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Tag: Elections

  • Huntington Beach Voter ID Measure Violates California Law, Appeals Court Says

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    SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A California appeals court ruled Monday that a Huntington Beach measure requiring voter identification at the polls violates state law.

    The Fourth District Court of Appeal in Santa Ana determined that the measure passed by voters in the seaside city of 200,000 people should be struck down because it conflicts with state election law, said Lee Fink, a lawyer for Huntington Beach resident Mark Bixby, who challenged the city’s measure. California Attorney General Rob Bonta also sued over the Huntington Beach law contending it would disenfranchise voters.

    “Voting is the fundamental right from which all other rights flow, and no matter where threats to that right come from — whether from Washington D.C. or from within California — we will continue holding the line,” Bonta said in a statement. “California’s elections are already fair, safe, and secure.”

    Corbin Carson, a Huntington Beach spokesperson, said the city is reviewing the appeals court’s ruling.

    Residents of Huntington Beach voted last year to let local officials require voter identification at the polls starting in 2026. The measure also allows the city to increase in-person voting sites and monitor ballot drop boxes in local elections.

    Bonta filed a lawsuit saying the measure conflicts with state law and could make it harder for poor, non-white, young, elderly and disabled voters to cast ballots. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, then signed into state law a measure barring local governments from establishing and enforcing laws that require residents provide identification to vote in elections.

    Huntington Beach, which is known as “Surf City USA” for its scenic shoreline dotted with surfers, has a history of sparring with state officials over the measures it can take under its city charter on issues ranging from immigration to housing. The GOP is dominant in Huntington Beach with nearly 57,000 registered voters versus 41,000 Democrats, county data shows.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • Poll: Markey primary challengers face tough fight

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    BOSTON — Democratic Sen. Ed Markey holds a “significant” lead over his primary rivals, according to a new poll, which suggests challengers will face a difficult fight to unseat the three-term incumbent.

    The University of Massachusetts at Amherst/WCVB TV poll, released Sunday, showed Markey with a 20-point lead over Congressman Seth Moulton and former teacher Alex Rikleen in a Democratic primary match-up. The poll of 800 likely voters found 51% supported Markey, compared to 28% for Moulton and 6% for Rikleen. About 13% said they were undecided.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • How will this proposition on the Texas ballot fund future water?

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    Illustration of an open faucet with water flowing from it in Clermont-Ferrand France on January 24 2025. On Thursday, January 23, an investigation by UFC-Que Choisir and the environmental NGO Generations Futures revealed the widespread presence of PFAS, the so-called forever pollutants, in tap water across metropolitan France, notably highlighting a concerning level of TFA. (Photo by Romain Costaseca / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP) (Photo by ROMAIN COSTASECA/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images)

    Texas’ rapid population growth could lead to a water shortage in the coming years. A Nov. 4 ballot initiative could help secure the state’s water resources.

    Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

    On the Nov. 4 ballot in Texas is Proposition 4, a measure that would allocate $1 billion a year of state tax money for shoring up Texas’ water supplies, something that officials at the Tarrant Regional Water District would like voters to consider.

    Last month, the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M University released findings that showed Texas is rapidly consuming its “cheap” water — that water that is easily accessible and requires relatively little treatment before reaching our faucets. In the coming years, as the state’s population continues growing, we’re going to depend more and more on water that’s more expensive to make ready for consumption. That includes the brackish water in aquifers that requires desalination, as well as reuse water that goes through additional treatment before being injected back into cities’ water supplies.

    Already, TRWD is providing its municipal customers with reuse water that is treated and filtered, in part, as it flows through a dedicated wetlands area near Richland-Chambers Reservoir, one of six water sources for Tarrant County. TRWD plans to have another wetlands area near Cedar Creek Reservoir on line by 2032.

    This mechanism relies on natural processes and aquatic life to remove sediment and nutrients from treated wastewater that is discharged into the Trinity River. After the water leaves the wetlands, it’s directed into the reservoir, then sent to TRWD’s municipal customers for final treatment.

    To some, recycled water may sound unappetizing, but Zach Huff, TRWD’s water resources engineering director, said it meets all safety standards and is perfectly fine to drink.

    “We’ve been using reuse water since the beginning of time,” said Huff. “It’s a perception thing.”

    Like TRWD, providers across Texas are turning to nontraditional water sources to meet growing demand. By 2060, Texas’ population is expected to grow by between 10 million and 15 million people. In Tarrant County alone, the population could surpass 3 million people by 2060, up from just over 2.1 million in 2020.

    We’re going to need new, and expensive, infrastructure to provide enough water to all those new people. That’s where Proposition 4 comes in. That $1 billion a year over 20 years, beginning in 2027, would go some distance toward ensuring Texas is water resilient, experts say, though it falls far short of the $154 billion the Texas Real Estate Research Center said the state would need to invest to avoid a potential water shortfall during future drought conditions.

    TRWD’s seven-year plan has about $2 billion worth of projects. Huff said a portion of the Proposition 4 money could go to subsidizing those. The rest of the funding would come from TRWD’s water customers, which includes municipal customers in Fort Worth, Arlington and Mansfield.

    A dependable funding source is important, Huff said, because TRWD is constantly looking at least 20 years ahead with its projects. Because of that, TRWD can’t rely solely on income from customers to finance its activities.

    “You can’t wait until just in time,” Huff said of developing water infrastructure. “And being several decades ahead is a big financial burden.”

    State funding alleviates some of that burden, Huff said, and helps providers like TRWD keep costs to their customers lower.

    Should Proposition 4 pass, that $1 billion a year would come from state sales and use tax income once it exceeds $46.5 billion. That money would go directly to the Texas Water Fund, which is administered by the Texas Water Development Board. A portion of the money would be earmarked for the New Water Supply Fund for Texas, with an eye toward developing new water source infrastructure.

    Matt Adams

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.

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    Matthew Adams

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  • 5 key races to watch on Election Day 2025

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    With three days until Election Day, and the latest polls pointing to a potential photo finish in the battle for New Jersey governor, the two major party nominees are urging their supporters to get out and vote.

    “When we vote, we win,” Democratic nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill told supporters.

    And her Republican rival, Jack Ciattarelli, told his supporters that “championship teams finish strong… let’s win this race.”

    New Jersey is just one of two states, along with Virginia, that hold statewide elections for governor this November. And the contests, which traditionally grab outsized national attention, are viewed as crucial early tests of President Donald Trump’s unprecedented and explosive second-term agenda, as well as key barometers ahead of next year’s midterm showdowns for the U.S. House and Senate.

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

    New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill, right, and Republican nominee Jack Ciattarelli, on the stage moments at the start of their second and final debate, on Oct. 8, 2025, in New Brunswick, N.J. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News Digital)

    Also in the political spotlight this November is New York City’s high-profile mayoral election, the ballot box proposition over congressional redistricting in California and three state Supreme Court contests in battleground Pennsylvania.

    Democrats, who are aiming to exit the political wilderness following last year’s election setbacks when they lost control of the White House and Senate and failed to win back the House majority, are highlighting their success so far this year in special elections.

    “There’s wind at our back,” Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chair Ken Martin recently touted. “We have overperformed in every single election that’s been on the ballot since Donald Trump was inaugurated.”

    ONE OF THE TOP 2025 RACES MAY END UP IN A PHOTO FINISH

    But Republicans point to the multitude of problems facing the Democratic Party.

    “Sadly for the DNC, the truth is that Democrats’ approval rating is at a 30-year low as the party has hemorrhaged more than 2 million voters over the past four years,” Republican National Committee communications director Zach Parkinson told Fox News Digital recently.

    Here’s a closer look at 2025’s top elections.

    New Jersey

    Ciattarelli, who’s making his third straight run for Garden State governor and who nearly upset Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy four years ago, has good reason to be optimistic he can pull off victory in blue-leaning New Jersey.

    In a state where registered Democrats still outnumber Republicans despite a GOP surge in registration this decade, a recent public opinion poll suggested Ciattarelli narrowing the gap with Sherrill in the race to succeed the term-limited Murphy.

    Republican nominee for governor in New Jersey Jack Ciattarelli

    Jack Ciattarelli, the Republican nominee for governor in New Jersey, speaks to a raucous crowd of supporters at a diner in Saddle Brook, N.J., on Oct. 15, 2025. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

    While Democrats have long dominated federal and state legislative elections in blue-leaning New Jersey, Republicans are very competitive in gubernatorial contests, winning five out of the past 10 elections.

    And Trump made major gains in New Jersey in last year’s presidential election, losing the state by only six percentage points, a major improvement over his 16-point deficit four years earlier.

    THE POLITICAL BOMB TRUMP EXPLODED IN THE NEW JERSEY SHOWDOWN FOR GOVERNOR

    Trump headlined a tele-rally with Ciattarelli a week ago, on the eve of early voting. Trump’s teaming up with Ciattarelli may help energize MAGA supporters, many of whom are low propensity voters who often skip casting ballots in non-presidential election years.

    The race in New Jersey was rocked a couple of weeks ago by a report that the National Personnel Records Center, which is a branch of the National Archives and Records Administration, mistakenly released Sherrill’s improperly redacted military personnel files, which included private information like her Social Security number, to a Ciattarelli ally. 

    Rep. Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey

    Rep. Mikell Sherrill of New Jersey, the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, speaks at a news conference on Oct. 13, 2025, in Clifton, N.J. (Mikie Sherrill campaign)

    But Sherrill’s military records indicated that the United States Naval Academy blocked her from taking part in her 1994 graduation amid a cheating scandal.

    Sherrill, who was never accused of cheating in the scandal, went on to serve nearly a decade in the Navy flying helicopters.

    The showdown was jolted again at last month’s final debate after Sherrill’s allegations that Ciattarelli was “complicit” with pharmaceutical companies in the opioid deaths of tens of thousands of New Jerseyans, as she pointed to the medical publishing company he owned that pushed content promoting the use of opioids as a low-risk treatment for chronic pain.

    CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLLING

    And Trump recently set off a political hand grenade in the race, as he “terminated” billions of federal dollars for the Gateway Project, which is funding a new train tunnel under the Hudson River connecting New Jersey and New York.

    Sherrill, holding a news conference at a major commuter rail station just a few miles from the site of the tunnels in one of the busiest train corridors in the nation, called the project “critical” as she took aim at Trump and Ciattarelli.

    Virginia

    Explosive revelations in Virginia’s attorney general race that the GOP is aiming to leverage up and down the ballot recently shook up the race for governor, forcing Democratic Party nominee, former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, back on defense in a race where most polls indicated her enjoying a sizable lead over Republican rival Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

    A split of Winsome Earle-Sears and Abigail Spanberger.

    The two major party gubernatorial nominees in Virginia: Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, left, and Democrat former Rep. Abigail Spanberger. (Getty Images)

    Virginia attorney general Democratic nominee Jay Jones was in crisis mode after controversial texts were first reported a couple of weeks ago by the National Review.

    Jones acknowledged and apologized for texts he sent in 2022, when he compared then-Virginia House Speaker Todd Gilbert to mass murderers Adolf Hitler and Pol Pot, adding that if he was given two bullets, he would use both against the GOP lawmaker to shoot him in the head.

    But he faced a chorus of calls from Republicans to drop out of the race. 

    Earle-Sears hasn’t wasted an opportunity to link Spanberger to Jones.

    And during last month’s chaotic and only gubernatorial debate, where Earle-Sears repeatedly interrupted Spanberger, the GOP gubernatorial nominee called on her Democratic rival to tell Jones to end his attorney general bid.

    FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING ON THE VIRGINIA SHOWDOWN, HEAD HERE 

    “The comments that Jay Jones made are absolutely abhorrent,” Spanberger said at the debate. But she neither affirmed nor pulled back her support of Jones.

    Earle-Sears has kept up the pressure.

    “Abigail Spanberger should have been the first to call for Jay Jones to step down. Instead, she doubled down — because deep down, she’s OK with what he said,” Earle-Sears argued recently in a social media post.

    New York City

    The mayoral election in the nation’s most populous city always grabs outsized attention, especially this year as New York City may elect its first Muslim and first millennial mayor.

    Democratic socialist 34-year-old state lawmaker Zohran Mamdani’s victory in June’s Democratic Party mayoral primary sent political shock waves across the country. And he’s come under attack from Republicans and from his rivals on the ballot over his far-left proposals.

    NYC debate candidates stand behind podiums

    From left, independent mayoral candidate former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa and Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani participate in a mayoral debate, on Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in New York.  (Angelina Katsanis/Pool-AP Photo)

    Mamdani is the clear polling and fundraising frontrunner in the heavily blue city as he faces off against former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who came in a distant second in the primary and is now running as an independent candidate. Cuomo is aiming for a political comeback after resigning as governor four years ago amid multiple scandals.

    THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING ON THE NEW YORK CITY MAYORAL ELECTION IS RIGHT HERE 

    Also running is two-time Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa, a co-founder of the Guardian Angels, the non-profit, volunteer-based community safety group.

    Embattled Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat who was running for re-election as an independent, dropped out of the race last month. He recently backed Cuomo, but his name remains on the ballot.

    California

    Voters in heavily blue California will vote in November on whether to set aside their popular nonpartisan redistricting commission for the rest of the decade and allow the Democrat-dominated legislature to determine congressional redistricting for the next three election cycles.

    The vote will be the culmination of an effort by Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Democrats to create up to five left-leaning congressional seats in the Golden State to counter the new maps that conservative Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law a couple of months ago, which will create up to five more right-leaning U.S. House districts in the red state of Texas.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom at Prop 50 event

    Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom of California speaks during a congressional redistricting event, on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    The redistricting in Texas, which came after Trump’s urging, is part of a broader effort by the GOP across the country to pad their razor-thin House majority to keep control of the chamber in the 2026 midterms, when the party in power traditionally faces political headwinds and loses seats.

    Polls suggest majority support for passage of what’s known as Proposition 50.

    Pennsylvania

    Democrats currently hold a 5-2 majority on the Supreme Court in the northeastern battleground of Pennsylvania.

    But three Democrat-leaning justices on the state Supreme Court, following the completion of their 10-year terms, are running this year to keep their seats in “Yes” or “No” retention elections.

    The election could upend the court’s composition for the next decade, heavily influence whether Democrats or Republicans have an advantage in the state’s congressional delegation and legislature, and impact crucial cases including voting rights and reproductive rights.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    While state Supreme Court elections typically don’t grab much national attention, contests where the balance of a court in a key battleground state is up for grabs have attracted tons of outside money.

    The state Supreme Court showdown this spring in Wisconsin, where the 4-3 liberal majority was maintained, drew nearly $100 million in outside money as both parties poured resources into the election.

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  • Inside Curtis Sliwa’s Never-Ending Campaign

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    A lot of people, even those who will not vote for Sliwa, do seem to find his campaign charming and disarming. Mamdani supporters have asked him to appoint Sliwa as “cat czar.” He has spent so long wearing a red beret that he has a visible tan line along his forehead. (Sliwa has vowed to keep the beret off, if elected.) While campaigning, Sliwa has spoken positively of the former Black Panther Assata Shakur, and said that a socialist elected official was both nothing new and nothing to fear. Asad Dandia, a local historian who is a friend and early supporter of Mamdani’s, posted on X, “After the election is over, I genuinely want to chop it up with Curtis Sliwa.”

    “If everybody that says ‘I love you, Curtis,’ ‘You did something for me, Curtis,’ had voted, he would have got double the amount of votes that Eric Adams got,” Bruno told me. “When you do campaigning, you try to target your base,” he continued. “Try to figure out Curtis’s base.” I was stumped. “It’s called New York City,” he said.

    In Bay Ridge, I tagged along with Steve, a volunteer campaigner, to watch the Sliwa ground game in action. Steve, a retired L.A.P.D officer, wore a “SLIWA FOR MAYOR” baseball cap. He was on his way to drop off some yard signs at a neighborhood barbershop and then to talk to voters who were waiting for the bus. A few blocks from the campaign office, he ran into an acquaintance, Patrick Doyle, who was walking his dog, a two-year-old black pitbull called Buddy. They almost immediately started to argue. “My heart’s with Curtis, but it’s not looking good,” Doyle told Steve. “No, no,” Steve said, “it is looking good.”

    “Curtis can guarantee Cuomo,” Doyle said. “If Curtis drops out, Cuomo is in.” Steve shook his head, telling Doyle, “You believe in the polls and that’s a mistake.”

    “It’s gonna hurt us in the end,” Doyle said, of people who refuse to vote for Cuomo. Buddy strained against his leash and seemed to cough a little.

    “I would never vote for Cuomo,” Steve replied. “It’s a matter of conscience and morality.”

    A large part of why Sliwa supporters are so stubborn may be that they hate Andrew Cuomo. “I call him Killer Cuomo,” Steve told me, referring to Cuomo’s handling of COVID in nursing homes. Pabon, the federal worker—who’s unvaccinated—told me he didn’t respect Cuomo’s lack of conviction on whether he would rehire anti-vaxxers like him. “He’s dead silent on that for months,” Pabon said. “One thing I’ll give Mamdani, he straight out said, ‘Nope, I will not hire you.’ ” After the second debate, I spoke briefly to Joe Tumsci, a union electrician, who was rallying for Cuomo. “Why are they still campaigning? I have no idea,” Tumsci said, of the Sliwa group. “We should join together and defeat Mamdani. The Mamdani campaign enjoys the division.” I asked if he had ever spoken to any Sliwa supporters to try to persuade them. “I haven’t,” he said, “but the girl in the red jacket over there is really cute.” He pointed to a blond middle-aged woman. “Go tell her I said so.”

    Back on the street in Bay Ridge, Steve approached his canvassing point. “We have to surge. This is the time to surge,” he muttered. Steve speaks fluent Mandarin—he previously lived and studied in Beijing and Taiwan—and he had tremendous success at a line for the S79 bus, where he chatted in Mandarin to an older Chinese man and a woman in a pink jacket. (“If you see me start to speak Chinese, I don’t want to surprise you,” he told me earlier.)

    But, at a second line, an elderly man with an Eastern European accent, wearing a green corduroy jacket, accosted him. “He’s a nice guy, but everybody has a ceiling, O.K.?” the man said. “If he would not run, Cuomo would win.”

    “Don’t believe that,” Steve said. “You’re going by polls.” The man started saying that Sliwa was being egotistical. “I believe I should run, also. I’m an American citizen,” he said. “How can he win from twelve per cent? I also can win—why not? He’s stupid, O.K.?” I asked the man if he thought Mamdani would win as a result of the Sliwa campaign. “Hundred per cent,” he said, and pointed at Steve. “Because of him.” (The man said he was voting for Cuomo. I asked if he liked Cuomo. He said, “No.”)

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    Naaman Zhou

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  • Prop. 50 key to Democratic party’s future, Newsom says

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    Polls open Tuesday morning for California’s special election, and for lots of voters, the only measure on the ballot will be Proposition 50.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom calls the resdistricting measure a key moment for the future of the Democratic party.

    On NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, Newsom remained positive that the outcome for Prop. 50 will be favorable for Democrats.

    Ginger Conejero Saab has more in the video above.

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  • AP Has Declared Winners in Elections for Nearly 180 Years. This Is Why and How Race Calls Are Made

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    Those are among the questions The Associated Press will answer when the news organization tabulates votes and declares winners in hundreds of races that are on ballots nationwide Tuesday.

    It’s a role the AP has filled for nearly 180 years, since shortly after its founding.

    Determining a winner involves a careful and thorough analysis of the latest available vote tallies and a variety of other election data. The ultimate goal is to answer this question: Is there any circumstance in which the trailing candidate can catch up to the candidate who is leading the race. If the answer is no, then the leading candidate has won.

    Here’s a look at the AP’s role and its process for determining the outcome of elections, also known as calling a race:

    The United States does not have a nationwide body that collects and releases election results. Elections are administered locally, by thousands of offices, following standards set by the states. In many cases, the states themselves do not even offer up-to-date tracking of election results.

    The AP fills this gap by compiling vote results and declaring winners in elections, providing critical information in the period between Election Day and the official certification of results, which typically takes weeks.

    The AP’s vote count brings together information that otherwise might not be available online for days or weeks after an election or is scattered across hundreds of local websites. Without national standards or consistent expectations across states, it also ensures the data is in a standard format, uses standard terms and undergoes rigorous quality control.

    The AP hires vote count reporters who work with local election officials to collect results directly from counties or precincts where votes are first counted. These reporters submit them, by phone or electronically, as soon as the results are available. If any of the results are available from state or county websites, the AP will gather the results from there, too.

    In many cases, counties will update vote totals as they count ballots throughout the night. The AP is continuously updating its count as these results are released. In a general election, the AP will make as many as 21,000 vote updates per hour.

    As votes are coming in, the AP will analyze races to determine the winners.

    One key piece that the AP considers is how many ballots are uncounted and from what areas. In cases where official or exact tallies of the outstanding vote are unavailable, the AP estimates the turnout in every race based on several factors and uses that estimate to track how much of the vote has been counted and how much remains.

    The AP also tries to determine how ballots counted so far were cast and the types of vote, such as mail ballots or ballots cast in person on Election Day, that remain.

    That is because the method that voters choose can be correlated to the party they voted for. Since voting by mail became highly politicized in the 2020 election, Democrats have been more likely to vote by mail, while Republicans have been more likely to vote in-person on Election Day.

    In many states, it is possible to know which votes will be counted first, based on past elections or plans announced by election officials. In others, votes are clearly marked by type when released.

    This helps to determine if an early lead is expected to shrink or grow. For example, if a state first counts votes cast in person on Election Day, followed by mail-in votes, that suggests that an early Republican lead may narrow as more mail ballots are tabulated. But if the reverse is true and mail ballots are counted first, an early Republican lead could be the first sign of a comfortable victory.

    In almost all cases, races can be called well before all votes have been counted. The AP’s team of election journalists and analysts will call a race as soon as a clear winner can be determined.

    In competitive races, AP analysts may need to wait until additional votes are tallied or to confirm specific information about how many ballots are left to count.

    Competitive races where votes are actively being tabulated — for example, in states that count a large number of votes after election night — might be considered “too early to call.” A race may be “too close to call” if a race is so close that there is no clear winner even once all ballots except for provisional and late-arriving absentee ballots have been counted.

    The AP’s race calls are not predictions and are not based on speculation. They are declarations based on an analysis of vote results and other election data that one candidate has emerged as the winner and that no other candidate in the race will be able to overtake the winner once all the votes have been counted.

    Follow along as AP tabulates votes and calls races beginning Tuesday night. Check out results pages and notes from the decision team here.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • Obama calls NYC mayoral frontrunner Mamdani just days before crucial election

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    Three days ahead of the New York City mayoral election, former President Barack Obama called frontrunner Zohran Mamdani to offer his support.

    The 64-year-old Democrat offered to be a “sounding board” to Mamdani, a Democratic socialist who continues to lead the race in polling.

    “Zohran Mamdani appreciated President Obama’s words of support and their conversation on the importance of bringing a new kind of politics to our city,” Mamdani spokesperson Dora Pekec told Fox News Digital.

    Mamdani’s main opponents are former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is running as an Independent, and Republican Curtis Sliwa.

    CUOMO PICKS UP ENDORSEMENTS, RISES IN POLLS AS COMEBACK CAMPAIGN NEARS FINISH LINE

    Three days ahead of the New York City mayoral election, former President Barack Obama called frontrunner Zohran Mamdani to offer his support. ( Neil Constantine/NurPhoto via Getty Images; Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Sliwa’s campaign told Fox News Digital they had no comment on the call.

    Cuomo lost to Mamdani in the Democratic primary last summer.

    The phone call between Mamdani and Obama came the same day Obama was also campaigning in Virginia for Abigail Spanberger and in New Jersey for Mikie Sherrill. Both Democrats are in close gubernatorial races in their respective states. 

    OBAMA SAYS IT’S ‘LIKE EVERY DAY IS HALLOWEEN’ AS HE BLAMES REPUBLICANS FOR GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

    Zohran Mamdani

    New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani is the frontrunner in Tuesday’s election.  (Deirdre Heavey/Fox News Digital)

    Both women are Democratic gubernatorial candidates.

    “Your campaign has been impressive to watch,” Obama told Mamdani in the 30-minute private conversation, according to The New York Times who cited two people familiar with the conversation.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger joins former President Barack Obama, during a campaign event Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger joins former President Barack Obama, during a campaign event Saturday, in Norfolk, Virginia. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    Obama hasn’t endorsed Mamdani officially following a vow to not interfere in municipal races, the newspaper reported, adding that it was the second call between the two men since the Democratic primary.

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    Obama spoke to Mamdani as some establishment Democrats, such as New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, have kept their distance from the progressive leader.

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  • Obama says it’s ‘like every day is Halloween’ as he blames Republicans for government shutdown

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    Former President Barack Obama on Saturday slammed Republicans for the ongoing federal government shutdown.

    “The government is shut down and the Republicans who currently are in charge of Congress, they’re not even pretending to solve the problem,” the 64-year-old told a rally crowd while campaigning for former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., turned Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Norfolk, Virginia. “They have not even been showing up to work, not in session. Where are you? What are you doing?”

    The government shutdown began a month ago on Oct. 1, after lawmakers failed to pass a spending bill to fund the government, with Democrats concerned expiring Affordable Care Act tax cuts could raise premiums and that Medicaid cuts could leave people without coverage.

    Republicans have blamed the shutdown on Democrats, with Trump recently calling them “crazed lunatics.”

    JOHNSON WARNS US ‘BARRELING TOWARD ONE OF THE LONGEST SHUTDOWNS’ IN HISTORY

    Former President Barack Obama speaks during a campaign event for Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger, Saturday, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    “The shutdown proceeds because the Democrats just don’t know what they’re doing,” President Donald Trump told reporters this week. I don’t know what’s wrong with them. They’ve never done a thing like this. They’ve become crazed lunatics. All they have to do is say, ‘Let’s go, let’s go. Let’s open up our country.’ And everything snaps back into shape. So there’s something wrong with them.”

    Trump has also suggested getting rid of the filibuster.

    “Remember, Republicans, regardless of the Schumer Shutdown, the Democrats will terminate the Filibuster the first chance they get,” he wrote on Truth Socila on Saturday. “They will Pack the Supreme Court, pick up two States, and add at least 8 Electoral Votes. Their two objectors are gone!!! Don’t be WEAK AND STUPID. FIGHT,FIGHT, FIGHT! WIN, WIN, WIN! We will immediately END the Extortionist Shutdown, get ALL of our agenda passed, and make life so good for Americans that these DERANGED DEMOCRAT politicians will never again have the chance to DESTROY AMERICA!”

    He added, “Republicans, you will rue the day that you didn’t TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER!!! BE TOUGH, BE SMART, AND WIN!!! This is much bigger than the Shutdown, this is the survival of our Country!”

    Obama didn’t mention Democrats’ part in the shutdown when talking about it on Saturday. He did, however, have choice words for Trump and his administration.

    “Our country and our politics are in a pretty dark place right now. It’s hard to know where to start, because every day this white House offers up a fresh batch of lawlessness and recklessness and mean-spiritedness and just plain craziness,” he charged.

    SHUTDOWN IGNITES STRATEGIST DEBATE: WILL TRUMP AND GOP PAY THE POLITICAL PRICE IN 2026?

    Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger joins former President Barack Obama, during a campaign event Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger joins former President Barack Obama, during a campaign event Saturday, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    The former president joked: “It’s like every day is Halloween. Except it’s all tricks and no treats. And and here’s the thing, it’s not as if we didn’t see some of this coming. I will admit, it’s worse than even I expected. But I did warn y’all.”

    He claimed that while the economy has been good for Trump’s “billionaire pals,” costs haven’t gotten any better for average people.

    Obama said “there is absolutely no evidence Republican policies have made life better for you” while claiming that Republicans are more focused on “scapegoat[ing] minorities and DEI for every problem under the sun. You got a flat tire? DEI. wife mad at you? DEI.”

    Obama/Spanberger supporters at a rally

    Supporters of Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger cheer during a campaign event with former President Barack Obama, Saturday, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    “What they have not devoted energy to is helping you,” he told the crowd. “They have not put forward serious proposals to lower housing costs or make groceries more affordable.”

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    He urged the crowd to vote for Spanberger who is facing Virginia’s Liutenant Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears for an open seat in the state.

    Later Saturday, Obama headed to New Jersey for a rally with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Rep. Mikie Sherrill, who is in a close race against Republican Jack Ciattarelli.

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  • From the subway to social media, NYC mayoral candidates make their closing arguments to voters

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    NEW YORK — In his final ad of the New York City mayoral race, Andrew Cuomo opens on a dour note: “Life in New York is tough right now.”

    Then comes a dig at Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee who the former governor has argued is too inexperienced to lead the city: “Candidates who need on-the-job training can’t fix it,” he says.

    In their last days on the campaign trail before Election Day on Tuesday, Cuomo, Mamdani and Republican Curtis Sliwa are offering their closing arguments to voters.

    For Cuomo, 67, it’s a message that voters must stop Mamdani from leading the city into ruin, casting himself as the only one who can keep the city safe and move it forward.

    Meanwhile, Mamdani is trying to keep riding the wave of progressive excitement that carried him to victory in June’s primary — while weathering the final barrage of attacks from Cuomo and other critics wary of giving a 34-year-old democratic socialist the reins to America’s biggest city.

    With early voting concluding Sunday, he’s shaking hands with everyone form social media influencers to airport taxi drivers as he urges his supporters not to grow complacent. “People say ‘We got this. It’s over. Cuomo is cooked,’” he says in one of his many popular online videos. “Do not believe it.”

    And Sliwa is running an aggressive ground-level campaign of his own, hitting the city’s subways and streets with his public safety-focused pitch and a warning that his Democratic opponents are “two sides of the same coin.”

    Cuomo, a Democrat on the ballot as an independent, has spent the final stretch working to convince Republicans he is a more viable candidate than Sliwa.

    He has met with Jewish and Muslim leaders. There have been an array of media hits on traditional news channels but also appearances on shows hosted by YouTuber-turned-boxer-turned-pro wrestler Logan Paul as well as Stephen A. Smith, a commentator on sports and politics.

    Much of the former governor’s pitch has been marked by dark warnings of social and economic collapse if Mamdani were to win, along with assurances that his record as governor makes him a more suitable choice.

    In an interview this week on Fox Business, Cuomo said Mamdani, who was born in Uganda to parents of Indian descent but grew up in New York City, “doesn’t understand the New York culture.”

    “Republicans, there are two choices, me or Mamdani. Don’t waste your vote,” Cuomo said.

    Former New York Gov. David Paterson, who has campaigned for Cuomo, said Cuomo has amped up the negativity because previous jabs on Mamdani’s inexperience and agenda haven’t slowed his momentum.

    “Normally, I would say, ‘Ease up.’ You’re both running for mayor. You both care about the city, so you know, just state your message,” Paterson said. “In this case, the reason he’s doing it is that that message hasn’t filtered in yet.”

    Sliwa, 71, has returned to the place where he gained fame as the creator of the Guardian Angels anti-crime patrols: the city’s subways.

    He’s held near daily news conferences across the transit network, hammering home his message that he’ll make the trains safer.

    As a rainstorm Thursday caused localized flooding in parts of the city, Sliwa filmed a video for social media as cars drove through a small pond that had developed on one intersection, decrying the state of the city’s sewer system.

    It’s reflective of the local quality-of-life issues the longtime talk-radio host has kept central to his colorful campaign.

    President Donald Trump has repeatedly dismissed Sliwa’s candidacy — and mocked his passion for rescuing cats — but Sliwa has waved off the criticism.

    “Homeless people, emotionally disturbed, veterans we don’t take care of — we don’t need a tough guy to be mayor. We need a compassionate, considerate, concerned person,” Sliwa said in an interview on CNN. “And that’s Curtis Sliwa.”

    By contrast, he said, Cuomo is “cold-hearted” and “angry.”

    “Nobody votes for anger,” Sliwa said.

    Sliwa wore his signature red beret to cast his ballot on the first day of early voting, but did not bring a cat with him as he did when he ran against Mayor Eric Adams in 2021.

    Mamdani, a state assemblymember, has tried to stay on the offensive.

    Last weekend, he packed out a stadium in Queens with more than 10,000 people for a rally alongside U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — playing to a friendly crowd receptive to his platform of using government programs to lower the high cost of living in New York.

    But he said he “will not allow myself to become complacent” while his army of volunteers knocks on doors.

    He set up a news briefing with social media influencers, appeared on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart, won an endorsement from an association of bodega owners and held a midnight news conference in Queens after canvassing night shift workers at a nearby hospital and airport.

    The everywhere-all-at-once approach appeared to help him secure at least one undecided voter at a recent stop.

    Dr. Rita Bellevue, a retired physician, seemed pleasantly surprised when Mamdani and his coterie of news cameras approached her at a midtown Manhattan bus stop. Afterward, she said she had been deliberating whether to vote for him or for Cuomo.

    “I think I just decided,” she said with a smile before hurrying to catch her bus.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report.

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  • Ohio panel and Virginia lawmakers move forward with congressional redistricting plans

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    A Republican-dominated Ohio panel adopted new U.S. House districts on Friday that could boost the GOP’s chances of winning two additional seats in next year’s elections and aid President Donald Trump’s efforts to hold on to a slim congressional majority.

    The action by the Ohio Redistricting Commission came as Virginia’s Democratic-led Virginia General Assembly advanced a proposed constitutional amendment that could pave the way for redistricting in the state ahead of congressional midterm elections next year. The Senate on Friday passed a resolution that would allow lawmakers to temporarily bypass a bipartisan redistricting commission and gerrymander their maps. The House had advanced it Wednesday.

    Trump has been urging Republican-led states to reshape their U.S. House districts in an attempt to win more seats. But unlike in other states, Ohio’s redistricting was required by the state constitution because the current districts were adopted after the 2020 census without bipartisan support.

    Ohio joins Texas, Missouri and North Carolina, where Republican lawmakers already have revised their congressional districts.

    Democrats have been pushing back. California voters are deciding Tuesday on a redistricting plan passed by the Democratic-led Legislature.

    The political parties are in an intense battle, because Democrats need to gain just three seats in next year’s election to win control of the House and gain the power to impede Trump’s agenda.

    In Ohio, Republicans already hold 10 of 15 congressional seats. The new map could boost Republican chances in already competitive districts currently held by Democratic Reps. Greg Landsman in Cincinnati and Marcy Kaptur near Toledo. Kaptur won a 22nd term last year by about 2,400 votes, or less than 1 percentage point, in a district carried by Trump. Landsman was reelected with more than 54% of the vote.

    Ohio’s commission had faced a Friday deadline to adopt a new map, or else the task would have fallen to the GOP-led Legislature, which could have crafted districts even more favorable to Republicans. But any redistricting bill passed by the Legislature could have been subject to an initiative petition campaign from opponents seeking to force a public referendum on the new map.

    The uncertainty of that legislative process provided commissioners of both parties with some incentive for compromise. All seven commissioners — five Republicans and two Democrats — voted for the new map.

    But Ohio residents who testified to commissioners Friday denounced the new districts. Julia Cattaneo, who wore a shirt saying “gerrymandering is cheating,” said the new map is gerrymandered more for Republicans than the one it is replacing and is not the sort of compromise needed.

    “Yes, you are compromising — your integrity, honor, duty and to represent Ohioans,” she said.

    Added resident Scott Sibley: “This map is an affront to democracy, and you should all — every one of you — be ashamed.”

    Republican state Auditor Keith Farber, a member of the commission, defended the map during a testy exchange with one opponent. Because many Democrats live in cities and many Republicans in rural areas, he said there was no way to draw a map creating eight Republican and seven Democratic districts — as some had urged — without splitting cities, counties and townships.

    Virginia is represented in the U.S. House by six Democrats and five Republicans. Democratic lawmakers haven’t unveiled their planned new map, nor how many seats they are trying to gain, but said their moves are necessary to respond to the Trump-inspired gerrymandering in Republican-led states.

    “Our voters are asking to have that voice. They’re asking that we protect democracy, that we not allow gerrymandering to happen throughout the country, and we sit back,” Democratic Sen. Barbara Favola said.

    The proposed constitutional amendment would let lawmakers temporarily bypass a bipartisan commission and redraw congressional districts to their advantage. The measure would still need to pass the General Assembly again next year, then go before voters in a statewide referendum.

    The developments come as Virginia holds statewide elections Tuesday, where all 100 seats in the House of Delegates are on the ballot. Democrats would need to keep their slim majority in the lower chamber to advance the constitutional amendment next year.

    Republican Sen. Mark Obenshain said Democrats were ignoring the will of voters who had overwhelmingly approved a bipartisan redistricting commission.

    “Heaven forbid that we actually link arms and work together on something,” Obenshain said. “What the voters of Virginia said is, ‘We expect redistricting to be an issue that we work across the aisle on, that we link arms on.’”

    But Democratic Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg, who has long championed the state’s bipartisan redistricting commission, noted the panel still would be in charge of redistricting after the 2030 census.

    “We’re not trying to end the practice of fair maps,” he said. “We are asking the voters if, in this one limited case, they want to ensure that a constitutional-norm-busting president can’t break the entire national election by twisting the arms of a few state legislatures.”

    ___

    Lieb reported from Jefferson City, Missouri; Scolforo from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; and Diaz from Richmond, Virginia. Diaz is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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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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  • Jim McGreevey Is Back on the Ballot, 21 Years After Scandal Led Him to Resign as New Jersey Governor

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    JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) — Two decades after resigning as New Jersey’s governor and stunning the political world as he declared “I am a gay American,” Jim McGreevey is back on the campaign trail, running for mayor of the state’s second-largest city.

    McGreevey, a Democrat, is one of seven candidates in a nonpartisan race to replace Steven Fulop as mayor of Jersey City, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan.

    He’s running, he said, because he’s concerned that the city of his birth is at a “tipping point,” with pricy downtown high-rises raising housing costs, young people struggling to find employment and what he says are underperforming schools.

    “This is not a cathartic exercise,” McGreevey told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of Tuesday’s election. “I’ve done that long ago. That was done 20-plus years ago. This is to make Jersey City better. To improve services. To balance the budget. To be responsive to familial needs.”

    McGreevey’s opponents include two city council members, a Hudson County commissioner, a city police officer and the former president of the city’s board of education. Fulop isn’t seeking a fourth term.

    If no candidate receives more than 50% of the vote, a runoff election will be held Dec. 2.


    Opponent: I never had to ‘resign in disgrace’

    McGreevey’s resignation is etched in New Jersey political lore.

    In a televised speech on Aug. 12, 2004, McGreevey said, as his wife and parents looked on, that he was quitting because he had engaged in an extramarital affair with another man. With that revelation, he became the country’s first openly gay governor.

    The circumstances of McGreevey’s exit were more complicated than his merely coming out. The man McGreevey had been involved with was Golan Cipel, a former Israeli naval officer he had appointed as the state’s homeland security adviser in 2002.

    Cipel, who met McGreevey in Israel and worked for his campaign as a Jewish community liaison, was not qualified for the $110,000-per-year position, in part because, as an Israeli citizen, he couldn’t obtain the necessary U.S. security clearances.

    Cipel quit a few months into his tenure and threatened to sue McGreevey for sexual harassment, hastening the governor’s resignation. Cipel has denied that any affair occurred, saying he was the victim of McGreevey’s “repeated sexual advances.”

    Some of McGreevey’s opponents in the mayoral race have argued that his conduct as governor should disqualify him with voters. One rival, city council member James Solomon, argued that McGreevey’s run is an extension of corruption that he claimed infected his time as governor.

    Another rival, former school board president Mussab Ali, said at a recent debate: “I have never had the experience of having to resign in disgrace.”

    “My opponents may care about what happened 20 years ago,” McGreevey said. “Folks in Jersey City are worried about their rent today, worried about the children’s individual education plan today. They’re concerned about the fact that the street is dirty or that there’s a sewer break on Montgomery (Street).”


    McGreevey: ‘This would be a great closing act’

    Jersey City is where McGreevey’s grandfather moved after leaving Northern Ireland, and where his father took him for meals at the VIP Diner — a time capsule where the pay phones still work.

    And it’s where McGreevey, 68, who now runs a prison reentry nonprofit, would like to finish his once-promising political career by managing a city of nearly 303,000 residents with a municipal budget of about $700 million.

    “This would be a great closing act,” McGreevey said, an American flag pin on his lapel. “And candidly, to get the city in the right place, it’ll require some time.”

    McGreevey said he’d long ago made peace with being out of politics. He got divorced, attended an Episcopal seminary, earned a Master of Divinity degree, volunteered at a Harlem ministry and took steps to become a priest before pivoting to nonprofit work.

    As executive director of the Jersey City-based New Jersey Reentry Corporation, he said he has seen the difficulty formerly incarcerated people and veterans have finding housing and employment.

    McGreevey launched his campaign on Halloween in 2023 and posted a video soon after acknowledging his past. The title: “Second chances are central to who I am.”

    His run has drawn parallels to another ex-governor looking for a second chance. Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned after being accused of sexual harassment, is running for mayor of neighboring New York City.


    McGreevey: ‘I enjoy people more. I enjoy politics a lot less’

    McGreevey said his absence from public life has given him a perspective on how politics has changed and become more polarized.

    A former prosecutor and head of the state parole board, McGreevey entered politics in 1990 as a member of the state assembly. Before becoming governor in 2002, he was mayor of Woodbridge Township, a suburb of about 103,000 residents.

    “When I was a young Assemblyman, we would campaign hard on the Democratic ticket, but then, after I was elected, you would work with Democrats and Republicans on committees, on legislation,” McGreevey said. “My sense is today, whether it’s the city or the state or the nation, almost everything is viewed through a political lens as opposed to a governmental lens.”

    Twenty years away has also changed McGreevey, he says.

    “I enjoy people more. I enjoy politics a lot less,” he said.

    Whether enough people like McGreevey and his politics enough to give him that second chance will become clearer in the weeks ahead.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Trump Pivots Second Term Toward Foreign Policy

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    BUSAN, South Korea—President Trump wrapped up his six-day swing through Asia by touting trade deals and new investments in the U.S. But as he arrives back in Washington, the gold-plated receptions abroad are giving way to a shuttered government and deepening voter anxiety about the economy.

    The split screen sheds light on why Trump has turned much of his second-term attention to foreign policy.

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  • Lawmakers grasping for ways to end government shutdown

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    Certain senators know it’s time for the government shutdown to come to an end. So does House Speaker Mike Johnson. And with President Donald Trump arriving back in Washington from his overseas trip, perhaps the White House knows it, too.…

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    By LISA MASCARO – AP Congressional Correspondent

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  • Ohio Panel Unveils Proposed US House Map That Could Help Republicans Win More Seats

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    Ohio’s Republican-led redistricting commission unveiled a proposed U.S. House map Thursday that could give Republicans a chance at winning two more seats in next year’s midterm elections, bolstering President Donald Trump’s efforts to hold on to a slim congressional majority.

    Ohio’s redistricting plan comes amid a nationwide battle for partisan advantage ahead of next year’s congressional elections. Trump kick-started the fray this summer by urging Republican-led states to reshape their U.S. House districts in an attempt to win more seats. Republican lawmakers in Texas, Missouri and North Carolina already have done so.

    Democrats in California have countered with their own redistricting plan being decided by voters in a Tuesday election. And other states, including Republican-led Indiana and Virginia‘s Democratic-led General Assembly, are convening in special sessions aimed at redistricting.

    Unlike those other states, which are voluntarily redrawing districts, Ohio is required by its state constitution to enact new congressional districts before the 2026 elections because the current map was adopted by Republican officials without bipartisan support. Republicans currently hold 10 of Ohio’s 15 congressional seats, but some Republicans view the mandatory redistricting as opportunity to expand upon that.

    The proposed map appears to increase Republican chances in the districts held by Democratic U.S. Reps. Greg Landsman in Cincinnati and Marcy Kaptur around Toledo, an area that gave Trump a majority in the 2024 presidential election. Kaptur won a 22nd term last fall by about 2,400 votes, or less than 1 percentage point. Landsman was reelected with more than 54% of the vote last year.

    Each seat could be pivotal, because Democrats need to gain just three seats nationally in next year’s elections to win control of the House from Republicans and impede Trump’s agenda. The president’s party historically has lost seats in midterm elections.

    The Ohio Redistricting Commission faces a Friday deadline to adopt a new map, which would require support from at least two Republicans and two Democrats on the seven-member panel.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • Serbia Youth Lead Thousands on March for Weekend Rally Marking Deadly Canopy Collapse Last Year

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    BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Thousands of mainly young people in Serbia embarked on a two-day march from Belgrade on Thursday, aiming to join a major rally in the country’s north this weekend that will mark the anniversary of a deadly train station disaster.

    Protesters believe the victims died because government corruption led to sloppy renovation work at the station. They have been demanding accountability for the disaster, and an early parliamentary election that they hope will oust Vucic’s populist government from power.

    Flag-waving university students on Thursday led the huge column of marchers setting off on the 90-kilometer (58-mile) journey toward Novi Sad. Saturday’s gathering there is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, piling pressure on Vucic.

    Various other groups of university students also have been trekking across Serbia for two weeks before they all converge in Novi Sad on Saturday.

    Belgrade residents came out of their houses on Thursday to greet the protesters as they passed by. People honked their car horns, waved or blew whistles. Some cried.

    Mihajlo Jovanovic, a sports academy student from Belgrade, said that he joined the march because “nothing has changed and we are going there (to Novi Sad) hoping that it finally will change.”

    Veterinary student Ana Marija Seslija said that “we are walking to show that our struggle has not stopped and that we are all still active.

    Authorities have detained scores of university students and other protesters in the past months, trying to crush the resistance. Police have been accused of brutality toward protesters, including beatings and arbitrary detentions.

    While 13 people have been charged in the disaster, no trial date has been set. Doubts prevail that proceedings would untangle an alleged top-level corruption web that critics believe led to the fatal negligence and disregard of construction safety rules during the station building renovation.

    Vucic, without offering evidence, has branded student-protesters as Western-backed “terrorists,” while the governing Serbian Progressive Party organized counterrallies. This has fueled political tensions.

    Serbia is formally seeking to join the European Union. But the accession process has been stalled, because Vucic has nurtured close ties with Russia and China, while being accused of clamping down on democratic freedoms.

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  • Dutch Hard-Right Leader Geert Wilders Set to Exit Power

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    Dutch firebrand Geert Wilders’s hard-right Freedom Party was on the brink of losing power after elections in the Netherlands on Wednesday, indicating that Europe’s populist politicians who draw strong support while in opposition can struggle once they are in government.

    The Freedom Party was on track to place second in parliamentary elections, according to exit polls, with a sharp drop in support, as voters punished Wilders’s party for failing to deliver on its promises.

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  • AP Decision Notes: What to Expect in Minnesota on Election Day

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — The two-term mayor of Minneapolis who led the city during the murder of George Floyd is seeking reelection Tuesday against more than a dozen challengers, including a democratic socialist advocating for a change to the “status quo.”

    Beyond the mayoral race, voters will fill two vacancies in state Senate districts — one seat previously held by a Democrat who resigned after a burglary conviction, the other by a Republican who died in office. Democrats currently hold a one-seat majority in the chamber.

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, is one of 15 candidates on the ballot. His best-funded and highest-profile challenger is state Sen. Omar Fateh, who describes himself as a democratic socialist.

    Minneapolis implemented ranked choice voting in 2009, allowing voters to choose up to three candidates in order of preference on their ballot. If no candidate receives a majority of first-choice votes, the candidates with the weakest performance are dropped — including the candidate with the lowest number of first-choice rankings and those with no mathematical path to win. The votes from those eliminated candidates are reallocated to voters’ next-highest choices. That process continues until a candidate receives 50% of the vote.

    Frey has been the top fundraiser in the race and has support from a political action committee that is funding digital ads criticizing Fateh. Frey also has backing from Gov. Tim Walz and Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

    Fateh has framed his campaign as a fight against the “status quo” and asked his supporters to rank DeWayne Davis and Jazz Hampton as their two other top choices. All three are running as Democrats. Fateh has been endorsed by Rep. Ilhan Omar, who represents Minneapolis in Congress.

    Fateh, the son of Somali immigrants, could make inroads with the city’s sizable Somali American population in neighborhoods like Cedar-Riverside. His Senate district includes the heart of the city’s Somali American community.

    Every mayoral race since 2013 has gone to at least a second round of ranked-voting. In 2021, Frey won after two rounds of tabulation, in a reelection race that put a spotlight on his leadership after Floyd’s killing. In 2017, when Frey ousted an incumbent, it took six rounds of tabulation. In 2013, it took 34 rounds to declare Betsy Hodges the winner of the mayoral race.

    District 47 is vacant after its former senator, Democrat Nicole Mitchell, resigned. She was convicted of burglary for breaking into her estranged stepmother’s Detroit Lakes home.

    The Democratic nominee, state Rep. Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger, won the nomination with 82% of the vote. The Republican nominee is Dwight Dorau, who ran unopposed in the primary. Then-Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris carried the district with about 60% of the vote in 2024 and Mitchell last won with 59% of the vote.

    Most of the suburban district falls in Washington County, with a small portion stretching southward into Ramsey County. In Minnesota, each state Senate district is divided into two state House districts, and Hemmingsen-Jaeger represents half of District 47 in the state House.

    Hemmingsen-Jaeger’s House district includes parts of Maplewood and Woodbury. She won her seat in 2022 and won her 2024 reelection with about 60% of the vote.

    State Sen. Bruce Anderson, a Republican who was first elected to the Legislature in 1994, died in July, prompting a special election. Most of District 29 falls into Wright County, with smaller slices of the district stretching into Meeker and Hennepin counties.

    The Republican nominee, Michael Holmstrom Jr., won the August primary with 73% of the vote. He’s campaigned as a Buffalo business owner with a background in Republican activism, including opposition to abortion. He faces Democrat Louis McNutt, who ran unopposed in the primary. Past results indicate that the district favors Republicans. Anderson won his last several reelection campaigns with upwards of 60% of the vote, and Republican Donald Trump carried the district in 2024 with about 65%.

    Here’s a look at what to expect on Tuesday:

    Polls close at 8 p.m. local time, which is 9 p.m. ET.

    The AP will provide vote results and declare winners in the Minneapolis mayoral race and in the two state Senate special elections. Municipal elections will be held for local offices across the state, such as the Minneapolis City Council, St. Paul mayor and Duluth School Board, but those contests will not be included in AP’s vote tabulation.

    Any eligible voter in Minneapolis may participate in the mayoral general election. Eligible voters in state Senate districts 29 and 47 may participate in the special elections in their district.


    What do turnout and advance vote look like?

    As of June, there were about 253,000 registered voters in Minneapolis. In the 2021 mayoral election, turnout was about 54% of registered voters. About 20% of ballots in that election were cast before Election Day.

    As of Oct. 28, a total of 15,525 ballots had been cast in Minneapolis before Election Day.

    Both state Senate Districts 29 and 47 had about 59,000 registered voters as of June. About 68% of registered voters in District 29 voted in the 2022 general election, with about 16% of those voters casting ballots early or by absentee. In District 47, turnout in 2022 was about 69% of registered voters, with about 32% of voters casting ballots early or by absentee.


    How long does vote counting usually take?

    In the 2024 presidential election, the AP first reported results in Hennepin County at 9:34 p.m. ET, or 34 minutes after polls closed. The election night tabulation ended at 2:59 a.m. ET with more than 99% of total votes counted.

    In the 2022 general election, the AP first reported results in state Senate District 29 at 10:10 p.m. ET and in District 47 at 10:49 p.m. ET.

    Vote tabulation in District 29 stopped for the night at 1:22 a.m. ET with about 91% of total votes counted. In District 47, the election night vote tabulation stopped at 12:10 a.m. ET with nearly 100% of the vote counted.

    As of Tuesday, there will be 364 days until the 2026 midterm elections and 1,099 days until the 2028 general election.

    Associated Press writer Robert Yoon contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  • AP Decision Notes: What to Expect in Texas on Election Day

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Texans will vote on a large menu of constitutional amendments Tuesday while some Houston voters will choose among 16 candidates from across the ideological spectrum in a special election to fill a vacant congressional seat.

    Voters will check off whether they are “for” or “against” 17 state constitutional amendments on issues ranging from parents’ rights, judicial conduct, changes to the bail system, state taxes and more. Plus, there are citywide ballot measures, local and municipal elections and a Fort Worth state Senate race.

    Most of the statewide ballot measures deal with taxes: capital gains (Proposition 2), animal feed (Proposition 5), and securities (Proposition 6), to name a few.

    Two ballot measures in particular reflect national Republicans’ political messaging. Proposition 15 affirms “that parents are the primary decision makers for their children,” an animating issue for Gov. Greg Abbott and congressional Republicans. Proposition 16 clarifies “that a voter must be a United States citizen,” though it is already illegal for people who are not U.S. citizens to vote in federal elections. The Tarrant County Democratic Party’s voting guide says it remains “neutral” on Propositions 15 and 16 since they restate “existing law,” while the Bexar County Democratic Party uses that same reasoning to oppose both ballot measures.

    Sixteen candidates are running in the 18th Congressional District, after the death of Rep. Sylvester Turner. If no candidate surpasses 50% of the vote, the top two vote getters will advance to a runoff election. Kamala Harris carried the Houston district, which includes George Bush Intercontinental Airport, by 40 percentage points in 2024, putting Democrats in a strong position to hold the seat.

    The seat is vacant after two of its representatives died within less than a year of one another. Longtime Democratic Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee died in July 2024. Her daughter, Erica Lee Carter, finished Jackson Lee’s term and endorsed Turner to fill the seat afterward. But Turner died two months into his term, spurring the upcoming special election.

    Lee Carter endorsed Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee, who also won support from high-profile Texas Democrats including Rep. Jasmine Crockett, Colin Allred, and Beto O’Rourke.

    Amanda Edwards – a former city council member who lost a primary challenge to Jackson Lee – is one of the top fundraisers in the race and has backing from EMILY’s List, a national group that supports women running for office. State Rep. Jolanda Jones, who represents part of Houston, is backed by LGBTQ+ Victory Fund. Isaiah Martin, who has more than 600,000 TikTok followers, is running as the self-described “Gen-Zer” candidate.

    There are five Republican candidates on the ballot, including Theodis Daniel, the father of a childhood cancer survivor who was made an honorary Secret Service agent during Trump’s last Joint Speech to Congress. Also on the ballot is independent candidate George Edward Foreman IV, the son of the late heavyweight boxing champion.

    Here’s a look at what to expect on Tuesday:

    Polls close statewide at 7 p.m. local time, but the state is split into two times zones. Polls in most of Texas close at 8 p.m. ET., while polls in the westernmost part of the state close at 9 p.m. ET. The 18th Congressional District is located entirely within the Central Time Zone, so polls there close at 8 p.m. ET.

    The AP will provide vote results and declare winners in the special election in the 18th Congressional District and for 17 statewide ballot measures.

    Any registered voter in Texas may cast a ballot on the 17 statewide ballot measures. Any voter registered in the 18th Congressional District may participate in the special election.


    What do turnout and advance vote look like?

    As of January, there were about 18.3 million registered voters in Texas. Voters do not register by party.

    In the 2024 presidential election, turnout was about 61% of registered voters. About 80% of voters in that election were cast before Election Day.

    There were just shy of 420,000 voters registered in the 18th Congressional District in that election, and roughly 52% of them voted in that election. About 78% of ballots were cast early or by absentee before Election Day.

    As of Oct. 28, a total of 759,969 ballots had been cast before Election Day. See the AP Early Vote Tracker for the latest update.


    How long does vote counting usually take?

    In the 2024 presidential election, the AP first reported results at 8 p.m. ET, just as polls closed in the Central Time Zone. By the time polls closed in the Mountain Time Zone at 9 p.m. ET, about 62% of votes had been counted. More than 99% of the vote had been counted by noon ET the following day.

    In the 18th Congressional District race that year, the AP first reported results at 8:31 p.m. ET. By 9:07 a.m. ET the following morning, 99% of the vote had been tabulated.

    As of Tuesday, there will be 364 days until the 2026 midterm elections and 1,099 days until the 2028 general election.

    Associated Press writer Robert Yoon contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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