, drawing allegations from Mamdani and others that he was playing to Islamophobia. Cuomo denied he was doing so.

    Incumbent Mayor Eric Adams ended his independent bid and endorsed Cuomo. But Cuomo was unable to push Sliwa, the Republican nominee, out of the race, denying anti-Mamdani voters the chance to consolidate behind one opponent. Sliwa repeatedly and colorfully vowed he would die before making way for Cuomo, arguing he owed it to his supporters to keep running.

    For Cuomo, Tuesday’s results are likely a coda to a long and eventful political career. He was governor of New York for nearly 11 years before resigning in 2021 after he was accused of sexual harassment, allegations he has denied, and amid criticism of how his administration handled Covid-19 cases in nursing homes. Running for mayor, Cuomo leaned into his executive experience, often pointing out Mamdani’s short career in politics and relative lack of work history.

    He relaunched his mayoral bid as an independent after losing to Mamdani in June. He remained focused on public safety, promising to hire additional police officers and build more housing. Cuomo, who has a longstanding relationship with Trump, also sought to portray himself as the better candidate to fend off the president’s attacks on New York City.

    A history-making mayor

    Mamdani will be inaugurated on January 1, 2026. He inherits a deeply complex city home to 8.5 million people, a large bureaucracy, a municipal workforce of roughly 300,000 and a city budget of $115 billion.

    Mamdani will make history as New York City’s first Muslim mayor, the first South Asian to hold the office and one of the youngest mayors elected in modern times. He recently married Rama Duwaji, an artist of Syrian descent who was born in Texas and moved to New York City to complete a master’s degree in illustration. Duwaji skipped traditional campaigning alongside her husband on the trail and while it remains unclear whether she will have any role in his administration, at 28, she will be the first member of Gen Z to serve as New York City’s first lady.

    While Mamdani’s identity as both an immigrant and a South Asian New Yorker was central to his campaign, his connection to that community began to take shape long before he launched his run for City Hall. He first made national headlines in 2021 when he joined New York City cab drivers on a 15-day hunger strike seeking relief from excessive debt.

    Mamdani has a strong connection to the cab driver community in New York City, which is largely made up of immigrants, including thousands of South Asians who were among his fiercest supporters. In the last days of the campaign, Mamdani made a stop at LaGuardia Airport’s taxi stand at midnight, catching cabbies at shift change.

    “Without the night shift, there is no morning,” Mamdani told them.

    CNN’s David Wright contributed to this report.

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    Gloria Pazmino and CNN

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  • Will a Mamdani victory push the Democrats further left?

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    This week, editors Peter SudermanKatherine Mangu-WardNick Gillespie, and Matt Welch discuss the upcoming New York City mayoral election and what a Zohran Mamdani victory could mean for both the city and national politics. They weigh the best-case/worst-case scenarios of a leftward turn in New York, asking whether Mamdani represents a lasting anti-AI socialist movement or simply the newest iteration of the Democratic big tent.

    The editors then turn to the governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey, where Democratic wins would signal continued strength for the party’s centrist wing. They examine a federal judge’s order requiring the government to keep SNAP funded during the ongoing shutdown, and then analyze Trump’s tariff case as it heads to the Supreme Court and what a ruling could mean for presidential trade powers. Finally, a listener asks whether libertarians who work in the defense industry are violating their principles or simply operating within the system as it exists.

     

    0:00–The best-case scenario and worst-case scenario for a Mayor Mamdani

    8:09–Gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia

    20:04–SNAP benefits and shutdown politics

    29:32–Does the GOP have an Obamacare alternative?

    34:57–Listener question on ethical contradictions

    44:37–Tariffs case reaches the Supreme Court

    55:05–Weekly cultural recommendation

     

    Mentioned in This Podcast

    The Democratic Thrill for Mamdani Is a Tell,” by Matt Welch
    Will Democrats Find Their Way?” By Liz Wolfe
    Mamdani’s Socialist Mayorship Will Make New York a Worse Place To Live and Do Business,” by Nick Gillespie
    Zohran Mamdani’s $5 Billion Corporate Tax Hike Threatens NYC’s Status as the World’s Financial Capital,” by Filippo Borello
    3 Reasons Why Zohran Mamdani’s City-Run Grocery Stores Will Fail,” by Natalie Dowzicky
    New York City Is About To Elect a Socialist Mayor in Zohran Mamdani. Why Won’t This Failed Ideology Die?” By Zach Weissmueller
    About 1 in 5 Kids Are at Risk of Losing SNAP. Centralized Control Keeps Failing Low-Income Families.” By Romina Boccia and Tyler Turman
    SNAP Stops,” by Liz Wolfe

    In Tariff Case, Trump’s Attorneys Can’t Decide if Foreign Investment Is Good or Bad for America,” by Eric Boehm
    Trump Hopes To Bully SCOTUS Into Upholding His Tariffs,” by Damon Root
    Trump’s Tariff Tantrum Proves He Shouldn’t Have That Power,” by Joe Lancaster

    In Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia, Elites Are Alien Creatures,” by Peter Suderman

    I’m Just A Shill (FT. Zohran),” by Andrew Cuomo


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    Peter Suderman

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  • How the Senate filibuster works and what advocates and critics say about it

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    Congressional Republicans are pushing back on calls from the White House to end the filibuster so that Republicans don’t need the help of Democrats to pass a bill to reopen the government. CBS News’ Lindsey Reiser explains what the filibuster is, and why the Senate has held on to the rule for decades.

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  • Virginia governor race underlines future hopes for Democrats as Spanberger makes final campaign push

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    This fall’s race for Virginia governor offers Democrats a chance to start recovering from stinging losses in last year’s presidential election. 

    It also brings the risk that the party could slip further into the doldrums that hurt its brand with voters around the country in 2024. 

    The Nov. 4 election for governor of Virginia — pitting former Democratic U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger against Republican Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears — will serve as one of Democrats’ first major opportunities to rebound from the setbacks they suffered in the 2024 presidential election, when they also lost control of the Senate and failed to retake control of the House. 

    Spanberger rallies with Obama

    Spanberger held a rally with former President Barack Obama on the weekend before Election Day. President Trump, however, has had little involvement as Earle-Sears looks to succeed Gov. Glenn Youngkin and become the first GOP candidate since 1997 to succeed a fellow Republican as governor of the commonwealth.

    Mr. Trump has not formally endorsed Earle-Sears. In a telephone rally on the eve of the election, the president attacked Spanberger and encouraged people to vote for Republicans up and down the ballot, but he didn’t mention Earle-Sears by name.

    Under Virginia law, a governor cannot serve for two consecutive terms, which has resulted in open races for the office without the advantage of incumbency. Regardless of who wins between the two in November, Spanberger or Earle-Sears will become the Commonwealth’s first ever female governor. 

    Candidates for the Virginia governor’s election: Democrat Abigail Spanberger, left, and Republican Winsome Earle-Sears.

    AP


    The Trump administration’s impact on the federal workforce and the ongoing shutdown may also be on voters’ minds in the coming days, as they get their say in a contest that historically has been fraught with prospect of serving as a rebuke to the incumbent in the White House. 

    “It is because of the trade wars and the retaliatory tariff policies and the attack on Virginia, our economy and our people, that we recognize the possibility of November 4, that we recognize how important it is to have a governor who will stand up for Virginians,” Spanberger said at a recent event. 

    State of the race

    Spanberger headed into the start of early voting in September with a clear advantage in the contest. That momentum threatened to be impacted, however, by a controversy that has made its way through Virginia politics. She has faced difficult political questions in attempting to respond to violent text messages, authored by Jay Jones, the Democratic nominee in the Virginia Attorney General’s race, about a Republican leader. 

    “I’m asking my opponent to please, ask him to get out of the race,” Earle-Sears said during the lone debate between the two candidates. “Have some political courage. What you have done is you are taking political calculations about your future as governor. Well as governor, you have to make hard choices, and that means telling Jay Jones to leave the race.” 

    Spanberger has denounced Jones’ words, which were made public after the start of early voting, where he wrote in the past about a fantasy hypothetical situation involving the shooting of a Virginia state House Republican leader. 

    Jones however has not left the race, and is still running as the Democratic attorney general candidate in the Nov. 4 election. 

    That dynamic has provided Virginia Republicans with an issue against Democrats that could alienate moderates and independents at a time where concerns about political violence are rampant. Virginia Democrats are also mounting a last-minute effort to redraw congressional districts in the state to help the left counter Mr. Trump’s successful push in a series of red states to undertake an overhaul of district maps in hopes of helping Republicans hold on to the House in next year’s midterm elections. 

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  • What to know about the Democratic Socialists of America

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    What to know about the Democratic Socialists of America – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    As Zohran Mamdani’s campaign continues to draw national and even international attention, CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett takes a deeper look at the state of socialism in America and Mamdani’s rise.

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  • The Democrats Have a Democrat Problem

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    We’re one year away from the 2026 midterm elections and a day before voters in New Jersey and Virginia elect governors – as good a time as any to assess the political landscape.

    One takeaway from a new poll is that the Democratic Party has a problem … with its own voters.

    The survey from the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, conducted before the partial government shutdown, found a whopping 67% of Democrats say their own party makes them feel frustrated. Thirty percent go so far as to say they are angry with their side.

    The frustration is way up from 2019 and 2021, when 50% and 48% of Democrats, respectively, said they felt frustrated with their party.

    • 41% of Democrats said their party isn’t fighting hard enough against President Donald Trump
    • 13% see a lack of good leadership
    • 10% complain of a lack of good messaging

    A Polling Quirk

    We saw something similar in the first polls about Obamacare. Among those expressing opposition to the law were Democrats who felt the Affordable Care Act – a heavily negotiated compromise approach to overhauling the nation’s healthcare system – did not go far enough.

    In other words, when you see disapproval in a poll, don’t assume it’s all people who hate the concept. Many may mean they’re getting too much of a thing, but some will mean they’re not getting enough of it.

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    No Clear Edge?

    On balance, the Pew poll found widespread unhappiness with both parties. Sixty-one percent of respondents said Republicans are very or somewhat too extreme in their positions. Fifty-seven percent said the same about Democrats.

    (If you want more evidence of the Democrats’ plight, an October CBS News/YouGov poll found 64% of those surveyed used “weak” as the top word to describe the party.)

    Do the parties govern in an ethical way? Just 39% said so about Republicans, and 42% said that accurately described Democrats. Do they respect the country’s democratic institutions and traditions? Forty-four percent said Republicans do, while 53% said Democrats do.

    On the economy, arguably the most critical issue, Republicans have seen their edge drop considerably from two years ago, with 38% of Americans saying they agree with the GOP’s economic policies. Thirty-five percent say the same about Democrats, only three percentage points lower. Republicans had a 12-point lead on this question in 2023.

    Unhappy With Trump, But Not Thrilled With Dems

    Thanks to a new Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll, we’re getting a clearer picture of voters’ views of Trump and what his standing means – and doesn’t mean – one year out from midterms.

    Overall, 41% of Americans say they approve of the job he’s doing, with 59% saying they disapprove. That’s the highest disapproval since a similar poll one week after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

    The president’s doing fine with Republicans, at 86% approval. And he’s doing dismally among Democrats, with 95% of them disapproving. But Trump is struggling with independents, among whom he has a 30% approval rating while 69% disapprove.

    The Post poll had some pretty bleak findings for Democrats, with 68% of Americans saying the party is out of touch with their lives. Sixty-three percent say the same about Trump and 61% say so about Republicans.

    All of which leads to the poll’s findings about which party would win the day if the midterm elections were held today: 46% of registered voters say they’d support the Democratic candidate in their district while 44% said the Republican and 9% said they would not vote.

    Obviously, a lot can – and will – change before Americans go to vote. But Democrats need to find a way to energize their own voters if they’re going to retake the House.

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    Olivier Knox

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  • Abigail Spanberger Thinks That Democrats Need to Listen More

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    Every four years, a familiar pattern plays out in Virginia, in which governors are limited to one term at a time and elections are held twelve months after the latest Presidential contest. A semi-substantive campaign breaks out, but the result is driven by the national mood; only once in the past half century has the President’s own party won the governor’s mansion in Richmond. Unlike in New Jersey—where Spanberger’s old congressional roommate, Mikie Sherrill, is running in the other gubernatorial race this fall—in Virginia, the out candidate invariably wins, and whatever that person does is held up as a national model for the Party. So it’s only natural for Spanberger to contend that her case for political moderation deserves a serious look, and perhaps for her to be a little tired of all the attention on Mamdani. As Election Day approaches, Spanberger, who is a warm but assiduous campaigner, is ahead in her race by a wider margin than any candidate in her state’s recent history. Republicans have tried dragging down Spanberger by amplifying the case of Jay Jones, the Democratic candidate for attorney general, who was found to have sent text messages three years ago fantasizing about killing the G.O.P. speaker of the state assembly. Spanberger condemned him but wouldn’t call on him to withdraw from the race. Still, Earle-Sears—a Jamaican immigrant and a social conservative who recently insisted, in a debate, that being against protections for people in same-sex marriages is “not discrimination”—has run a mostly puzzling and underfunded campaign. (Donald Trump only recently, tepidly, backed her.)

    Spanberger’s lead has afforded her the chance to run a straightforward Democratic campaign focussed largely on the cost of living in her state. To optimists, that’s a through line connecting candidates as different as Spanberger and Mamdani. Tim Kaine, the Democratic senator from Virginia, pointed out that both are younger than their predecessors and that both stress the issue of affordability. But in the race’s final stretch Spanberger has seemed eager to emphasize what, in her telling, is the realism of her approach. “This is what I’m going to work to do, right? I’m not going to make promises that I can’t keep, but I will work tirelessly to deliver,” she said. “There’s no magic wand to lower housing costs, but it takes intentionality and a plan to work with the General Assembly to change some of our laws to increase housing supply, to have a governor’s office and an administration focussed on making a long-term plan to bring down costs, right? Health care’s the same—you can’t just wave a magic wand and fix the system.”

    “If you just speak in bumper-sticker sayings or what fits on a rally sign, you’re actually underestimating voters, or you’re making a promise that you can’t complete,” she continued. “And I think that’s part of why, you know, over time, people’s faith in politics might get degraded.”

    Don Beyer, a Democratic congressman from northern Virginia, said that his colleagues in the U.S. House have been watching Spanberger’s campaign as a glimmer of hope since the spring, as Trump’s steamrolling of the capital has intensified. “Everyone’s been pointing to it: ‘We know we can’t pass any legislation, we can only use the courts, we can’t impeach him. But Abigail can win!’ ” Beyer told me. He said he expected that, if she does, it will help Democrats recruit stronger candidates for tough midterm races next year. Kaine said his fellow-senators, too, are monitoring the contest closely. But, in Kaine’s account, they are more cautious: “They view the Virginia result as one that will either be a hope creator nationally, or the one that will pour some cold water on people who are already feeling a little bit down.”

    Late last year, while Kaine was traversing the state to campaign for a third term in the U.S. Senate, he started to notice that something was missing from the messages he saw on his hotel TVs, in media markets that overlapped with West Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Kentucky. “Other Democrats were running ads about preserving democracy, or about choice. Important issues, but they weren’t running ads about the economy, where the Republicans were running ads about inflation,” he told me this fall. Kaine, who was elected Virginia’s governor in 2005, before becoming Barack Obama’s first Democratic National Committee chairman and then Hillary Clinton’s running mate in her bid for the Presidency, had done a straightforward spot about his record building roads, bridges, and ships, and supporting offshore wind power, and voters were responding positively. “It just made me mad, because I thought both Kamala Harris, but also other Democrats, had economic stuff they could have put front and center,” he said. Kaine won reëlection comfortably in an otherwise dark November for Democrats, and, soon after, he spoke with Spanberger about what he’d seen.

    She didn’t need much convincing. She had already been on the trail for a year, using a version of the basic economics- and education-first pitch that had served her well in her three congressional races. (The 2020 round of redistricting shifted much of her purview to northern Virginia, meaning she’s already earned votes from a big band of the state.) Virginia’s current governor, the Republican Glenn Youngkin, won his race in 2021 in part by warning of the dangers of “critical race theory.” When Earle-Sears started trying to reignite a culture war against Spanberger, whom she has accused of being a secret hard-core lefty, the Democrat largely shrugged it off and pivoted back to her safe space: protecting paychecks, fighting the effects of tariffs, investing in rural hospitals. In the race’s only debate this fall, Spanberger mostly stared ahead as Earle-Sears sought repeatedly to get her to address the Jones scandal, sometimes pivoting from entirely unrelated topics—like a car tax—to try to force the issue. Spanberger skated past a series of moderator questions about trans rights by mostly demurring and offering that local jurisdictions should make tough calls about who can use what bathroom or play on what team.

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    Gabriel Debenedetti

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  • WATCH: Dems dodge on whether Obamacare is worth shutting down government: ‘Ask a Republican’

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    As the shutdown enters its second month, Democrats dodged questions on whether their hardline stance on extending Obamacare subsidies is worth keeping federal workers without pay and risking benefits through the government closure.

    Asked by Fox News Digital whether it is worth continuing the standoff over Obamacare as federal workers go weeks without pay and benefits lag, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., answered, “We have to ask a Republican, because the Republicans have agreed to exactly zero negotiations.”

    Donald Trump is out flying around the world, the Republicans here in the Senate won’t do a damn thing without Donald Trump telling them to, and the House Republicans are now on their sixth week of paid vacation,” Warren continued. “So, you know, we’d like to sit down and negotiate, but we’ve got no Republicans on the other side.”

    President Donald Trump embarked on a diplomatic tour to Asia this week, visiting with leaders from several different countries, both friendly and unfriendly to the U.S., including South Korea, Japan and China.

    GOVERNMENT LIMPS DEEPER INTO SHUTDOWN CRISIS WITH NO DEAL IN SIGHT

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks on the fourth and last day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago, Ill., on Aug. 22, 2024. ( SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

    House Republicans, meanwhile, have been in recess, with Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., indicating the body will remain thus until the Senate agrees to the House-passed budget continuing resolution bill to reopen the government.

    When asked the same question, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., also placed the blame on Trump, saying, “He’s got to agree to live by the deal we come up with; thus far we’ve not been able to get him to agree.”

    “The issue that matters the most to me in opening government is getting the president to guarantee that if we open it, he won’t then tear up the deal,” Kaine added. “We have to do a budget deal for 30 days or 45 days, whatever is done, but he has to agree that if you do that, he won’t then the next day start firing more people, canceling projects.”

    Kaine credited Trump for finding funds to pay U.S. troops, “when the House refused to come back to take up a military pay bill,” saying, “I think that’s important.”

    Still, he also ripped on the president, saying, “Nobody should go hungry, nobody should go without pay. President Trump has billions of dollars in a contingency fund for staff that Congress put there for this moment and he is cruelly refusing to use it, and that’s all on him.”

    THUNE, GOP REJECT PUSHING ‘RIFLE-SHOT’ GOVERNMENT FUNDING BILLS DURING SHUTDOWN

    Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Monday, Aug. 11, 2025, in Washington as from left, Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, look on.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., meanwhile, called Trump’s stance “as fabulously immoral as any act seen by any president ever.”

    “The funding is there for November, $5.5 billion,” he said, “The president has the authority to distribute those funds … But the president decided to attack the welfare of America’s children as a bargaining chip.”

    Faced with the question, Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., said, “Republicans are giving us two choices: either take health care away from millions of people or take food away from millions of people and don’t pay the troops. I don’t think that’s the choice that we’re facing.”

    Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., shot back, “You’re talking to the wrong Democratic senator because I voted for the continuing resolution 13 times.”

    SENATE DEMOCRATS DEFY WHITE HOUSE WARNINGS, AGAIN BLOCK GOP BID TO REOPEN GOVERNMENT

    The Capitol Building is seen from the National Mall in Washington D.C. on Friday, August 9, 2024.

    The Capitol Building is seen from the National Mall in Washington D.C. on Friday, August 9, 2024. (Aaron Schwartz/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

    Pressed further on why more Democratic senators haven’t followed suit, Cortez-Masto said, “You’ve got to talk to my colleagues.”

    Sen. Angela Alsobrooks, D-Md., also framed the issue as one of affordability, saying, “The Republicans in the House haven’t been to work in six weeks. So, it shows how callous and uncaring they really are. They need to reopen this government immediately.”

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    “We also need to ensure that we don’t inflict any further pain. We’ve inflicted so much pain on hardworking, working-class Americans who cannot afford not only the insurance and healthcare, they can no longer afford groceries,” she said, adding, “This administration is causing our economy to fail and our hurting families every day.”

    Alsobrooks noted, “I have voted on eight different occasions to reopen the government and, you know what, the Republicans need to come to the table and negotiate something that allows us both the reopen this government and to make sure that we are ensuring that Americans are able to afford health care coverage.”

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  • DNC chair predicts wins in key governor races as Trump agenda faces first test

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    EXCLUSIVE: PHILADELPHIA, PA Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair Ken Martin is confident his party’s investment in 2025’s most consequential elections will pay off.

    “I do expect that we’ll win those elections in New Jersey and Virginia,” Martin said in an exclusive national interview with Fox News Digital, pointing to the only two states holding gubernatorial contests this year. “We feel pretty bullish about our chances.”

    Democrats are looking to rebound from last year’s setbacks – when the party lost control of the White House and Senate and failed to win back the House majority – with strong showings in next week’s races. 

    The New Jersey and Virginia contests are viewed as early tests of President Donald Trump‘s agenda and as a barometer for next year’s midterm elections, when Democrats hope to win back control of Congress.

    FIVE KEY RACES TO WATCH IN NEXT WEEK’S ELECTIONS

    Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin addresses party members at the DNC’s summer meeting, on Aug. 25, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News )

    The DNC has dished out over $7 million – a party record – for get-out-the-vote and organizing efforts this summer and autumn in New Jersey, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, where Democrats are fighting to retain three state supreme court seats. 

    “I’ve always taken the position that every election matters, whether it’s an on year off year, whether it’s a local election, a federal election, every inch of ground that we gain here adds up,” Martin emphasized.

    Martin said that since Trump returned to the White House in January, “there’s been 45 elections on the ballot. Democrats have overperformed in all of them to the tune of about 16 percentage points on average.” While confident, he added that “we’re not taking anything for granted.”

    DEMOCRATIC AND REPUBLICAN NOMINEES IN CRUCIAL GOVERNOR’S RACE TOUT SURGE IN EARLY VOTING NUMBERS

    Asked what a ballot box setback would mean for Democrats, Martin said his focus is on “turning out every single vote we can over these next several days left to make sure we do win.”

    He reiterated, “I do expect that we’ll win those elections in New Jersey and Virginia. We have terrific candidates who are running great campaigns.”

    Martin spoke during a two-day campaign swing through Pennsylvania, ahead of return stops to boost voter turnout in New Jersey and Virginia.

    Mikie Sherrill in Elizabeth, New Jersey

    Rep. Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic nominee for governor in New Jersey, greets voters at a senior center in Elizabeth, N.J., on Oct. 29, 2025 (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

    In blue-leaning New Jersey, polls show a tight race between Democratic nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill and GOP rival Jack Ciattarelli, who is vying in the race to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy.

    Asked why Republicans feel bullish about their chances to capture the Garden State’s governor’s office, Martin told Politico in a recent interview that “New Jersey is the best place, probably, for Donald Trump to actually stop the Democratic momentum — or at least minimize the Democratic momentum that we’ve seen throughout this year.”

    Presented with his comments, Martin said that “we expect this race to be close, and it certainly seems like it will be close.”

    And he noted that “history is not on our side in the sense that we’ve never elected, at least in 50 years, a Democrat to a third term in the governorship” in New Jersey.

    HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING AND ANALYSIS ON THE 2025 ELECTIONS

    Still, he argued that Sherrill “is running a really strong campaign on a message that’s resonating with New Jerseyans.”

    In Virginia, recent controversy in the state’s attorney general race has complicated Democrats’ efforts to hold the governor’s mansion, forcing nominee, former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, to defend against GOP attacks. Polls had shown Spanberger with a solid lead over Republican rival Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. 

    Jay Jones speaks at a podium while wife Mavis Jones stands behind him

    Jay Jones addresses supporters after winning the Democratic nomination for Virginia Attorney General as wife Mavis Jones looks on in Norfolk, Virginia, on June 17, 2025.  (Trevor Metcalfe/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    The controversy centers on Democratic attorney general nominee Jay Jones, who apologized for texts sent in 2022 comparing then-House Speaker Todd Gilbert to mass murderers Adolf Hitler and Pol Pot, saying that if given two bullets, “he would use both” on the Republican lawmaker. 

    Republicans have demanded Jones withdraw from the race. 

    “Let me be very clear, I immediately condemned those vile and indefensible comments and text messages that he made and called on him to apologize,” Martin said. “He needed to apologize to Virginians, which he did.”

    Asked by Fox News Digital if he should have called for Jones to step aside, Martin said, “That’s not up to me to decide. That’s up to Virginians to decide whether or not his comments were disqualifying, and they’ll make their decision in a few days.”

    Martin also called Pennsylvania’s state supreme court retention elections in Pennsylvania “critical for our party, because what we’ve seen over many years now is attempts by billionaire donors and special interests to buy Supreme Court seats throughout the country, and it’s an attempt actually to thwart our democracy.”

    “The reality is, is for us, this is a critical election for the National Democratic Party, because if they win here, if these billionaire donors are able to win these three Supreme Court races, they will certainly take this on the road and try to do this everywhere else in the country,” Martin warned.

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    The Republican National Committee (RNC), asked to respond to Martin’s remarks, pointed to its fundraising edge. 

    “Ken Martin has turned the DNC into a debt-ridden circus run by radicals — and we sincerely hope he keeps up the great work, RNC national press secretary Kiersten Pels argued in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Regardless of what happens next Tuesday, it won’t be because of anything Ken Martin did. The DNC is broke, desperate, and wasting its last dollars trying to save face in blue states, and even then, Democrats are struggling to hold on.”

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  • What Explains Graham Platner’s Popularity?

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    Earlier this week, I spoke to Platner, who told me that his journey into politics began, in high school, when he read work by the historian Howard Zinn. Following graduation, he enlisted in the Marine infantry; after serving for four years, he went to George Washington University, where he discovered the writing of the anarchist scholar David Graeber and the historian Greg Grandin. He did another stint in the military, including a tour of duty in Afghanistan, and came back to the United States disillusioned with the American project, especially its foreign policy. He started listening to podcasts, most notably “The Majority Report,” hosted by Sam Seder and Michael Brooks. This was around 2016, and while Platner supported Bernie Sanders and his policies, he was in a “time of deep frustration and isolation,” he said, before he returned to Afghanistan, in 2018.

    Platner does see his campaign as an extension of Sanders’s, he said—maybe not exactly in terms of its rhetoric so much as in its animating force. He talked with me for a while about the long history of economic-populist political movements in America, and about how they died out after the Vietnam War, as labor lost power during the Reagan Administration and a new type of liberal politics was formed under Bill Clinton. Platner argues that the old momentum did not totally dissipate but merely needed Sanders to kick it back up. “Those underlying problems never got fixed, and so the energy has just remained there,” he said. “The inequality is still there and all the underlying structures are still in place.” His campaign, like that of Sanders, is rooted in “movement politics,” he said, and in “building power through organizing.”

    The problem with the dirtbag left wasn’t that it was uncouth or edgy or rude—those were its selling points—but, rather, that it could sometimes feel too intellectual, insider-y, and a bit too close to the élites that it was always criticizing. When populist rabble-rousing comes from fancy professors, writers, and podcasters who went to private school, you don’t take it all that seriously. Sanders had given them a vehicle for political change, but, in the years between his runs for President, much of the online left fell into a blinkered, Noam Chomsky-inspired form of media criticism—at times, it seemed as though they believed that the greatest threats to their socialist-ish, decidedly metropolitan utopia could all be found in the opinion sections of the Times and the feature well of The Atlantic. They flagged bad headlines and dog-piled on clumsy tweets from journalists, accumulating some influence in the process, but mostly among people like me—a left-leaning journalist at a fancy magazine who lives in one of the most expensive cities in America.

    Meanwhile, the electoral legacy of the Sanders insurgency had been carried most notably by a trio of women of color: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar. Each of these politicians has achieved national prominence, but one could imagine how their identities might place a ceiling on any national ambitions. What was needed, one might conclude, was a rural white guy, perhaps one who had served as a grunt overseas and had an unassailably salt-of-the-earth job—say, an oyster farmer. Someone who could credibly talk to the alienated, broke people of America about economic redistribution.

    Platner, it turns out, had even more in common with the enfants terribles of the online left than people initially realized. Like them, he posted a lot online. He did so anonymously, and used offensive language that was meant to provoke a reaction. Having read his Reddit archive, I believe that his posts—which, in addition to homophobic language, include a question about Black people’s tipping habits—were mischaracterized in the early news coverage. He was not some reactionary who is now posing, for whatever reason, as a liberal; in most of his posts, Platner was writing about military stuff, and about being the only lefty in his platoon. He also discussed his disenchantment with the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan and spoke out, on several occasions, about racist and violent police practices. Granted, he was not typing out words that might be suitable for an appearance on “Meet the Press.” Platner sounded like someone who had listened to a lot of leftist podcasts.

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  • MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace, JB Pritzker ridiculed for claiming Dems never called Trump Hitler

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    Fox News’ “Gutfeld!” panel criticized MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday after they claimed no Democrats had ever compared President Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler.

    Gutfeld opened the segment by airing a clip of Pritzker’s appearance on Wallace’s “The Best People” podcast on Monday, where the two agreed that no Democrat has ever called Trump Hitler and that Republicans make such claims as a smear tactic.

    “Wow, if only we had this thing called the internet,” Gutfeld ribbed before playing a compilation of Democrats comparing the president to Hitler.

    CROCKETT DISMISSES CRITICS WHO THINK ‘HITLER’ AND ‘FASCIST’ COMPARISONS CONTRIBUTE TO POLITICAL VIOLENCE

    Nicolle Wallace speaks onstage during Former FBI Director James Comey In Conversation With MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace at 92NY on May 30, 2023, in New York City. (Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)

    Gutfeld then introduced a video compilation that included prominent Democrats such as former Vice President Kamala Harris and Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who in a clip from July 19, called Trump “wannabe Hitler.”

    Mocking Wallace’s producers for failing to inform her about “something called reality,” he quipped that, via a quick search on the internet, these instances would be readily available to them.

    During his interview with Wallace on Monday, Pritzker articulated a distinct line between drawing historical parallels in policy and comparing Trump to Hitler directly. 

    “I’m not suggesting, I haven’t suggested Donald Trump is Hitler,” Pritzker said.

    “I don’t think any Democrat has,” Wallace said. “And I actually think it’s a smear that they project back onto critics. But JD Vance called Donald Trump ‘cultural heroin.’ He called him ‘America’s Hitler.’ I mean, the attacks on Donald Trump as a fascist came from three generals who worked for him.”

    PRITZKER SWIFTLY FACT-CHECKED AFTER CLAIMING HE NEVER DERIDED GOP WITH DICTATORSHIP COMPARISON: ‘PATHOLOGICAL’

    JB Pritzker delivers remarks in D.C.

    Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at the office of The Center for American Progress event on March 18 in Washington, D.C.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    However, the record shows that many prominent Democrats, and Wallace herself, have drawn parallels between Trump and Hitler.

    After Trump drew cheers from a crowd as he embraced the word “nationalist” during a 2018 event, she replied, “I watch enough History Channel to know that they cheered at Hitler, too.”

    Fox News’ Kat Timpf chimed in with her thoughts on Pritzker’s claim, noting that the governor claimed he never even “suggested” that Trump was Hitler and “set the bar very low for himself.”

    “So, when you were saying that the way Trump’s immigration policy is — is a precursor to the Holocaust, what were you suggesting that makes Trump in those circumstances?” Timpf questioned. “I would love to hear his answer.”

    “Because if he would have said I never directly called [Trump] Hitler, maybe that’s true. But what did you mean when you mean by all the stuff — you certainly suggested it,” she added.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE

    Donald Trump speaking to military senior leaders with American flag backdrop

    President Donald Trump speaks to a gathering of top U.S. military commanders at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, in Quantico, Va. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo)

    Pritzker, who created the Illinois Accountability Commission to track ICE agents’ conduct, insisted there are instances of misconduct “all the time.” 

    The vocal Trump critic has compared the president’s ICE crackdown to Nazi Germany and called ICE agents Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s “thugs.”

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    Fox News’ Alexander Hall and Stephanie Samsel contributed to this report.

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  • 25 states sue Trump administration over SNAP food stamp funding freeze

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    25 states sue Trump administration over SNAP food stamp funding freeze – CBS News










































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    25 states are suing the Trump administration to stop federal food aid from being suspended amid the government shutdown. CBS News correspondent Nicole Valdes has more.

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  • ‘Opposition party’: Karine Jean-Pierre, press secretary under Biden, on why she left the Democratic Party – WTOP News

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    Karine Jean-Pierre, former White House press secretary under President Joe Biden, joined WTOP on Tuesday afternoon to discuss her new book about her time in the White House.

    The Democratic Party continues to reel from President Donald Trump’s 2024 election victory and the Republican Party’s total command of all three branches of government.

    There have been several books written about what happened in the days before and after former President Joe Biden’s disastrous debate with Trump — his eventual withdrawal from the race and the ill-fated campaign of then-Vice President Kamala Harris.

    There’s also a lot of hand-wringing among Democrats about what to do next to oppose the Trump administration.

    One insider in the Biden White House has gone a big step further than just criticism. Former Biden White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said she has left the Democratic Party and is now an independent.

    She details why in her new book, “Independent — A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines.” Jean-Pierre joined WTOP’s Sarah Jacobs and Shawn Anderson in-studio on Tuesday afternoon to discuss her new book about her time in the White House.

    She criticized the Democratic Party’s lack of strategy and leadership, particularly in handling  Biden’s 2024 campaign. Jean-Pierre defended Biden’s mental acuity and criticized the timing and manner of his removal from the race.

    Jean-Pierre did a full interview with WTOP’s “Books Brother” Terik King — that will air this weekend on The Book Report.

    Read and listen to the interview below.

    WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Sarah Jacobs speak with former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre

    The following transcript has been lightly edited for clarity.

    • Sarah Jacobs:

      What was it that prompted you to leave the Democratic Party you were a significant part of for over two decades?

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      Yes, I totally agree it was. It definitely was a party that I believed in, and still am aligned with, but I do not like the direction of the party currently, right now; because I feel as if they are not fighting. I feel as if there’s no strategy. I feel as if we are headed to a direction where our democracy could be no more if we are not very, very careful.

      I learned, during my time, in order to have democracy, you have to work at it every day, and I don’t see that from the leadership. And I do also feel the groups who really make up the party, some of us are being thrown under the bus.

      We knew the Trump administration was coming in November of last year, and there was no plan. There was no focus. There was no ‘OK, no. This should not be business as usual. So what are we going to do?’

      And that’s one of the reasons I wrote the book, as to what is the direction next? How do we meet this moment? And a road map to get engaged and to encourage people to get involved.

    • Shawn Anderson:

      In your book, though, you’re particularly angry over how President Biden was essentially moved out of the race. You felt that was very unfair. Talk more about that.

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      I have known President Biden since 2009, when he was vice president for Barack Obama, and he has always been someone that I have known to be decent, to be a good human, to care about people and to work very hard, certainly when he was president, to deliver for the American people. And he did that.

      Objectively, he had a pretty successful couple of years in the administration with the economy, trying to turn that around, dealing with issues that really matter to the American people. And so when you come to this debate, it was a bad debate. It was a shocking debate. Not going to take that away. We saw what we saw.

      I was still surprised in the way the Democratic Party coordinated a campaign, an ugly campaign, to take him out of the race after 50-plus years of public service.

      One thing that I try to tell people is to understand I was in it personally. So I saw what was happening. I saw the campaign develop. I saw the nastiness that was kind of infused into him making his decision.

      And for me, it was something that I had never seen before, and it was quite shocking.

    • Sarah Jacobs:

      Many Democrats say they detected cognitive decline, and that was a big reason why they wanted the president to step down. Is that not your experience?

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      That’s not my experience, and I talk about it in the book. Look, I got to see him every single day. I am not saying he did not age. He aged. He showed age. He talked slower, he walked slower. His voice was softer. I mean, there are things that we saw that looked like age.

      But I’m talking about his mental acuity. If he was there, he was there every single day. He pushed us. He was on top of policy. Anytime he called me or called me into the Oval Office, I knew that I had to be ready for whatever he was going to present or ask me. Let’s not forget, this is somebody who also led a coalition when it came to the war in Ukraine that, globally, we hadn’t seen in decades. People saw him actively, almost every day, doing the work. And so that’s what I’m talking about. That’s what I saw, and I could only speak for myself.

    • Shawn Anderson:

      Given the political reality that even friendly Democratic voters perceived, President Biden was not up to the job physically. Why, in your opinion, wasn’t it a prudent move to encourage him to leave the race after that June 27 debate?

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      I just think the timing of it — it was so close. There was so much on this 2024 race. And the time to have done that, if they were thinking about his age, to me, should have been in 2023 after the midterms, when the primary was going to start.

      That’s when a conversation should have happened, and it didn’t. If anything, they encouraged him to run. They encouraged him to do a reelection. I also think that behavior from the Democratic leadership, I actually think hurt us as well. Because, you remember, there was a primary where 14 million voters came out during the primary to vote for both Biden and Kamala Harris.

      You have to think those voters — some of those voters probably were supporters of his — and thought to themselves, ‘What’s happening? What’s going on with the party?’

      To me, the timing of it, what was the reality, not just of that debate, but everything. You’ve got to consider, everything — who he was, what he did, how he actually was able to deliver for the American people. And again, I’m speaking for myself.

      On average, I saw him every day, and that debate was not the norm.

    • Sarah Jacobs:

      You are joining a growing number of people in this country as independent voters. What do you want readers to take away from your book?

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      I’m glad you said that, because there is something broken with the system. When you have millions of independent voters who say they don’t see themselves in the Democratic Party. They don’t see themselves in the Republican Party. But then, if there’s a primary, most primaries are closed, and so they can’t even have a voice.

      That means the system is broken. And I’m not calling for a third party. I’m calling for a system that works and that feels like it is centered around people, not party.

      My whole point of this is, please get involved. Please figure out a way to have a voice. Please figure out how you can help the communities that you care about. It is important how you engage in this moment. It is critical that we get people to engage.

      And I also believe, if the leadership were to come together, that there’s a way to reimagine how we move forward, how we move in this future, and as we’re looking at this country. That is the way that I think about things. We have to stay engaged. We do. We have to stay engaged.

    • Shawn Anderson:

      But the Democrats, and you’re no longer a Democrat, are moving in three, four different directions. So do you have something specific that you believe, something hard and fast, specific thing that you believe should be done to move that forward?

    • Karine Jean-Pierre:

      You said the Democrats don’t have the House, they don’t have the Senate, they don’t have the White House. It is true. So in my mind, they should be like an opposition party.

      This is the time that you do everything that you can to communicate and to have a unifying message, not a broken up message — a unifying message, so that it really connects with the American people. And this is the reimagining.

      I’m glad that they are sticking hard on the shutdown. And don’t get me wrong, I know a lot of people are suffering from the shutdown. I know a lot of federal government workers who are wondering how they’re going to put food on their table.

      The problem with where we are today is, if the Democrats don’t stand up, we are going to head to a health care crisis. What they have to do now is make sure that they message this, that the American people know what they’re trying to do and why they’re trying to do it. So to me, it’s a messaging. It’s an opposition. What does that look like? How do they really have a plan and a strategy to move forward in that?

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  • SNAP funds to run out as shutdown stalemate enters 5th week

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    Nearly 42 million Americans will not receive benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, starting Saturday, due to the ongoing government shutdown. CBS News congressional reporter Taurean Small has more.

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  • Gov. Walz, DFL Leaders hold first in series of gun violence town halls around Minnesota

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    Governor Walz and DFL leaders say they’re hitting the road and plan to make stops around the state to talk with Minnesotans about gun violence.

    Meanwhile, negotiations in St. Paul have stalled and legislative leaders in a politically divided Capitol are at a stand still when it comes to addressing gun violence at a special session. 

    DFL leaders made their first stop in Waconia on Saturday afternoon. Hundreds of attendees filled the high school auditorium to hear more from Governor Walz and Gabby Giffords, a gun violence survivor and former congresswoman.

    Though, the crowd first heard Tess Rada, the parent of a third grader who attends Annunciation Catholic School. Some Annunciation parents and families filled a section of seats near the stage, sporting Annunciation t-shirts. 

    “If your child was one of the lucky ones who survived, imagine finding them that day shaking crying covered in blood,” said Rada, recalling the day that 30 people were injured and two children were murdered in the August 27th shooting at Annunciation in Minneapolis.

    “I understand that guns are a part of American life and the right to own them is constituently protected but the cost of these particular weapons is simply too high.” 

    Governor Tim Walz then took the stage, answering a handful of pre-selected questions, alongside a physician, educator and Giffords. 

    While he’s advocated for a ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines in the past, and vowed to call a special session, the governor acknowledges progress in that area has slowed and turned his attention to another route. 

    “I will tell all of you, well, put it on the ballot and you can vote for a constitutional amendment on this. Then let the people vote,” said Governor Walz on Saturday. 

    In the case of a constitutional amendment, Walz would still face a divided legislature as that kind of proposal must pass both chambers before it would make it to the ballot for voters to decide. 

    “I think it is important that we look at every option available to us and any of those whether it is a constitutional amendment, or a comprehensive agenda will have to go through the legislature,” Sen. Erin Murphy, DFL Senate majority leader, told reporters after the event. 

    Republican House Speaker Lisa Demuth says some democrats aren’t committed to the effort Walz is pushing. 

    “Since the governor couldn’t even get his own members on board with a special session on banning guns, it appears he’s moved on to holding campaign rallies hosted by the DFL that aren’t truly open to the public,” Demuth said in a statement. 

    The Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus called this event “political theater” adding, “[the governor’s] agenda is too extreme for even his own party”. 

    The DFL plan to hold similar events across the state. The next is scheduled in Rochester on November 6th. 

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  • Merkley’s marathon address decried Trump’s ‘authoritarian grip’—but executive overreach didn’t start with him

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    Sen. Jeff Merkley (D–Ore.) took to the Senate floor on Tuesday around 6:30 p.m. to “ring the alarm” on what he described as President Donald Trump’s “tightening authoritarian grip on the country.” Over the course of his nearly 23-hour speech—the second-longest in Senate history—Merkley accused the Trump administration of undermining checks and balances, attacking free speech and the press, politicizing the Justice Department, and using the military to suppress dissent. 

    Wrapping up his speech Wednesday evening, Merkley stated: “The president believes he is the king of this country and he can control everything, regardless of what the law says.” These comments come in the wake of last weekend’s “No Kings” protests and an appeals court decision from earlier this week that will allow Trump to deploy the National Guard to Portland, Oregon.

    “I’m holding the Senate floor to protest Trump’s grave threats to democracy,” Merkley said in his address, declaring: “We cannot pretend this is normal,” strongly implying that, in failing to act, the Senate itself is complicit in enabling Trump’s authoritarian drift. 

    Merkley’s warnings are hardly unfounded. The Trump administration’s deployment of the National Guard into U.S. cities, politicization of the Justice Department, and sweeping use of executive authority over immigration enforcement have all raised legitimate constitutional concerns and questions about how much power the executive branch should wield. But while Merkley frames these actions as an almost uniquely Trump-era phenomenon, the roots of executive overreach run far deeper. 

    For years, Democrats and Republicans in Congress have signed off on policies that expanded executive power, and presidents from both parties have taken advantage of this broad authority. 

    The Biden administration, for instance, used soaring pandemic-era emergency orders to justify vaccine mandates and heavy-handed intervention in the U.S. economy. It also pressured social media platforms to suppress “misinformation.” These moves were met with little resistance from many Democrats, including Merkley, who supported sweeping federal relief packages and voted to keep emergency measures in place even after COVID-19 was largely contained. He also joined colleagues in urging social media companies to curb “misinformation” during the 2024 election, aligning with the Biden administration’s broader agenda to regulate online speech. 

    Merkley is right to call out Trump’s actions, but executive overreach has been a problem long before Trump was reelected. And unless lawmakers move to rein in the executive branch and shrink the size of government, this overreach will continue to be a problem long after Trump leaves office. 

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  • Poll shows how California voters feel about Prop 50 redistricting effort

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    Poll shows how California voters feel about Prop 50 redistricting effort – CBS News










































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    Democrats in California want to add more of their party’s seats to Congress, but they need voters’ approval first. CBS News’ Anthony Salvanto has the data on how voters are feeling about the redistricting effort.

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  • Pelosi faces challenges as age becomes unavoidable tension point for Democrats

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    State Sen. Scott Wiener couldn’t wait any longer. The once-in-a-generation political opening he’d eyed for years had arrived, he decided — whether the grand dame of San Francisco politics agreed or not.

    On Wednesday, Wiener, 55, a prolific and ambitious lawmaker, formally announced his candidacy for the San Francisco congressional seat held for nearly four decades by Rep. Nancy Pelosi, 85, who remains one of the party’s most powerful leaders and has yet to reveal her own intentions for the 2026 race.

    “The world is changing, the Democratic Party is changing, and it’s time,” Wiener said in an interview with The Times. “I know San Francisco, I have worked tirelessly to represent this community — delivering housing, health care, clean energy, LGBTQ and immigrant rights — and I have a fortitude and backbone to be able to deliver for San Francisco in Congress.”

    State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) announced Wednesdat that he will run for the congressional seat currently held by former Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    (Josh Edelson/For The Times)

    Wiener’s announcement — which leaked in part last week — caught some political observers off guard, given Wiener had for years seemed resigned to run for Pelosi’s seat only once she stepped aside. But it stunned few, given how squarely it fit within the broader political moment facing the Democratic Party.

    In recent years, a long-simmering reckoning over generational power has exploded into the political forefront as members of the party’s old guard have increasingly been accused of holding on too long, and to their party’s detriment.

    Long-serving liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg ruffled many Democratic feathers by declining to step down during Barack Obama’s presidency despite being in her 80s. She subsequently died while still on the court at the age of 87 in 2020, handing President Trump his third appointment to the high court.

    Californians watched as the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein, another D.C. power player from San Francisco, teetered into frailty, muddled through her final chapter in Washington and then died in office at 90 in 2023. The entire nation watched as President Biden, another octogenarian, gave a disastrous debate performance that sparked unrelenting questions about his age and cognitive abilities and cleared the way for Trump’s return to power last year.

    Visitors walk past a bust of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein at San Francisco City Hall.

    Visitors walk past a bust of U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein at San Francisco City Hall. The former mayor of San Francisco served in the Senate until she died in 2023 at age 90.

    (Stephen Lam/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

    As a result, age has become an unavoidable tension point for Democrats heading into next year’s midterm elections.

    It has also been an issue for Republicans, including Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), 83, the former Senate majority leader who has faced health issues in recent years and is retiring in 2026 after more than 40 years in the Senate. Other older Republicans are facing primary challenges for being perceived as too traditional or insufficiently loyal to Trump or the MAGA movement — including Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), 73 and in office since 2002, and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), 68 and in the Senate since 2015.

    For decades, many conservatives have called for congressional term limits in opposition to “career politicians” who cling to power for too long. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, and David Trone, a Maryland Democrat, renewed those calls on Wednesday, announcing in an op-ed published in the New York Times that they would co-chair a national campaign to push for term limits.

    However, perhaps because they are in power, the calls for a generational shake-up in 2026 have not been nearly as loud on the Republican side.

    Democratic Party activists have sounded the alarm about a quickening slide into gerontocracy on the political left, blamed it for their party’s inability to mount an energetic and effective response to Trump and his MAGA movement, and called for younger candidates to take the reins — while congressional leaders in their 70s and 80s have increasingly begun weighing their options in the face of primary challenges.

    “It’s fair to say the political appetite for octogenarians is not high,” said Eric Jaye, a veteran Democratic strategist in San Francisco.

    “The choice in front of people is not just age,” said Saikat Chakrabarti, a 39-year-old tech millionaire and Democratic political operative who is also running for Pelosi’s seat. “We need a whole different approach and different candidates.”

    “There’s like this unspoken rule that you don’t do what we’re doing in this moment. You sit out and wait your turn,” said Sacramento City Councilmember Mai Vang, 40, who has launched a primary challenge to Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Sacramento), who is 81 and has been in Congress since 2005. “But I’m not going to wait on the sidelines, because there is an urgency of now.”

    A national trend

    The generational shift promises to reshape Congress by replacing Democrats across the country, including some who are leaving without a fight.

    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, 78 and a senator representing New Hampshire since 2009, said in March that it was “time” to step aside.

    In Illinois, Sen. Richard Durbin, 80 and a senator since 1997, and Rep. Jan Schakowsky, 81 and in the House since 1999, both announced in May that they would not run again. Durbin said it was time “to pass the torch,” while Schakowsky praised younger “voices” in the party as “so sharp.”

    Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York, 78 and in the House since 1992, announced his retirement last month, saying that “watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party.”

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani speaks at a news conference.

    New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani speaks at a news conference.

    (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    Other older Democrats, meanwhile, have shown no intention of stepping aside, or are seeking out new roles in power.

    Maine Gov. Janet Mills, 77, recently announced she is running to challenge Republican Sen. Susan Collins, who is 72 and has been in the Senate since 1997. Mills has tried to soften concerns about her age by promising to serve just one term if elected.

    Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, 79 and in the Senate since 2013, has stiffly rebuffed a primary challenge from Rep. Seth Moulton, 46, accusing Moulton of springing a challenge on him amid a shutdown and while he is busy resisting Trump’s agenda.

    In Connecticut, Rep. John Larson, 77, who has been in office since 1999 and suffered a complex partial seizure on the House floor in February, has mocked his primary challengers’ message of generational change, telling Axios, “Generational change is fine, but you’ve got to earn it.”

    Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg speaks during the March for Our Lives in 2022.

    David Hogg, a survivor of the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., speaks at the 2022 March for Our Lives.

    (Leigh Vogel / Getty Images for March For Our Lives)

    David Hogg, a 25-year-old liberal activist who was thrust into politics by the 2018 mass shooting at his Parkland, Fla., high school, is among the party’s younger leaders pushing for new blood. He recently declined to seek reelection as the co-vice chair of the Democratic National Committee to bring primary challenges to older Democratic incumbents with his group Leaders We Deserve.

    When he announced that decision in June, Hogg called the idea that Democratic leaders can stay in power until they die even if they don’t do a good job an “existential threat to the future of this party and nation.” His group fundraises and disperses money to young candidates it backs.

    When asked by The Times about Pelosi and her primary challengers, however, Hogg was circumspect, calling Pelosi “one of the most effective and consequential leaders in the history of the Democratic Party.”

    A shift in California

    Pelosi is not the only older California incumbent facing a primary challenge. In addition to Matsui, the list also includes Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Porter Ranch), who is 70 and has been in office since 1997, and Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena), who is 74 and has been in office since 1999.

    But Pelosi’s challenges have attracted more attention, perhaps in part because her departure from Congress would be the clearest sign yet that the generational shift sought by younger party activists is fully underway.

    Nancy Pelosi waves the speaker's gavel

    Nancy Pelosi is sworn in as House speaker in 2007, surrounded by her grandchildren and children of other members of Congress.

    (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)

    A trailblazer as the first female speaker of the House, Pelosi presided over two Trump impeachments. While no longer in leadership, she remains incredibly influential as an arm-twister and strategist.

    She played a central role in sidelining Biden after his debate meltdown, and for the last couple months has been raising big money — a special skill of hers — in support of California’s Proposition 50. The measure seeks voter approval to redraw California’s congressional districts to better favor Democrats in response to Trump’s pressure campaign on Texas and other red states to redraw their lines in favor of Republicans.

    Pelosi has used Prop. 50 in recent days to deflect questions about her primary challengers and her plans for 2026, with her spokesman Ian Krager saying she “is fully focused” on the Prop 50 fight and will be through Nov. 4.

    Chakrabarti, who helped Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) unseat a longtime Democratic incumbent in 2019, said he sees even more “appetite for change” among the party’s base today — as evidenced by “mainstream Democrats who have voted for Nancy Pelosi their whole life” showing up to his events.

    And it makes sense, he said.

    For decades, Americans have watched the cost of essentials skyrocket while their wages have remained relatively flat, Chakrabarti said, and that has made them desperate to support messages of “bold, sweeping economic change” — whether from Obama or Trump — even as long-serving, mainstream Democrats backed by corporate money have worked to maintain the status quo.

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez leaves a news conference at the Capitol in 2019.

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez leaves a news conference at the Capitol in 2019. At left is Saikat Chakrabarti, who was her chief of staff and is now a candidate for the congressional seat held by Rep. Nancy Pelosi.

    (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Imag)

    He said it is time for Democrats to once again push bold, big ideas, which he plans to do — including Medicare for all, universal child care, free college tuition, millions of new units of affordable housing, a new economy built around climate action, and higher taxes on billionaires and mega-millionaires like him.

    Wiener, who also backs Prop. 50 and would be the first out gay person to represent San Francisco in Congress, said he cannot speak to Pelosi’s thinking — or to Politico reporting Wednesday that Pelosi is considering her options and has been seen “publicly elevating” San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan in the race — but is confident in his readiness for the role.

    Wiener agreed with Chakrabarti that big ideas are needed from Democrats to win back voters and make progress. He also said that his track record in the state Legislature shows that he has “been willing to take on very, very big fights to make significant progressive change.”

    “No one has ever accused me of thinking small,” he said — citing his success in passing bills to create more affordable housing, reform health insurance and drug pricing, tackle net neutrality, challenge telecommunications and cable companies and protect LGBTQ+ and other minority communities and immigrants.

    “In addition to having the desire to make big progressive change, in addition to talking about big progressive change, you have to be able to put together the coalitions to deliver on that change, because words are not enough,” Wiener said. “I’ve shown over and over again that I know how to do it, and that I can deliver.”

    Political analysts said a message of big ideas will clearly resonate with some voters. But they also said that Pelosi, if she stays in the race, will be hard to beat. She will also face more serious questions than ever about her age and “her ability to function at the extraordinarily high level” she has worked at in years past, Jaye said, and will “have to answer those questions.”

    If Pelosi decides not to run, Chakrabarti has the benefit of self-funding and of the current party enthusiasm for fresh faces, they said, and anyone — Chan or otherwise — would benefit from a Pelosi endorsement. But Wiener already has a strong base in the district, a track record for getting legislation passed and, as several observers pointed out, a seemingly endless battery.

    “Scott Wiener is an animal. The notion of work-life balance is not a concept he has ever had. He is just like a robotic working machine,” said Aaron Peskin, who served 18 years on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, some alongside Wiener.

    Rep. Lateefah Simon (D-Oakland) speaks to reporters at the Capitol in September.

    Rep. Lateefah Simon (D-Oakland) speaks to reporters at the Capitol in September.

    (Kayla Bartkowski/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    Amanda Litman, the president of Run for Something, which supports young progressive candidates, said there is pent-up demand for a new generation of leaders, and “older Democrats, especially those in Congress, need to ask themselves, ‘Am I the best person to lead this party forward right now?’”

    Rep. Lateefah Simon (D-Oakland), 48, won her seat in 2024 after longtime Rep. Barbara Lee, 79, who had been in the seat since 1998, decided to run for Oakland mayor. Simon said that to her, “it’s not necessarily about birthdays” but who can do the job — “who can govern, who can mentor and who can hold this administration accountable.”

    As a longtime community activist who worked with youth, Simon said she is “extremely excited” by all the energy of young Democratic office seekers. But as a freshman in Congress who has leaned on Lee, Pelosi and other mentors to help her learn the ropes, she said it’s also clear Democrats need to “have some generals who are really, really tried and tested.”

    “What is not helpful to me in this moment,” Simon said, “is for the Democrats to be a circular firing squad.”

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  • Trump warns ‘I’d rather have a Democrat than a communist’ as NYC mayoral race enters homestretch

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    President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he believes New York City could soon elect a “communist” mayor and signaled he’d prefer a Democrat to take the reins at City Hall over a far-left candidate.

    Asked during a White House press gaggle whether he’d urge Republican Curtis Sliwa to drop out of the race, Trump didn’t endorse anyone, but made clear his concern about current polling with just two weeks to go until Election Day.

    “Well, I looked at the polls and looks like we’re going to have a communist as the mayor of New York,” Trump said. “It’ll be very interesting. But here’s the good news. He’s got to go through the White House, everything goes through the White House. At least this White House, it does.”

    Trump appeared to suggest that if Sliwa exited the race, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo might close the gap with Democratic socialist nominee Zohran Mamdani, but wasn’t confident it would change the outcome.

    BILL ACKMAN JUMPS INTO NYC MAYORAL FIGHT, SAYS SLIWA MUST DROP OR ‘WE ARE TOAST’

    Independent NYC mayoral candidate, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, left, speaks during a debate with Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, center, and Democratic socialist candidate Zohran Mamdani, Oct. 16, in New York City. (AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis, Pool)

    “If he [Sliwa] dropped out, he’s not going to win. And not looking too good for Cuomo either,” Trump said. “Maybe if he dropped out, Cuomo would have a little bit of a chance. But not much. Because it looks like the lead is—it’s not a great lead, but it’s big enough that he should be able to win.”

    Pressed on whether he’d be willing to meet with Mamdani if elected, Trump said he would.

    “Yeah, I’ll speak to him,” the president said. “I think I have an obligation to speak to him.”

    FOX NEWS POLL: MAMDANI MAINTAINS SIGNIFICANT LEAD IN NYC MAYORAL RACE

    NYC debate candidates stand behind podiums

    New York City mayoral candidates Andrew Cuomo, left, Curtis Sliwa and Zohran Mamdani participate in a debate, Oct. 16, in New York City. (AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis, Pool)

    Still, Trump lamented what he sees as the city’s decline under progressive leadership.

    “I love New York. I’ve always loved New York. I just can’t believe a thing like this is happening,” he said. “I left New York, and we had a mayor, [Bill] de Blasio, who was a disaster… New York was a hot city. And now it’s — it’s sad to see what’s happening, frankly.”

    “With the communist in charge… look, you just go back a thousand years. I mean, it’s been done many times, a thousand years. It’s never worked once. So it’s not going to work now.”

    curtis sliwa mayoral debate

    Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa speaks during the NYC mayoral debate, Oct. 16. (AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis, Pool)

    Mamdani, a state assemblyman and longtime Democratic Socialist of America (DSA) member, has embraced calls to legalize prostitution and tax the wealthy. 

    His campaign has drawn endorsements from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and other national progressives like Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

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    The city’s mayoral election is Nov. 4.

    The Cuomo, Mamdani and Sliwa campaigns did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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  • Maine Democratic Senate candidate insists he’s ‘not a secret Nazi’ after controversial tattoo reveal

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    Maine Democratic Senate candidate and former Marine Graham Platner denied that he was a “secret Nazi” on Monday after revealing he has a tattoo that resembles a Nazi Germany symbol.

    Platner’s campaign shared a video with the “Pod Save America” podcast that showed Platner lip-syncing to Miley Cyrus’ “Wrecking Ball” at his brother’s wedding about a decade ago. In the video, Platner is shirtless and appears to have a skull tattoo on his chest that resembles the “Totenkopf,” a symbol of the SS, or Schutzstaffel, under Adolf Hitler.

    “I am not a secret Nazi,” Platner said. “Actually, if you read through my Reddit comments, I think you can pretty much figure out where I stand on Nazism and antisemitism and racism in general. I’d say a lifelong opponent.”

    REPUBLICAN LAWMAKER DIRECTS INVESTIGATION AFTER SWASTIKA VANDALISM DISCOVERED IN DC OFFICE

    Graham Platner, a U.S. Marine and Army veteran and oyster farmer, in August launched a Democratic run for the U.S. Senate in Maine against Sen. Susan Collins. (Graham Platner campaign)

    Platner said that he got the tattoo in a Croatia parlor after being “very inebriated” with his fellow Marines in 2007. He insisted that skulls and crossbones were a “pretty standard military thing” and that he got the tattoo prior to joining the Army and getting a security clearance. 

    “At no point in this entire experience of my life did anybody ever once say, ‘Hey, you’re a Nazi,'” Platner said. “It never came up until we got wind that in the opposition research, somebody was shopping the idea that I was a secret Nazi with a hidden Nazi tattoo. And I can honestly say that if I was trying to hide it, I’ve I’ve not been doing a very good job for the past 18 years.”

    Platner quickly faced backlash for the video, including from the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC).

    “This comes less than a week after he was caught: advocating for political violence, saying Black people don’t tip, calling all police ‘bastards,’ calling Maine’s lobstermen ‘pieces of sh*t.’ What’s next…,” the group wrote on X.

    ‘MAINE’S MAMDANI’: MAINE GOP CHIEF ISSUES WARNING ABOUT NEW CHALLENGER LOOKING TO OUST SUSAN COLLINS

    Sen. Susan Collins of Maine

    Graham Planter is looking to run against Sen. Susan Collins but has to first win the Democratic primary against sitting Gov. Janet Mills.  (Mark Makela/Getty Images)

    Although Platner suggested he did not think the symbol meant anything beyond a skull and crossbones, his former political director Genevieve McDonald reportedly wrote on Facebook that he “knows damn well what it means.”

    “This is seriously the dumbest timeline,” McDonald wrote. “Graham has an anti-Semitic tattoo on his chest. He’s not an idiot, he’s a military history buff. Maybe he didn’t know it when he got it, but he got it years ago and he should have had it covered up because he knows damn well what it means.”

    She added, “The vault is open for the GOP to f—— crush any dreams we had in the general and literally everyone I know is fighting with each other on social media. We cannot be this painfully stupid.”

    WATCH: SNL’S ‘WEEKEND UPDATE’ NAZI JOKE ABOUT TRUMP ADMINISTRATION GETS AWKWARD RESPONSE FROM AUDIENCE

    Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner of Maine

    Graham Platner’s former director reportedly claimed that he knew “damn well” what the symbol meant. (Graham Platner Senate campaign)

    Fox News Digital reached out to Platner’s campaign and the NRSC for comment.

    Platner, who is attempting to take on longtime Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, recently came under fire last week after Reddit posts of his from 2018 resurfaced. In one post, he wrote that “all” police are bastards and called himself a “communist.”

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    In a separate post, he argued that if people “expect to fight fascism without a good semi-automatic rifle, they ought to do some reading of history.”

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