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Tag: midterm elections

  • Trump’s State of the Union seeks to calm economic jitters

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    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared during the State of the Union on Tuesday that “we’re winning so much,” saying he sparked a jobs and manufacturing boom at home while imposing a new world order abroad — hoping that offering a long list of his accomplishments can counter approval ratings that have been falling.

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    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    By WILL WEISSERT and MICHELLE L. PRICE – Associated Press

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  • Trump heads to Fort Bragg to cheer special forces members who ousted Venezuela’s Maduro

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    President Donald Trump is heading to North Carolina on Friday to celebrate members of the special forces who stormed into Venezuela on the third day of the New Year and whisked away that country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, to face U.S. smuggling charges.First Lady Melania Trump will also be making the trip to Fort Bragg, one of the largest military bases in the world by population, to spend time with military families.Trump has been hitting the road more frequently to states that could play key roles in November’s midterm congressional elections, including a stop before Christmas in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. The White House has been trying to promote Trump’s economic policies, including attempts to bring down the cost of living at a time when many Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated with Trump’s efforts to improve affordability.The president spoke at Fort Bragg in June at an event meant to recognize the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army. But that celebration was overshadowed by his partisan remarks describing protesters in Los Angeles as “animals” and his defense of deploying the military there.Trump has since deployed the National Guard to places like Washington and Memphis, Tennessee, as well as other federal law enforcement officials involved in his crackdown on immigration. Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, announced Thursday that the administration is ending the operations in Minnesota that led to the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens.This time, Trump’s visit is meant to toast service members involved in his administration’s dramatic ouster of Maduro, an operation he has described as requiring bravery and advanced weapons.His administration has since pushed for broad oversight of the South American country’s oil industry. Next month, he plans to convene a gathering of leaders from a number of Latin American countries in Florida, as the administration spotlights what it sees as concerning Chinese influence in the region.The March 7 gathering can give Trump a chance to further press a new and aggressive foreign policy which the president has proudly dubbed the “Donroe Doctrine,” a reference to 19th-century President James Monroe’s belief that the U.S. should dominate its sphere of influence.

    President Donald Trump is heading to North Carolina on Friday to celebrate members of the special forces who stormed into Venezuela on the third day of the New Year and whisked away that country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, to face U.S. smuggling charges.

    First Lady Melania Trump will also be making the trip to Fort Bragg, one of the largest military bases in the world by population, to spend time with military families.

    Trump has been hitting the road more frequently to states that could play key roles in November’s midterm congressional elections, including a stop before Christmas in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. The White House has been trying to promote Trump’s economic policies, including attempts to bring down the cost of living at a time when many Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated with Trump’s efforts to improve affordability.

    The president spoke at Fort Bragg in June at an event meant to recognize the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army. But that celebration was overshadowed by his partisan remarks describing protesters in Los Angeles as “animals” and his defense of deploying the military there.

    Trump has since deployed the National Guard to places like Washington and Memphis, Tennessee, as well as other federal law enforcement officials involved in his crackdown on immigration. Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, announced Thursday that the administration is ending the operations in Minnesota that led to the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens.

    This time, Trump’s visit is meant to toast service members involved in his administration’s dramatic ouster of Maduro, an operation he has described as requiring bravery and advanced weapons.

    His administration has since pushed for broad oversight of the South American country’s oil industry. Next month, he plans to convene a gathering of leaders from a number of Latin American countries in Florida, as the administration spotlights what it sees as concerning Chinese influence in the region.

    The March 7 gathering can give Trump a chance to further press a new and aggressive foreign policy which the president has proudly dubbed the “Donroe Doctrine,” a reference to 19th-century President James Monroe’s belief that the U.S. should dominate its sphere of influence.

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  • Trump boasts of over $1.5B in political funds, which could rock the midterms

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    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has bragged about building a political war chest exceeding $1.5 billion — a staggering sum that he can wield at his whim to shape November’s midterms and the 2028 race to succeed him.

    Trump’s stockpile — which dwarfs any amounts raised by his predecessors in their second terms — is not easy to precisely calculate given that much of it is being collected by groups that aren’t required to file regular financial disclosures.

    Current and former staffers, as well as others in Trump’s orbit, wouldn’t say exactly where his political bank account stands six months after the president announced on social media that he’d raised, just since Election Day 2024, “in various forms and political entities, in excess of 1.5 Billion Dollars.”

    But what is not in question is that it represents a mountain of cash that could reshape Republican politics for years to come — if he chooses. He’s been reluctant to spend money on other people’s races in the past, and he’s even found ways to funnel some cash to his own businesses.

    The $1.5 billion Trump claimed is roughly equal to what he and outside groups spent on his successful 2024 reelection bid, according to OpenSecrets, a nonpartisan group that tracks political spending.

    By comparison, Democratic President Joe Biden’s various super PACs, political groups and nonprofits, as well as the Democratic National Committee, raised roughly $97 million during his first year in office, according to public disclosures. That’s only about 7% of Trump’s total, and Biden was gearing up for a reelection run Trump isn’t allowed to make.

    “I think a lot of people are asking, ‘What is it all for?’” said Saurav Ghosh, federal campaign finance reform director at the Washington nonprofit Campaign Legal Center.

    People close to Trump say the main benefit of all that cash is unmatched influence heading into November. They insist Trump is eager to help Republicans so his political agenda isn’t stymied, like when Democratic victories derailed his first-term agenda after 2018’s midterms. His stockpile has helped the GOP build a sizable cash advantage over Democrats ahead of November, at least so far.

    “One of the main reasons a lame-duck president might want to amass this much money is to maintain political relevance,” said Daniel Weiner, a former Federal Election Commission attorney and current director of the Brennan Center’s Elections and Government Program. “Certainly he’s been far more aggressive about this than any of his predecessors.”

    Trump on Wednesday vowed political consequences for Republicans opposing his tariff policies, and could spend big to hurt them in GOP primaries. Chief among his targets is Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, who opposed Trump’s tax and spend package and defied the White House in helping force the release of federal files on Jeffrey Epstein.

    Trump has also endorsed a primary opponent of Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., after he voted to convict Trump during his 2021 impeachment trial over the mob attack on the U.S. Capitol. Still, the extent to which Trump will open his pocketbook in congressional races remains to be seen.

    “What I’m a little surprised about is that Trump has not leveraged — at least overtly — the money he controls going into that election on his congressional agenda,” said Jason Roe, a Republican strategist in Michigan.

    Indeed, Trump has a history of not spending big on races where he isn’t running. In 2018, Trump’s America First Action super PAC spent less than $30 million — a pittance given that super PACs spent about $820 million that cycle, according to OpenSecrets.

    He doesn’t always follow through on his threats, either. Despite pledging to travel to Alaska to help defeat Republican Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski in 2022, a Trump-affiliated PAC instead gave $1.5 million to a group opposing her. Murkowski was reelected anyway.

    The president also has made no major moves so far to oppose state lawmakers in Indiana who refused to back new congressional maps championed by the White House.

    Trump’s campaign bank account also would let him play a decisive role in the next presidential race. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are the early favorites, with Trump suggesting pairing them on a GOP ticket he says would be formidable.

    Much of Trump’s political cash comes from the MAGA Inc. super PAC, which raised $100-plus million in the last six months of 2025 and entered this year with more than $300 million. The Republican National Committee reported raising $172 million last year.

    There’s also a constellation of pro-Trump nonprofits, including Securing American Greatness, which are only required to release limited information about their finances. Donations to one Trump entity can be moved through the various nonprofits and super PACs, making it difficult to track what’s spent where.

    “Because there are virtually no restrictions on what super PAC money can be used for, it essentially can be operated as a slush fund at the disposal of whoever controls it,” Weiner said.

    There are many ways Trump has used political funds to enrich his businesses in the past, including billing his campaign for the use of his own airplane. He could also stage political events at his properties in Florida or New Jersey, or his golf club outside Washington.

    At least $26 million has been spent by conservative groups and Republican committees at Trump properties since 2015 — and the actual figure is likely higher since some groups don’t have to offer detailed spending figures.

    Though federal rules govern the ways political donations can be spent, they can also be skirted. In 2020, Trump’s campaign paid tens of millions of dollars to limited liability companies controlled by aides, a move that satisfied federal disclosure rules, but masked the ultimate recipient of the money. In 2024, his political operation clawed back millions of dollars in donations it made to a super PAC supporting Trump’s run and used the money to instead pay legal bills that mounted after his indictments in four federal criminal cases while also facing civil trials.

    “As with so many things Donald Trump, he is sometimes pushing the envelope on what’s permitted, sometimes blowing right through what are pretty clear legal limits,” said Ghosh, of the Campaign Legal Center.

    Trump’s fundraising efforts are tireless. The day after his 2024 election win, he ordered staff to begin fundraising anew, and he’s since attended frequent fundraisers. His allies send out emails seeking donations constantly, often multiple times daily.

    “I’m sitting here. Alone. In the war room. Fighting for you,” Trump wrote in one such message last month. In another, a Trump-affiliated group tried to spur on donors to give by asking, “Does ICE need to come and track you down?”

    During his first presidential run, Trump relied heavily on small donations. But much of his operation now relies on large checks from uber-wealthy donors and well-connected businesses.

    Greg Brockman, co-founder of OpenAI, and his wife, Anna, donated $25 million to MAGA Inc. last year, as Trump talked constantly about helping ensure U.S. companies dominate the artificial intelligence field globally.

    Other big donations came from crypto interests that have had federal investigations dropped and big tobacco companies hoping to ease regulations.

    The parents of Howard Brodie, Trump’s ambassador to Finland, donated $500,000 to MAGA Inc., while Isabela Herrera gave $3.5 million before her father, Venezuelan banker Julio Herrera Velutini, was pardoned by Trump on bribery charges.

    “Each of these wealthy individuals. corporations, they are ponying up for a purpose,” Ghosh said. “What we’re seeing with Trump’s administration is just an unprecedented level of pay-to-play.”

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  • SCOOP: Trump ally Kid Rock jumps into key governor’s race with high-profile endorsement

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    EXCLUSIVE — Detroit native and cultural icon Kid Rock is taking sides in the race for Michigan governor.

    The famed musician and entertainer with a working-class persona who is known for his conservative political views is endorsing Republican Rep. John James in the 2026 race to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

    The Michigan governor’s office and a Democrat-controlled open U.S. Senate seat are top targets for the GOP to flip in November’s midterm elections.

    “As our next Governor of Michigan, I know you will bring many victories to our GREAT STATE!” Kid Rock, whose real name is Robert James Ritchie, said in a statement shared first with Fox News Digital on Sunday.

    BATTLE FOR THE SENATE: WHERE DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS AIM TO FLIP SEATS

    Musician and Detroit native Kid Rock, left, joins Republican Rep. John James of Michigan, who is running for governor. (John James gubernatorial campaign)

    James, who’s in his second term representing a swing congressional district in suburban Detroit, said in a statement, “Kid Rock is a good friend. We share our love for Detroit, the state of Michigan and the United States of America!”

    “I’m honored to have the endorsement of this unapologetic freedom-loving patriot and I look forward to working with him and every other Michigander to make Michigan great again!” added James, a West Point graduate and veteran of the Iraq War, and a businessman who was the 2018 and 2020 Republican Senate nominee in the Great Lakes battleground state.

    Kid Rock’s backing of James comes a couple of hours before the singer and songwriter headlines Turning Point USA’s “All-American Halftime Show” during the Super Bowl.

    HOW TO WATCH THE TURNING POINT USA ALTERNATE HALFTIME SHOW

    Turning Point USA, which was co-founded by the late Charlie Kirk, is hosting its own alternative to the Super Bowl halftime show this Sunday. The event comes as conservatives criticize the NFL’s choice to feature Latin music star Bad Bunny as the halftime performer.

    Kid Rock performs at Republican National Convention.

    Musician Kid Rock performs on the fourth day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 18, 2024. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    Kid Rock is an outspoken supporter of President Donald Trump, backing him in all three of his presidential campaigns. He performed his song “American Bad Ass” at the 2024 Republican National Convention with altered lyrics to showcase his support for Trump.

    Trump, whose sway over the GOP remains immense and whose endorsements in Republican primaries are highly coveted and extremely influential, to date has not weighed in on Michigan’s gubernatorial race.

    HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING AND ANALYSIS FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL

    A release from James’s campaign highlighted that “John James has stood with President Trump consistently since 2018, and every subsequent election, maintaining a clear and steady alignment when others backed his opponents, ran against him, or stayed silent.”

    The James campaign also emphasized that “Kid Rock and John James share deep Detroit roots and a common view of Michigan as a state defined by hard work, manufacturing, culture, and natural beauty — from the Great Lakes to the communities that power the Midwest economy.”

    Rep. John James of Michigan, seen at the 2024 Republican National Convention, is running for governor in the battleground state's 2026 race.

    Rep. John James of Michigan, seen at the 2024 Republican National Convention, is running for governor in the battleground state’s 2026 race. (Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty)

    James is the clear polling front-runner in a very crowded field of Republicans vying for the GOP nomination in the August primary. Among the other Republicans in the race are former Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox, Michigan Senate Minority Leader Aric Nesbitt, former state House of Representatives Speaker Mike Leonard, and businessman Perry Johnson, a longshot candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination who is making his second bid for governor.

    Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson is the clear front-runner among three candidates for the Democratic nomination.

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    Former three-term Democratic Mayor Mike Duggan of Detroit is campaigning for governor as an independent.

    The race in Michigan is rated a toss-up by three top nonpartisan political handicappers: the Cook Report, Inside Elections, and Sabato’s Crystal Ball.

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  • Donald Trump Already Knows the 2026 Election Is “Rigged”

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    This time, the difference is not that Trump is complaining in advance about an election that he fears he’s going to lose; it’s that his threats to the integrity of the upcoming midterm elections have come earlier, louder, and with greater specificity and purpose than ever before. Time and again, starting almost from the moment he returned to the White House, in January last year, he has made it clear that he will not accept the outcome of almost any race in which a Democrat is the winner—even when they are runaway victors. (He recently accused Abigail Spanberger of cheating to win the Virginia governor’s race in November, although she beat her Republican opponent by nearly fifteen points.) On Wednesday, in an interview with NBC News, Trump gave what is now his standard answer: I will accept the results of the election only if I think that it is fair. The point seems to be that, for Trump, any election won by a Democrat is, by definition, unfair, fake, rigged. Given how often Trump has repeated this view, it seems reasonable to stipulate that, the more the polls show the President and his Republican Party bleeding support ahead of the midterms, the more he will preëmptively question the very possibility that the elections could produce an honest and reliable result.

    If only this were just a matter of Trump talking. A list of actions that he’s already taken since returning to the White House includes issuing an executive order, later struck down by a federal court, to make sweeping changes to the electoral process, such as requiring proof of citizenship in order to vote; hiring election deniers into key positions across the federal government; ordering investigations into the nonexistent fraud that he claims robbed him of victory in 2020; and pressuring state and local officials to change election laws to get rid of mail-in balloting and redraw congressional-district boundaries in order to advantage Republican candidates. In one remarkable example, which recently became public, on the day that Alex Pretti was killed by federal agents in Minneapolis, the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, suggested in a letter to Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, that the thousands of heavily armed immigration officers currently terrorizing the city’s residents would only withdraw if, among other things, the state agreed to turn over its voter rolls to the Justice Department. What, exactly, does she want them for?

    And then there is what’s happening in Georgia, where, this past week, F.B.I. agents accompanied by Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of National Intelligence, raided the Fulton County election headquarters to seize evidence related to Trump’s 2020 defeat in the state. In the days since, the Administration has offered a shifting array of explanations for why an official whose job it is to oversee our nation’s response to international threats should be involved in a domestic political matter—the brightest of red lines in America since the scandalous revelations in the nineteen-seventies about the government spying on its own citizens. Trump said on Thursday that Bondi had asked Gabbard to be in Georgia, though just a day earlier he claimed that he did not know she had been there, while Gabbard herself wrote in a letter to Congress that “the president himself” had directed her to be present. None of which, of course, answers the question of what it is that the Administration is actually doing in investigating a crime which, let’s be clear here, did not occur.

    The Georgia case, whatever it leads to, underscores the extent to which Trump remains obsessed with rewriting history to expunge his 2020 loss. “They rigged the second election. I had to win it. I needed it for my own ego,” he told the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday. “I would’ve had a bad ego for the rest of my life.” The level of obsession indicated by these comments ought to be proof (as if any were needed) that he is not prepared to accept future losses, either.

    In that sense, one of the most telling of the President’s recent comments was an aside he raised in an interview with the Times a few weeks back: Trump, looking ahead to this fall, told the reporters—on the record—that he had made a mistake in not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines in swing states that he ended up losing in 2020. “Well, I should have,” he said.

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  • 11 Democrats running to keep blue-leaning seat in party hands as GOP House majority on the brink

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    Eleven candidates are running in Thursday’s Democratic Party primary in New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District.

    The seat was left vacant after now New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill stepped down after winning November’s gubernatorial election in the Garden State.

    The winner of the Democratic primary will face off with Randolph Mayor Joe Hathaway, the only Republican to file for the special election, which will be held on April 16.

    The special election in a district that tilts towards the Democrats comes as Republicans cling to a razor-thin 218-214 majority in the House of Representatives.

    HOUSE GOP MAJORITY SHRINKS TO JUST ONE VOTE AS JOHNSON SWEARS IN NEW HOUSE DEMOCRAT

    Now-New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill, a Democrat, stepped down from her seat in the House of Representatives in November, after winning the Garden State’s gubernatorial election. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    But the GOP may land a reinforcement before the general election for the open seat in New Jersey is held.

    That’s because a special election is scheduled on March 10 in Georgia’s solidly right 14th Congressional District, in the race to succeed former GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. The MAGA firebrand and one-time top Trump House ally a month ago stepped down from Congress a year before her term ended.

    A whopping 22 candidates, including 17 Republicans, are running in the Georgia showdown.

    JOHNSON WARNS HOUSE REPUBLICANS TO ‘STAY HEALTHY’ AS GOP MAJORITY SHRINKS TO THE EDGE

    According to Georgia state law, all the candidates will run on the same ballot. If no contender tops 50% of the vote, a runoff election between the top two finishers will take place on April 7.

    Greene won re-election in 2024 to the seat by nearly 30 points and Trump carried the district, which is located in northwest Georgia, by 37 points.

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene

    Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia stepped down from her seat in Congress in early January, a year before her term ended. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    While there’s a very crowded field in Thursday’s Democratic congressional primary in New Jersey, only a handful of the candidates have a possible shot at winning the nomination.

    Among the frontrunners are former Rep. Tom Malinowski, an assistant Secretary of State in former President Barack Obama’s administration who represented the neighboring 7th Congressional District from 2018 to 2022 before being defeated by now-GOP Rep. Thomas Kean Jr., and Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill.

    Also in contention are former Lt. Gov. Tahesha Way, John Bartlett, a Passaic County commissioner, and Analilia Mejia, a progressive organizer who is running as an outsider and is backed by progressive champions Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. Sanders headlined a virtual rally for Mejia on the eve of the primary.

    HOUSE GOP’S ALREADY FRAGILE MAJORITY TO FURTHER SHRINK AFTER DEMOCRATS’ BALLOT BOX VICTORY

    The suburban district in northern New Jersey leans to the left, with Sherrill winning re-election in 2024 by 15 points, the same margin by which she carried the district in November’s gubernatorial showdown.

    But then-Vice President Kamala Harris won the district by just eight points in the 2024 presidential election, giving the GOP some hopes of possibly flipping the seat.

    Doug LaMalfa

    Republican Rep. Doug LaMalfa of California, who represented a district in the northeastern portion of the state, died in early January. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    There’s one more vacant seat in Congress, in California’s 1st Congressional District, following the recent unexpected death of Republican Rep. Doug LaMalfa.

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    A primary in the race to fill LaMalfa’s seat will be held on June 2, which is primary day in California. And the special general election will be held on Aug. 4.

    The district, in northeastern California, is solidly Republican.

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  • Democrat flips Texas district Donald Trump won by 17 points

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    Democrat Taylor Rehmet flipped a historically Republican district of Texas during a special election on Saturday to claim a closely watched state Senate seat.

    The military veteran and union leader comfortably won the race for Texas Senate District 9, which includes the Fort Worth area, beating the Republican candidate, conservative activist Leigh Wambsganss.

    Rehmet had a lead of more than 14 percentage points after almost every vote was counted, the Associated Press reported.

    President Donald Trump had won the district by 17 points back in 2024.

    “This victory is a warning sign to Republicans across the country,” Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin said in a statement late on Saturday. “Tonight’s results prove that no Republican seat is safe.”

    This is a breaking story; updates to follow.

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  • House candidate predicts historic rise of ‘new generation’ in Congress as parties target key demographic

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    After making historic inroads with Hispanic voters in the last several election cycles, the Republican Party is going all in on winning the Latino vote this midterm election. The party, which currently holds a razor-thin majority in the House of Representatives, is confident that Hispanic voters will help it retain and shape the future of its majority both this November and in the years to come.  

    Longtime South Texas Democratic Judge Tano Tijerina told Fox News Digital during an interview that he and Hispanics are ready to buck the Democrats and embrace a “new generation” of political leadership.

    Alongside former assistant U.S. attorney Eric Flores and former California mayor Kevin Lincoln, Tijerina is one of three Hispanic Republicans running to unseat Democrats in Congress who have been endorsed by President Donald Trump. There are eight other Hispanic Republicans running in competitive, heavily Latino districts in border states, Texas, New Mexico and California.

    If elected, these candidates will join an already influential group of Hispanics in Congress, including Reps. Maria Salazar, R-Fla., Monica De La Cruz, R-Texas, Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., Juan Ciscomani, R-Ariz., and Gabe Evans, R-Colo.

    HEALTHCARE, ECONOMY AND THE ‘ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL’: WELCOME TO THE MIDTERMS

    From left to right: Judge Tano Tijerina, Eric Flores and Kevin Lincoln. (Courtesy of National Republican Congressional Committee)

    Tijerina is running to unseat longtime Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar in a district along the Texas-Mexico border. He said that despite long being a Democratic stronghold, the Biden administration’s mismanagement of the border and prioritization of DEI “really opened up a lot of eyes of the Hispanics down here in South Texas.”

    “Being a Democrat after so many years, I’m just sick and tired of seeing all the social issues that the Democrats are [promoting]. And I’m not the only one. That’s why Webb County, that’s why South Texas, voted for Trump plus 10 numbers.”

    “We have always been conservative, everybody knows it,” he went on, adding, “Down here in South Texas, the only thing that we care about is good-paying jobs [and] making sure that we’re getting protected.”

    Cuellar also counts himself as one of the last “blue dog” conservative Democrats in the House of Representatives. He was highly critical of the Biden administration’s handling of the border and immigration issues. Cuellar has said that it was this stance that led to him being indicted by the Biden Department of Justice on foreign bribery charges. He was later given an unconditional pardon by Trump, who also posited that the charges were politically motivated.  

    Though there was much speculation that Cuellar would switch parties after his pardon, he rebuffed those rumors, saying he would remain a blue dog Democrat. Tijerina said that it is just as well because the people of South Texas “deserve somebody that’s actually going to go fight for them and not fight for themselves.”

    “[Cuellar] comes around and says, ‘I’m your money guy, I’m the one that brings the money.’ When in all reality, I, as a county judge, know that we’ve gone through commissioner’s court, we’re the ones with the ideas, we’re are the ones that ask for the federal funding, we’re the ones who do the cash match,” said Tijerina.

    “Henry’s been for Henry all these years, and it’s very obvious,” he went on. “It’s time for a new generation.”

    CALL TO DUTY: IN BATTLE FOR HOUSE, REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS LOOKING TO VETERANS

    Rep. Henry Cuellar in Washington, D.C.

    Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, was accused of taking more than half a million dollars in bribes from an Azerbaijan-owned energy company and a Mexican bank. He was pardoned by President Donald Trump on the grounds that he was being targeted for political reasons. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    In response, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Spokesperson Madison Andrus told Fox News Digital that “during his time in office, Congressman Cuellar has brought billions of dollars back home to South Texas through his powerful position on the House Appropriations Committee.”

    Andrus knocked Tijerina for “fighting for a controversial $10 million spending project in Webb County” to purchase property for a new tax office.

    “Tano should focus on his own backyard and do his homework on how members bring money back to their districts,” she said.

    A national Democratic strategist told Fox News Digital that Tijerina’s assertion that Cuellar has failed to bring money back to the district stems from a “misunderstanding” of how the House appropriations process works.

    “Just based on how the House works, Tano will not be able to bring as much money to the district as Cuellar is,” said the strategist, adding, “It is exceedingly rare that a freshman member of Congress gets a seat on the Appropriations Committee. So, Tano would not be able to sit on it, that just wouldn’t happen. And so, that would necessarily lead to a significant decrease in the federal funding that Texas 28 would get.”

    SENATE MAJORITY LEADER JOHN THUNE PREVIEWS REPUBLICAN MIDTERM MESSAGE HEADING INTO 2026

    A county judge standing in his office during a formal portrait session.

    Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina poses for a portrait in his office on February 20, 2025, in Laredo, Texas. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    Tijerina, however, is not the only candidate forecasting that the Democrats’ hold on the Hispanic vote is nearing its end.

    “For too long, Democrats took South Texas for granted, assuming our votes were virtually guaranteed, while they turned their backs on our values,” said Flores, an Army veteran running as a Republican in the Texas Rio Grande Valley.

    Flores asserted that Democrats have “traded the needs of hardworking families for a radical agenda that has left our borders open and our economy in shambles.”

    Lest one think this phenomenon is isolated to the Texas border, this sentiment was further echoed by Lincoln, a Marine veteran who is also running in California.

    Lincoln told Fox News Digital that Hispanic families in the California Central Valley are “feeling the crushing pressures of the affordability crisis driven by Democrats from Sacramento to Washington who put political ideology ahead of kitchen table issues.”

    “Generations of families like mine came to America in pursuit of the American Dream, and the Republican Party is earning their trust by working to restore the affordability and opportunity that allows working families to get ahead again,” said Lincoln.

    GOP SEIZES ON DEM CIVIL WAR AS PROGRESSIVES JUMP INTO KEY 2026 SENATE RACES: ‘THEY’RE IN SHAMBLES’

    Hispanic Trump supporters

    A woman holds a sign expressing Latino support for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump at his campaign rally at the Orange County Fair and Event Center, April 28, 2016, in Costa Mesa, California. (DAVID MCNEW/AFP via Getty Images)

    Despite this, the Democratic Party is also leaning into the affordability message and remains confident that Hispanic voters will stand by them.

    “While Republicans are pushing policies that make everyday life unaffordable, Democrats are focused on lowering costs, creating good-paying jobs, and protecting health care for every American,” DCCC spokesperson Bridget Gonzalez told Fox News Digital.

    “Latino voters see through the GOP’s empty, hypocritical rhetoric because they’re living with the consequences of Republican extremism every day,” said Gonzalez, adding, “Republicans can trot out all the talking points they want, but Latino families know who’s actually fighting for them — it’s the Democrats.”

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    Meanwhile, National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Christian Martinez told Fox News Digital that “outstanding” candidates like Flores, Lincoln and Tijerina “reflect their communities, understand the challenges working families face, and are stepping up to help grow a House majority focused on opportunity, security, and the American Dream.”

    “Republicans aren’t just talking about earning Hispanic voters’ trust, we’re continuing to work and build it,” said Martinez.

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  • How Trump could use ICE shooting to impact 2026 midterms

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    President Donald Trump could use the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer’s shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis on Wednesday to invoke the Insurrection Act and deploy troops to Democratic cities ahead of the November 2026 midterms, experts said.

    Good, 37, a U.S. citizen, was shot and killed by an ICE officerlater identified as Jonathan Ross, after agents asked her to exit her vehicle. The Trump administration defended the agent, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claiming Good had “attempted to run a law enforcement officer over” before she was shot. But critics have condemned the killing, with the city’s mayor, Jacob Frey, calling it “reckless.”

    In the wake of the shooting, the Trump administration said it would send more federal officers to the city to deal with protests and backlash.

    While the administration said this was necessary to help Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials do their jobs safely, experts told Newsweek that Trump could escalate the use of troops to target Democratic-run areas and “create an atmosphere of fear” ahead of the midterm elections. Trump has not said he would do so.

    The White House referred Newsweek to an X post by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt that said: “President Trump stands fully behind the heroic men and women of ICE. Radical left-wing agitators should be ashamed of themselves for protesting ICE’s removal of criminal illegal alien killers, rapists, gangbangers, and pedophiles from American communities.”

    “ICE is doing a very important job to remove illegal criminal aliens from our communities,” she added in comments made to the press.

    Al Tillery, a professor of political science at Northwestern University in Illinois, said that Trump could invoke the Insurrection Act to send troops to different areas in America ahead of the elections.

    The 19th-century statute, a combination of different laws enacted by Congress between 1792 and 1871, would allow the use of active-duty military personnel to perform law-enforcement duties within the United States. Trump has, in the last few months, not ruled out using the act amid legal challenges to his deployment of troops to cities including Portland, Oregon; Los Angeles; and Washington, D.C. Trump has said deploying troops to these cities was necessary to deal with crime.

    “Such a mission would need to be handled by the National Guard in a role similar to the deployments in Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and Portland,” Tillery told Newsweek. “With the State of Illinois’ recent federal court victory against deployments in Chicago, Trump would likely need to invoke the Insurrection Act, which is the principal legal mechanism that allows a president to federalize or deploy forces domestically to suppress unrest when state authorities are deemed unwilling or unable to do so.

    “There is not a doubt in my mind that Trump wants to use ICE and the National Guard to create an atmosphere of fear in Democratic cities in advance of the midterms. Whether or not Trump will get to even test the limits in this regard will depend on the Republican majority on the Supreme Court, which at times has demonstrated that they are fully supportive of Trump’s norm-busting behavior.”

    Thomas Whalen, an associate professor who teaches U.S. politics at Boston University, told Newsweek that the possibility of Trump sending troops into cities ahead of the midterms should be taken “seriously.”

    “Trump is usually at his worst when he thinks he’s going to lose. And it looks like he or at least his party is going to lose big time at the midterms,” he said.

    The Republican Party has a slim majority in both chambers of Congress, and the party not in office tends to perform better in midterm elections. Democrats picked up 40 seats in the House during the 2018 midterms during Trump’s first term in office. Losing the House would affect the GOP’s ability to pass key legislation and advance Republican policies.

    Trump has expressed concerns that the GOP may perform poorly in the midterms and the party is implementing various strategies to put the party on good footing, including putting Trump on the campaign trail and trying to redistrict states to favor Republican candidates.

    Whalen said: “He’s been talking a long time about invoking the Insurrection Act and you can imagine the chaos that would cause if implemented on Election Day with a generous gallop of federal troops and ICE personnel flooding the streets in major Democratic cities like Chicago.”

    However, Calvin Jillson,  a politics professor at Southern Methodist University in Texas, told Newsweek that this scenario was unlikely.

    “This is largely a fever dream on the left as the federal courts have limited President Trump’s ability to deploy National Guard troops into cities, especially against the wishes of state and local officials,” he said, “so he would have only federal law enforcement officers, marshals, ICE, Border Patrol, etc., in numbers insufficient to the task.

    “The main flaw in such a plan, however, clear from watching Minneapolis this week, is that a Trump administration show of force around the elections would be much more likely to bring Democrat voters into the streets and to the polls that it would be to intimidate them.”

    The midterm elections will take place on November 3.

    In a polarized era, the center is dismissed as bland. At Newsweek, ours is different: The Courageous Center—it’s not “both sides,” it’s sharp, challenging and alive with ideas. We follow facts, not factions. If that sounds like the kind of journalism you want to see thrive, we need you.

    When you become a Newsweek Member, you support a mission to keep the center strong and vibrant. Members enjoy:  Ad-free browsing, exclusive content and editor conversatiopns.  Help keep the center courageous. Join today.

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  • 2025 shockers: The biggest moments that rocked the campaign trail

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    It was an off-year when it comes to elections, but 2025 was on fire on the campaign trail, as next year’s looming midterm showdowns took shape.

    While it was never expected to match the intensity of the tumultuous 2024 battles for the White House and Congress, this year’s off-year elections grabbed outsized national attention and served as a key barometer leading up to the 2026 midterm contests for the House and Senate majorities.

    Here are five of the biggest moments that shaped the campaign trail.

    5. Trump pushes mid-decade congressional redistricting

    Aiming to prevent what happened during his first term in the White House when Democrats reclaimed the House majority in the 2018 midterms, President Donald Trump in June first floated the idea of rare but not unheard of mid-decade congressional redistricting.

    HERE ARE THE NEXT BATTLEGROUNDS IN REDISTRICTING FIGHT

    President Donald Trump first floated the idea of mid-decade congressional redistricting in June. (Alex Brandon/AP Photo)

    The mission was simple: redraw congressional district maps in red states to pad the GOP’s 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.

    Trump’s first target: Texas.

    A month later, when asked by reporters about his plan to add Republican-leaning House seats across the country, the president said, “Texas will be the biggest one. And that’ll be five.”

    The push by Trump and his political team triggered a high-stakes redistricting showdown with Democrats to shape the 2026 midterm landscape in the fight for the House majority.

    Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas called a special session of the GOP-dominated state legislature to pass the new map.

    But Democratic state lawmakers, who broke quorum for two weeks as they fled Texas in a bid to delay the passage of the redistricting bill, energized Democrats across the country.

    Among those leading the fight against Trump’s redistricting was Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom of California.

    Gavin Newsom Prop 50 victory

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during an election night press conference at a California Democratic Party office Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, in Sacramento, Calif. (Godofredo A. Vásquez/AP Photo)

    California voters earlier this month overwhelmingly passed Proposition 50, a ballot initiative which will temporarily sidetrack the left-leaning state’s nonpartisan redistricting commission and return the power to draw the congressional maps to the Democratic-dominated legislature.

    That is expected to result in five more Democratic-leaning congressional districts in California, which aimed to counter the move by Texas to redraw their maps.

    The fight quickly spread beyond Texas and California.

    Right-tilting Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio have drawn new maps as part of the president’s push.

    SETTING THE STAGE: WHAT THE 2025 ELECTIONS SIGNAL FOR NEXT YEAR’S MIDTERM SHOWDOWNS

    Republicans are looking to GOP-controlled Florida, where early redistricting moves are underway in Tallahassee. A new map could possibly produce up to five more right-leaning seats. But conservative Gov. Ron DeSantis and GOP legislative leaders don’t see eye-to-eye on how to move forward.

    “We must keep the Majority at all costs,” Trump wrote on social media this month.

    In blows to Republicans, a Utah district judge this month rejected a congressional district map drawn up by the state’s GOP-dominated legislature and instead approved an alternate that will create a Democratic-leaning district ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

    And Republicans in Indiana’s Senate defied Trump, shooting down a redistricting bill that had passed the state House.

    Indiana Senate votes down congressional redistricting

    Indiana Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith announces the results of a vote to redistrict the state’s congressional map, Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025, at the Statehouse in Indianapolis. (Michael Conroy/AP Photo)

    But Trump scored a big victory when the conservative majority on the Supreme Court greenlighted Texas’ new map.

    Other states that might step into the redistricting wars — Democratic-dominated Illinois and Maryland, and two red states with Democratic governors, Kentucky and Kansas.

    4. Jay Jones text messages revealed, rocking Virginia’s elections

    Virginia Democrats were cruising toward convincing victories in the commonwealth’s statewide elections when a scandal sent shockwaves up and down the ballot.

    SHOWDOWN FOR THE HOUSE: DEMOCRATS, REPUBLICANS BRACE FOR HIGH-STAKES MIDTERM CLASH

    Democratic attorney general nominee Jay Jones instantly went into crisis mode after controversial texts were first reported earlier by the National Review in early October.

    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.

    jay jones speaks from podium

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

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

    And the GOP leveraged the explosive revelations up the ballot, forcing Democratic Party nominee, former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, back on defense in a campaign where she was seen as the frontrunner against Republican rival Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

    Earle-Sears didn’t waste an opportunity to link Spanberger to Jones. And during October’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.

    “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.

    KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THE 2025 ELECTIONS 

    While the scandal grabbed national headlines, in the end it didn’t slow down the Democrats, as Spanberger crushed Earle-Sears by 15 points. Democrats won the separate election for lieutenant governor by 11 points and Jones even pulled off a 6-point victory over Republican incumbent Jason Miyares.

    3. Democrats overperform at the ballot box

    Just eight days into Trump’s second term in the White House, demoralized Democrats had something to cheer about.

    Democrat Mike Zimmer defeated Republican Katie Whittington in a special state Senate election in Iowa, flipping a Republican-controlled vacant seat in a district that Trump had carried by 21 points less than three months earlier.

    Zimmer’s victory triggered a wave of Democrats overperforming in special elections and regularly scheduled off-year ballot box contests.

    Among the most high profile was the victory by the Democratic candidate in Wisconsin’s high-stakes and expensive state Supreme Court showdown.

    With inflation, the issue that severely wounded them in the 2024 elections, persisting, Democrats were laser focused on affordability, and the wins kept coming.

    In November’s regularly scheduled elections, they won the nation’s only two gubernatorial showdowns — in New Jersey and Virginia — by double digits. And they scored major victories in less high-profile contests from coast to coast.

    Mikie Sherrill on her winning election night.

    Then-Rep. Mikie Sherrill celebrates during an election night event in East Brunswick, New Jersey, on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025.  (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The year ended with Democrats winning a mayoral election in Miami, Florida for the first time in a quarter-century, and flipping a state House seat in Georgia.

    The Democratic National Committee, in a year-end memo, touted, “In 2025 alone, Democrats won or overperformed in 227 out of 255 key elections — nearly 90% of races.”

    But Democrats are still staring down a brand that remains in the gutter, with historically low approval and favorable numbers.

    ELECTION REFLECTION: ‘DEMOCRATS FLIPPED THE SCRIPT’ ON AFFORDABILITY IN BALLOT BOX SHOWDOWNS

    Among the most recent to grab headlines: Only 18% of voters questioned in a Quinnipiac University survey this month said they approved of the way congressional Democrats were handling their job, while 73% percent disapproved.

    That’s the lowest job approval rating for the Democrats in Congress since the Quinnipiac University Poll began asking this question 16 years ago.

    2. Democrats’ primary problem

    The Democrats overperformed in this month’s special congressional election in a GOP-dominated seat in Tennessee — losing by nine points in a district that Trump carried by 22 points just a year ago,

    But there were plenty of centrist Democrats who argued that state Rep. Aftyn Behn, the Democratic nominee in the race, was too far to the left for the district.

    Republicans repeatedly attacked Behn over her paper trail of past comments on defunding the police.

    ‘FULL-BLOWN BATTLE’ BREWING IN DEM PARTY AS MAMDANI-STYLE CANDIDATES RISE IN KEY RACES

    And the U.S. Senate campaign launch this month in red-leaning Texas by Rep. Jasmine Crockett, a progressive champion and vocal Trump critic and foil, compounded the argument by centrists.

    “The Democratic Party’s aspirations to win statewide in a red state like Texas simply don’t exist without a centrist Democrat who can build a winning coalition of ideologically diverse voters,” Liam Kerr, co-founder of the Welcome PAC, a group which advocates for moderate Democratic candidates, argued in a statement to Fox News Digital.

    Aftyn Behn on Election Night

    Democratic nominee State Rep. Aftyn Behn speaks to supporters at a watch party after losing a special election for the U.S. seventh congressional district, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025, in Nashville, Tennessee. (George Walker IV/AP Photo)

    And the center-left Third Way, in a memo following the Tennessee special election, argued that “there are two projects going on in the Democratic Party right now. One is winning political power so we can stop Trump’s calamity. The other is turning blue places bluer.”

    “If far-left groups want to help save American democracy, they should stop pushing their candidates in swing districts and costing us flippable seats,” the memo emphasized.

    1. Mamdani wins NYC mayoral primary

    It was the story that has dominated campaign politics for the past six months.

    Zohran Mamdani‘s convincing June 24 victory in New York City’s Democratic Party mayoral primary was the political earthquake that rocked the nation’s most populous city and sent powerful shockwaves across the country.

    The capturing of the Democratic nomination by the now-34-year-old socialist state lawmaker over frontrunner former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and nine other candidates propelled Mamdani to a general election victory.

    Zohran Mamdani delivers victory speech on Election night with his banner behind him.

    Zohran Mamdani delivers a victory speech at a mayoral election night watch party, on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, in New York City.  (Yuki Iwamura/AP)

    Mamdani’s primary shocker, and later, his general election victory, energized the left.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    But it also handed Republicans instant ammunition as they worked to link the first Muslim New York City mayor with a far-left agenda to Democrats across the country, as the party aimed to paint Democrats as extremists.

    But Trump, who had repeatedly called Mamdani a “communist,” appeared to undercut that narrative with a chummy Oval Office meeting with the mayor-elect last month.

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  • Nicki Minaj’s MAGA shift seen as warning sign for Democrats ahead of midterms

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    Rapper Nicki Minaj‘s MAGA turn could “spell trouble” for Democrats in next year’s midterms, highlighting a potential shift of some anti-Trump voting blocs to the right, Washington Times editor-at-large Alex Swoyer said Monday.

    If someone like her [Minaj] can make this transformation, I think that speaks volumes about the type of voters that also can across the country,” Swoyer told “America Reports.”

    “We saw it in 2024 with the popular vote, and I think we’ll see it again. It could spell trouble for Democrats with the midterms.”

    Swoyer noted that the president’s party typically loses ground in midterm elections, but Minaj could help Republicans “expand their tent.”

    NICKI MINAJ PRAISED FOR SPOTLIGHTING CHRISTIAN PERSECUTION IN NIGERIA: ‘BODY COUNT IS JUST TOO HIGH TO IGNORE’

    Nicki Minaj enters the stage as the surprise guest on the final day of Turning Point USA’s annual AmericaFest conference at the Phoenix Convention Center on Dec. 21 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Caylo Seals/Getty Images)

    Minaj made a surprise appearance at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest on Sunday, teaming up with Erika Kirk for a Q&A. She previously joined forces with the Trump White House at the United Nations to address persecution against Christians in Nigeria.

    “I’m honored to be here,” Minaj said after Kirk welcomed her to the stage. 

    She went on to praise both President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, saying both are politicians who have an “uncanny” ability to relate to the American people.

    RAPPER NICKI MINAJ AND UN AMBASSADOR JOIN VOICES AGAINST CHRISTIAN PERSECUTION IN NIGERIA

    Erika Kirk and Nicki Minaj

    CEO and Chair of the Board of Turning Point USA Erika Kirk (left) speaks with U.S. rapper Nicki Minaj (right) during Turning Point’s annual AmericaFest conference in Phoenix, Ariz., on Dec. 21.  (Olivier Touron / AFP via Getty Images)

    Minaj’s appearance received praise from conservatives in the aftermath.

    PragerU personality Xaviaer DuRousseau hailed the move as “absolutely iconic” but said he wasn’t exactly surprised to see it happen.

    “I’ve watched closely over the last decade as to how the left has demonized President Trump and spread all this propaganda against him simply because he has been draining the swamp in D.C., where the same thing has been happening to Nicki Minaj,” he said Monday on “The Will Cain Show.”

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    “For over a decade, she has been exposing corruption, fraud, and exploitation in the entertainment space, so that’s why they try to label her as this horrible, villainous person, but really all she wants is for us to be able to protect our freedoms, prioritize faith, protect children and have a sane society once again.”

    Fox & Friends” co-host Brian Kilmeade suggested Monday that the warming reception Trump has received from rappers like 50 Cent, Snoop Dogg and now Minaj may “be the beginning of people taking a fresh look” instead of using a media filter to form their opinions.

    Fox News’ Brie Stimson and Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

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  • Conservatives need to embrace ‘fusion’ of populism, top leader says, calling AmFest scenes are ‘encouraging’

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    The future of the conservative movement rests on the ability of candidates and activists to embrace the best tenets of populism while addressing issues that are uncomfortable in “establishment Washington,” the leader of one of America’s oldest conservative policy groups told Fox News Digital.

    Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts, in Phoenix for the first AmericaFest following the murder of Charlie Kirk, said that despite a wave of recent losses for conservatives, there is great hope for the future. The event was packed with thousands of conservatives from around the nation.

    I was expecting to be really encouraged, and I am,” Roberts said of people he has engaged with at AmericaFest. “There’s a lot of passion and encouragement in that room. And I think we have to keep in mind, moving on to a second point, that you have to ignore sort of the naysayers and the doomsayers about conservative politicians losing the midterms.”

    He said that despite bad press and wipeouts for the right in Virginia, New Jersey, Florida and Pennsylvania, conservatives “ought to be more optimistic” after what he called a great first year of the Trump-Vance administration and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., working together.

    VIVEK RAMASWAMY CRITICIZES POCKETS OF ‘ONLINE RIGHT’ FIXATED ON HERITAGE IN TURNING POINT ADDRESS

    Heritage Foundation president Dr. Kevin Roberts. (Tom Williams/CQ Getty Images)

    “What we’ve got to do for 2026 is articulate to the American people — starting with this crowd here at AmFest — what those policy priorities need to be; not just for the short term but for the long term and Heritage certainly is in the middle of that conversation.”

    To keep conservatism at the fore in 2026, given recent setbacks, conservatives must run on an “aspirational vision” he said was lacking in several 2025 races – while noting Jack Ciattarelli’s failed bid for governor of New Jersey bid as one of the better-run campaigns.

    Looking to the new year, Roberts said Heritage is interested in seeing policymakers asking those uncomfortable questions inside the Beltway, like what the future of the American family looks like, whether the workplace is one where Americans earn dignity and not just a paycheck, and more directly, “what it means to be an American.”

    TIM SCOTT TELLS MAGA VOTERS TRUMP ‘IS ON THE BALLOT’ AS GOP FIGHTS TO GROW SENATE MAJORITY IN 2026

    “[That’s] to say something, of course, that establishment Washington doesn’t like to talk about,” he said.

    “What’s the future, not just of immigration policy, but how can we assimilate the highest percentage of foreign-born population we’ve had in modern American history? This is important for all of us if in fact we’re going to have a healthy society,” he said.

    “The bottom line is this, if establishment Washington talks about just sort of sidebar issues in this campaign, then the midterms are going to be a disaster. “

    WHY 2026 SHOULD TERRIFY REPUBLICANS AFTER TENNESSEE SPECIAL ELECTION

    “They, to state the obvious, have to talk about what the American people are asking, and they actually have to offer policy solutions where I happen to think Heritage has some good things to say.”

    In 2028, Trump will be term-limited and a new conservative leader will have to rise.

    The best way for conservatives to move forward, he said, is to embrace a “good fusion of the best elements of populism.”

    SETTING THE STAGE: WHAT THE 2025 ELECTIONS SIGNAL FOR NEXT YEAR’S MIDTERM SHOWDOWNS

    “Namely, exercising popular will over longstanding conservative principles like diminishing the size of the administrative state, but also making sure that we’re sustaining our longstanding, conservative principles,” Roberts said.

    “Whoever the standard-bearers are for conservatism in 2028, 2032, 2036, their policy ideas are going to sound a lot like Trump’s, but of course they are going to bring their own imprint into that.”

    “Those of us who focus on ideas and policy for a living need to do our jobs zealously well to keep offering not just the long-standing policy ideas, but some innovative ones as well,” he added.

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    Looking ahead to Heritage’s work in 2026, Roberts said the think tank will focus on family, the future of free enterprise, national security, and citizenship.

    “And then we’re also focused, especially on the side of our enterprise that works on advocacy and campaigns, “Heritage Action [For America]“, what those particular places are where we can tell that story to the American people. And hopefully, people running for office will take those issues and run with them,” he said.

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  • Trump Unsure Whether Impact of Economic Policies Will be Felt in Time for Midterms

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    U.S. President Donald Trump expressed uncertainty about whether Republicans would keep control of the House of Representatives in next year’s midterm elections because some of his economic policies have yet to take full effect, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday.

    Trump, in an interview conducted on Friday, told the Journal, “I can’t tell you. I don’t know when all of this money is going to kick in,” when asked about the whether Republicans would lose the House in November.

    The White House did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

    The president has argued that his economic policies, including his imposition of widespread tariffs on imports, are creating jobs, boosting the stock market and attracting increased investment into the United States.

    After campaigning last year on promises to tame inflation, Trump has in recent weeks alternated between dismissing affordability problems as a hoax, blaming President Joe Biden for them, and promising his economic policies will benefit Americans next year.

    “I think by the time we have to talk about the election, which is in another few months, I think our prices are in good shape,” Trump said in the interview.

    Last month the president rolled back tariffs on more than 200 food products in the face of growing angst among American consumers about the high cost of groceries.

    The president did not say whether he would lower tariffs on additional goods, the Journal reported.

    Trump’s overall approval rating edged up to 41 percent in a new Reuters/Ipsos poll but the approval rating on his performance on the cost of living was just 31 percent.

    Democrats have won a string of victories in state and local elections in Virginia, New Jersey and New York City, where growing voter concerns about affordability, including high food prices, were a key topic.

    Officials have said Trump will hit the road in the new year to campaign for Republican candidates and emphasize his economic policy successes. Trump has said his tax cuts and tariffs on foreign goods will put more money in the pockets of American families.

    Reporting by Anusha Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by Christopher Cushing

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  • Parkland survivor jumps into crowded NYC House race as Gen Z progressives challenge party elders

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    John F. Kennedy’s grandson Jack Schlossberg picked up plenty of national attention when he launched a congressional campaign to replace retiring Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., but the content creator is far from the only young, progressive candidate vying to represent the Big Apple in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Democratic activist Cameron Kasky, 25, launched a campaign on Tuesday for New York’s 12th Congressional District, joining an already crowded field of Democratic primary contenders.

    Kasky is jumping into the race as progressives across the U.S., especially in New York City, seek to seize Democrats’ success in the 2025 races, including gubernatorial wins in New Jersey and Virginia and 34-year-old socialist Zohran Mamdani taking the helm of the largest city in America.

    “New Yorkers are always on the move, reaching new heights, and rushing towards the future, but today’s leaders just can’t keep up,” Kasky said in his announcement video, while walking through a busy New York City between jump cuts of the Gen-Z activist riding public transportation. 

    CAMELOT OR CRINGE?: MEET JFK’S GRANDSON TURNED CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE FOR THE SCROLLING GENERATION

    Co-founder of the student-led gun violence prevention group “Never Again,” Cameron Kasky, speaks at the March For Our Lives II to protest against gun violence on June 11, 2022, in Los Angeles, California.  (Sarah Morris/Getty Images)

    The video is reminiscent in tone and style to Mamdani’s own jumpy and cinematic-forward videos, with Kasky’s political campaign debut scripted over a jazzy musical ensemble.

    SOCIALIST WAVE SPREADS COAST TO COAST AS PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRATS RALLY AROUND ZOHRAN MAMDANI’S NYC WIN

    “I’m Cameron Kasky, and I’m running for Congress because it feels like our party has no future, so we need to invest in a new generation of leaders to take on the fight.

    Kasky said “he never dreamed” of getting into politics, but after surviving a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018, and later leading the March For Our Lives, a student-led organization supporting gun control legislation, he said he learned “the hard way” that it happened because of the “American system,” he now seeks to dismantle.

    His key campaign promises are Medicare for All, calling for an end to “funding genocide” and abolishing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    Both Schlossberg and Kasky are seeking to unseat Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., the 78-year-old who is retiring at the end of next year after decades in Congress. Nadler currently represents Manhattan’s West Side, from Chelsea and Greenwich Village, through Midtown and Hell’s Kitchen, all the way up to the Upper West Side.

    Jack Schlossberg

    Jack Schlossberg, grandson of President John F. Kennedy, takes a photo as U.S. President Joe Biden departs for Michigan from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, on Sept. 6, 2024. (Annabelle Gordon/Reuters)

    Kasky’s announcement came on the heels of New York City Council member Chi Ossé launching a primary challenge against House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., in a neighboring congressional district amid an ongoing discussion about the party’s future.

    But even Mayor-elect Mamdani has rejected Ossé’s primary launch against Jeffries, arguing it’s not “the right time” to challenge the highest ranking House Democrat.

    As for Schlossberg, he is practically political royalty. But to New York City’s chronically online electorate, he is better known as the star of hundreds of satirical, and often absurd, viral videos, amassing close to 850,000 TikTok followers and nearly 770,000 on Instagram.

    Despite the followers and the Kennedy connections, Schlossberg has a thin résumé. He most recently served as a political correspondent for Vogue during the 2024 presidential election.

    Kasky and Schlossberg are far from the only candidates in an already jam-packed Democratic primary.

    Nonprofit leader and activist Liam Elkind is also in the running, and Elkind’s own launch video follows a similar walk-and-talk style as his fellow young, progressive opponents.

    Rep. Jerry Nadler

    United States Senator Jerry Nadler (D-NY) attends the 2023 New York City Pride March on June 25, 2023, in New York City.  (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)

    Chief among the 26-year-old’s campaign promises is to “actually fight Trump,” in addition to improving the Democratic Party, ending corruption, affordability and civil rights.

    Also campaigning in the crowded field are Assembly members Micah Lasher and Alex Bores as well as Council member Erik Bottcher.

    According to 43-year-old Lasher, he is running to “revitalize the Democratic Party, fight Trump’s agenda, and deliver results that improve the lives of New Yorkers.”

    Meanwhile, Bores, who is in his mid-30s, said he is “running for Congress because big systems have stopped working for the little guys — but together, we can fix them.”

    And 46-year-old Bottcher is running to “keep the New York City dream alive and take back our country.”

    Civil rights lawyer Laura Dunn, former journalist and political commentator Jami Floyd, Merrill Lynch and Mercury Capital Advisors alum Alan Pardee, and LGBTQ rights activist Matthew Shurka are all vying for the coveted Democratic nomination.

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    Forty-year-old Dunn said she is “running fearlessly for the people,” while 61-year-old Floyd notably did not vote for Mamdani this November and has been carving out a moderate position in the primary.

    Pardee, 58, said he is running to create “policies that make our city livable for all families,” and Shurka, 37, said he is campaigning to “take on corruption, confront Donald Trump’s attacks on this city, and fight for the people who make New York home.”

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  • Laura Loomer teases Georgia move after President Trump says he wants Marjorie Taylor Greene primaried

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    Conservative commentator Laura Loomer set off a fresh wave of speculation Saturday by openly teasing a possible move to Georgia after President Donald Trump withdrew his endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in a blistering late-night Truth Social post.

    Loomer, a staunch Trump ally with roughly 1.8 million followers on X, posted that the president told her he wanted Greene “primaried,” then asked her audience a pointed question.

    “Should I move to Georgia?” she asked.

    Her post, paired with Trump’s Truth Social message calling Greene a “ranting lunatic,” immediately triggered questions about whether Loomer is positioning herself as a potential challenger in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District.

    TRUMP DROPS MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE ENDORSEMENT, CALLS HER A ‘RANTING LUNATIC,’ HINTS AT BACKING PRIMARY RIVAL

    Conservative commentator Laura Loomer threatened a potential move to Georgia after President Trump disavowed former ally Marjorie Taylor Greene in a Truth Social post. (Getty Images)

    Greene has not responded to Loomer’s posts.

    Loomer and Greene have publicly attacked each other throughout the year, with their exchanges escalating sharply since summer. In August, the two clashed over Loomer’s criticism of Medal of Honor recipient Florent Groberg, sparking a days-long volley of insults.

    Saturday’s posts show Loomer revisiting and escalating those accusations. She described Greene as “no friend to MAGA,” accused her of disloyalty dating back to 2021 and brought up claims about Greene’s political alliances during the 2022 midterms.

    TRUMP GIVES EX-ALLY GREENE NEW NICKNAME AFTER DROPPED ENDORSEMENT, SAYS SHE BETRAYED ‘ENTIRE REPUBLICAN PARTY’

    Trump and MTG during a campaign rally

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene speaks alongside 2024 presidential hopeful Donald Trump at a campaign event in Rome, Ga., March 9, 2024.  (Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images)

    Several of Loomer’s follow-up posts Saturday referenced Greene receiving public support from Democrats, adding fuel to an already volatile public feud.

    Trump’s public break with Greene, which he delivered in a lengthy statement late Friday, removed one of the Georgia Republican’s most valuable political assets, the president’s personal endorsement.

    In his post, Trump said Greene had become consumed with “complaining,” claimed she had “turned left” politically and said conservative voters in Georgia were already considering a primary challenge. He added that he would give “Complete and Unyielding Support” to the “right person” who enters the race.

    Trump kisses MTG

    President Donald Trump kisses Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., after addressing a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol March 4, 2025. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    Trump did not name any potential challengers.

    While Loomer has not announced a campaign, her suggestion of a possible move to Georgia came within hours of Trump’s statement and quickly fueled speculation online that she could test the waters.

    If Loomer relocates and enters the 2026 primary, it would pit two highly visible right-wing firebrands against each other in one of the most closely watched House districts in the country.

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    Georgia’s 14th District remains deeply conservative, meaning the primary is typically the decisive contest. A high-profile rivalry amplified by Trump’s public intervention would almost certainly attract national attention, campaign money and intense media coverage.

    For now, Loomer has offered no formal announcement, only the question.

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  • Leading Senate Democrat tells Fox News ‘it’s time … for new leadership,’ as Schumer faces growing pressure

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    Amid a rising tide of calls from House Democrats and others in the party to remove Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., from his longtime post as Senate Democratic leader, a top Democratic senator says it’s time for “new leadership” in the party. 

    Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, speaking one-on-one with Fox News Digital during a stop in New Hampshire, said it’s also a moment for a younger generation of Democratic leaders to “step up the stage.”

    Booker was interviewed on Friday, four days after seven Senate Democrats and independent Sen. Angus King of Maine, who caucuses with the party, bucked Senate Democratic leaders and voted with the majority Republicans to end the longest federal government shutdown in history.

    Plenty of progressives and center-left Democrats have pilloried the deal to end the shutdown, which didn’t include the Democrats’ top priority: an agreement to extend expiring subsidies that make health insurance coverage through the Affordable Care Act, known as the ACA or Obamacare, more affordable to millions of Americans.

    DEMOCRATIC SENATOR CALLS FOR ‘MORE EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP’ AS SCHUMER FACES MOUNTING PRESSURE

    Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., is seen after a news conference in the U.S. Capitol on the government shutdown on Wednesday, November 5, 2025. (Tom Williams/Getty)

    And even though he opposed the agreement, Schumer, the top Democrat in the chamber, has faced calls from an increasing number of party members to step down due to his inability to keep Senate Democrats unified.

    But to date, no Senate Democrat has joined those calls for Schumer to step down.

    After the final congressional vote to end the shutdown, Booker wrote that “the Democratic Party needs change. It needs a new generation of leaders to stand up to Trump.”

    SCHUMER FACES FURY FROM THE LEFT OVER DEAL TO END SHUTDOWN

    Asked if those comments were directed at Schumer, Booker said, “I’m pointing these comments at anybody who will listen to me.”

    “Chuck Schumer’s generation, Nancy Pelosi’s generation, John Lewis’s generation. They have so much to be proud of. It is time, though, for new leadership. The other generations, X, millennials, Z, — it’s time for us to step up. The stage is waiting for us to lead, not just the party, but the nation right now.”

    Cory Booker Fox Digital interview

    Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey is interviewed by Fox News Digital at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, in Manchester, N.H. on Nov. 14, 2025 (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

    Booker was interviewed ahead of an event at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics. New Hampshire’s two senators — Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan — were among the Democrats who supported the deal with Republicans.

    Shaheen, who previously supported a bill to extend the ACA subsidies, on Monday defended breaking with her party to support the deal.

    “We’re making sure that the people of America can get the food benefits that they need, that air traffic controllers can get paid, that federal workers are able to come back, the ones who were let go, that they get paid, that contractors get paid, that aviation moves forward,” Shaheen said in a “Fox and Friends” interview.

    SHUTDOWN SHOWDOWN: DEMOCRATIC SENATOR STANDS FIRM AFTER DEFYING PARTY

    Asked about the Democratic senators who bucked the party, Booker, who played Division One football at Stanford University, called for party unity.

    “I played football, and that play is behind me. Now I want everybody back in the huddle, tighten your chin straps, because we’ve got to fight forward and the end zone, for me, is very simple. It is lowering people’s healthcare costs, lowering people’s grocery costs, lowering people’s energy costs, and getting an America that works for everybody, not just the wealthiest of the wealthy,” Booker said.

    And Booker, who broke a Senate record with a 25-hour speech earlier this year as he took aim at President Donald Trump‘s second-term agenda, said: “I’m a big believer, if you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.”

    Sen. Cory Booker in New Hampshire

    Democratic Sen. Cory Booker headlines an event at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, in Manchester, N.H. on Nov. 14, 2025. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

    But he also lamented the increased animosity between Democrats and Republicans, saying that “the partisanship, as you know, bothers me, because it’s turned to tribalism.”

    As he unsuccessfully ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, Booker spent plenty of time and made lots of friends in New Hampshire, which has held the first-in-the-nation presidential primary for over a century.

    Booker, who is up for re-election next year in blue-leaning New Jersey, is seen by political pundits as a possible contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, which is expected to be a crowded and competitive race.

    “Of course, I’m thinking about it. Haven’t ruled it out. But I’m up on the ballot in New Jersey in ’26 and that is my focus,” Booker said.

    After his Fox News interview, Booker headlined the latest “Stand Up New Hampshire Town Hall.” The speaking series, organized by top New Hampshire Democratic elected officials and party leaders, is seen as an early cattle call for potential White House contenders.

    And later in the day, he gave the keynote address at a major fundraising gala for the New Hampshire Democratic Party.

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    Booker called next year’s elections, when the Democrats will try to win back majorities in the House and Senate, “vitally important.”

    “Don’t talk to me about ’28 until you show me where you stand and who you stand for in ’26. I stand for New Jersey. I stand for America and an America that works for everybody,” Booker emphasized.

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  • Trump drops Marjorie Taylor Greene endorsement, calls her a ‘ranting lunatic,’ hints at backing primary rival

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    President Donald Trump announced Friday night on Truth Social that he is withdrawing his support and endorsement of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, calling her a “ranting lunatic” and accusing the Georgia Republican of “complaining” instead of celebrating what he described as his administration’s “record achievements.”

    The president claimed that Greene “has told many people that she is upset that I don’t return her phone calls anymore” in a long post where he ultimately vowed “Complete and Unyielding Support” to any conservative primary challenger leading into the 2026 midterm elections.

    Trump claimed Greene had “gone Far Left,” citing her recent appearance on The View, and gave her the new nickname “Wacky Marjorie.”

    Greene has been one of Trump’s most vocal allies since entering Congress in 2021, backing him during multiple impeachment attempts and campaigning with him across red states.

    EX-GOP OFFICIAL TURNED DEMOCRAT TARGETS TRUMP IN BATTLEGROUND STATE GUBERNATORIAL CAMPAIGN LAUNCH

    US Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) speaks alongside former US President and 2024 presidential hopeful Donald Trump at a campaign event in Rome, Georgia, on March 9, 2024.  (Photo by ELIJAH NOUVELAGE/AFP via Getty Images)

    “It seemed to all begin when I sent her a Poll stating that she should not run for Senator, or Governor, she was at 12%, and didn’t have a chance (unless, of course, she had my Endorsement — which she wasn’t about to get!),” the president wrote. 

    “She has told many people that she is upset that I don’t return her phone calls anymore, but with 219 Congressmen/women, 53 U.S. Senators, 24 Cabinet Members, almost 200 Countries, and an otherwise normal life to lead, I can’t take a ranting Lunatic’s call every day,” Trump added. 

    Rep. Greene responded immediately on social media, writing on X that “President Trump just attacked me and lied about me.”

    REP MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE SAYS THERE ARE MANY ‘WEAK REPUBLICAN MEN’

    Trump kisses MTG

    U.S. President Donald Trump kisses Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) after addressing a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 04, 2025 in Washington, DC. President Trump was expected to address Congress on his early achievements of his presidency and his upcoming legislative agenda.  (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    “I haven’t called him at all, but I did send these text messages today,” Greene added with screenshots of text messages. “Apparently this is what sent him over the edge. The Epstein files. And of course he’s coming after me hard to make an example to scare all the other Republicans before next week’s vote to release the Epstein files. It’s astonishing really how hard he’s fighting to stop the Epstein files from coming out that he actually goes to this level.”

    Greene seemed to have shut the door for any future working relationship with President Trump in her post, writing, “I have supported President Trump with too much of my precious time, too much of my own money, and fought harder for him even when almost all other Republicans turned their back and denounced him.”

    “But I don’t worship or serve Donald Trump,” Greene wrote. “I worship God, Jesus is my savior, and I serve my district GA14 and the American people.”

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    Trump, MTG and RFK Jr.

    U.S. President Donald Trump (L) speaks as U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (2nd L), Republican of Georgia, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (R) stand by after Kennedy was sworn in as Secretary of Health and Human Services in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on February 13, 2025.  (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    After touting his administration’s accomplishment since the beginning of his second term this January, the president quipped, “having created the “HOTTEST”  Country anywhere in the World from being a DEAD Country just 12 months ago (and so much more!), all I see “Wacky” Marjorie do is COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN, COMPLAIN!”

    Trump’s move could open the door for Georgia Republicans seeking to challenge Greene next year in her ruby-red district. 

    The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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  • Virginia’s Ghazala Hashmi becomes first Muslim elected statewide in the Old Dominion

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    The Fox News Decision Desk has projected that Democratic state Sen. Ghazala Hashmi will become the next lieutenant governor of Virginia. 

    Hashmi was born in Hyderabad, India, grew up in Georgia and has represented Chesterfield County in the Virginia state Senate in her most recent public role.

    She has a doctorate in American literature from Emory University and her campaign repeatedly highlighted her curriculum vitae as a public educator.

    She was a professor at the University of Richmond as well as the nearby J. Sergeant Reynolds Community College, where she was the first director of its Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning.

    WINSOME EARLE-SEARS REBUKES SPANBERGER PLAN TO UNDO VIRGINIA’S ICE PACT: ‘THIS IS NOT HARD’

    State Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, D-Chesterfield, gestures to a man offscreen in Richmond, Va. (Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    Hashmi was the only statewide candidate in the Virginia sweeps to repeatedly decline invitations and challenges to debate her opponent.

    That opponent, Richmond broadcaster John Reid, in turn released a 45-minute mock debate video in which Hashmi’s public policy positions were highlighted in-fact, but by an AI version of the lieutenant governor-elect.

    Hashmi is also the first South Asian to have served in the state Senate.

    SPANBERGER DEFENDS ABORTION AD CRITICIZING SEARS AFTER BERNIE WARNS AGAINST HIGHLIGHTING ISSUE

    She is primed to preside over the upper chamber in the lieutenant governor’s most visible role – where she will wield the gavel over a narrowly-divided, Democratic majority Senate.

    Hashmi’s campaign focused on supporting public education, expanding Medicaid and protecting abortion rights.

    She also emphasized climate change, environmental protection and affordable housing — themes that align with mainstream Democratic priorities.

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    On the campaign trail, Hashmi also reportedly said she hopes to lead a repeal of Virginia’s “Right to Work” law, which provides protections for workers against being required to join unions as a prerequisite for employment.

    She also presaged a contentious relationship with President Donald Trump, saying that his second term is “worse than the first time around,” and that the mogul has surrounded himself with “villainous creatures,” according to Annandale Today.

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

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    The Democratic-led Virginia General Assembly has approved advancing a proposed constitutional amendment that could pave the way for redistricting in the state ahead of congressional midterm elections.

    An 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 General Assembly advanced a proposed constitutional amendment that could pave the way for redistricting in the state ahead of the 2026 congressional elections. That measure needs another round of legislative approval early next year before it can go to voters.

    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 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 a rare bit of bipartisanship, Ohio’s new map won support from all five Republicans and both Democrats on the redistricting panel. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee praised the Ohio Democrats “for negotiating to prevent an even more egregious gerrymander” benefiting Republicans.

    Republicans hold 10 of Ohio’s 15 congressional seats. The new map could boost their 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 won reelection with more than 54% of the vote.

    National Democrats said they expect to hold both targeted districts and compete to flip three other Republican seats.

    Ohio residents criticize new map

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

    That uncertainty provided commissioners of both parties with some incentive for compromise. House Minority Leader Dani Isaacsohn, a Democratic commissioner, said the deal “averts the disaster that was coming our way” with a potential 13-2 map favoring Republicans. And Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose, another commissioner, said it avoided a costly battle over a referendum that could have delayed the state’s primaries.

    But Ohio residents who testified to commissioners Friday denounced the new districts. Julia Cattaneo, whose shirt proclaimed, “gerrymandering is cheating,” said the new map is gerrymandered for Republicans more 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 Auditor Keith Farber, a commission member, 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 eight Republican and seven Democratic districts — as some had urged — without splitting cities, counties and townships.

    Virginia Democrats point at Trump to defend redistricting

    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 will try 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 Senate’s approval Friday followed House approval Wednesday.

    The developments come as Virginia holds elections Tuesday, where all 100 state House seats are on the ballot. Democrats would need to keep their slim majority to advance the constitutional amendment again next year. It then would go to a statewide referendum.

    Republican Sen. Mark Obenshain said Democrats were ignoring the will of voters who overwhelmingly approved the 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 bipartisan redistricting commission, noted it still would be responsible for 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.”

    Indiana and Kansas could be next

    Republican Indiana Gov. Mike Braun called a special session to begin Monday to redraw congressional districts, currently held by seven Republicans and two Democrats. But lawmakers don’t plan to begin work on that day. Although it’s unclear exactly when lawmakers will convene, state law allows 40 days to complete a special session.

    In Kansas, Republican lawmakers are trying to collect enough signatures from colleagues to call themselves into a special session on congressional redistricting beginning Nov. 7. Senate President Ty Masterson says he has the necessary two-thirds vote in the Senate, but House Republicans have at least a few holdouts. The petition is necessary because Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly isn’t likely to call a session to redraw the current districts, held by three Republicans and one Democrat.

    ___

    Lieb reported from Jefferson City, Missouri; Scolforo from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; and Diaz from Richmond, Virginia. John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, and Isabella Volmert in Lansing, Michigan, contributed.

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

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  • Milei scores historic win in Argentina midterms, tightens grip on Congress

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    Argentine President Javier Milei secured a decisive victory Sunday in midterm elections, expanding his control of Congress and giving his government fresh momentum to push forward with deep spending cuts and sweeping free-market reforms.

    The result gives Milei’s libertarian movement a boost and marks another sharp turn for one of Latin America’s largest and most volatile economies.

    Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza, won about 41.5% of the vote in Buenos Aires province, a historic upset in a region long dominated by the Peronist opposition. The rival coalition took 40.8%, according to figures cited by Reuters and The Associated Press.

    GREECE’S HARD LESSON FOR NYC: BEWARE LEADERS WHO PROMISE THE WORLD

    Argentina’s president Javier Milei gestures as he delivers a speech on stage. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)

    Nationwide, La Libertad Avanza increased its seats in the lower house from 37 to 64, positioning Milei to more easily defend his vetoes and executive decrees that have defined his economic agenda.

    “The result is better than even the most optimistic Milei supporters were hoping for,” Marcelo Garcia, Americas director at the risk-analysis firm Horizon Engage, said in comments reported by Reuters. “With this result, Milei will be able to easily defend his decrees and vetoes in Congress.”

    Political consultant Gustavo Cordoba told Reuters the outcome reflected a cautious optimism among voters who appear willing to give Milei’s economic policies more time.

    Argentina-Milei

    Argentina President Javier Milei speaks during a ceremony to commemorate Holocaust and Heroism Day, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday, May 8, 2024.  (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

    “Many people were willing to give the government another chance,” Cordoba said. “The triumph is unobjectionable, unquestionable.”

    HOUSE DEM DECLARES SHE IS A ‘PROUD GUATEMALAN’ BEFORE AMERICAN AT PROGRESSIVE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

    Reuters reported that inflation has fallen from 12.8% before Milei’s inauguration to 2.1% last month. His government has also posted a fiscal surplus and pushed through broad deregulation measures — a dramatic reversal after years of economic turbulence.

    According to The Associated Press, the U.S. government under President Donald Trump offered Argentina a $40 billion aid package, including a $20 billion currency swap and a proposed $20 billion debt-investment facility, after tying future U.S. support to Milei’s performance in the midterms.

    Italian Prime Minister at President Donald Trump's Inauguration

    Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Argentina’s President Javier Milei share a joke as they arrive for the Presidential Inauguration of Donald Trump at the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 20, 2025.  (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

    President Donald Trump congratulated Milei on Truth Social Sunday night, writing: “Congratulations to President Javier Milei on his Landslide Victory in Argentina. He is doing a wonderful job! Our confidence in him was justified by the People of Argentina.”

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    Investors reacted positively to the results. Reuters reported that Argentine bonds and stocks are expected to rally as Milei’s stronger hand in Congress gives him the political capital to accelerate his reforms

    Milei called the election “a turning point for Argentina,” according to AFP via the Times of Israel.

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