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Former Georgia Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan came to The Atlanta Voice for the first time on Monday, Sept. 21, to discuss his campaign for governor. Duncan is one of nearly a dozen candidates who have launched campaigns this year. Last week, Duncan visited a Black-owned small business in what looked like a concerted effort to speak directly to Black voters. A former Republican, Duncan, is running as a Democrat and believes there’s a place for a governor who appeals to both sides.
“I do have a track record of working across the aisle,” he said. “I want to turn chaos into conversations.”
The Atlanta Voice: Good morning, Mr. Duncan, and welcome to WAREHOUSE Studios on the campus of The Atlanta Voice. Let’s get right to it. Why did you decide to run for governor?
Geoff Duncan: I really feel like Georgia’s best days are in front of us and I want to lead all Georgians to those better days. In my role as Lieutenant Governor I saw how important the job as governor can be. I really feel there’s an opportunity to prioritize folks in the state that need it the most.
Duncan listed affordable child care, unemployment, and housing cost, and healthcare as issues he plans to tackle during his campaign.
AV: Any other issues taking place in Georgia that you believe should be addressed on the campaign trail going forward?
GD: Quite honestly, we have a Donald Trump crisis, too. This guy has leaned into our state in such a negative way. Not only trying to steal the 2020 [presidential election], but now he’s essentially putting rural hospitals in a crisis. We have a Donald Trump crisis, and I am willing to stand up and push back.

AV: Does your experience as Lt. Governor give you an advantage over your opponents in this race?
GD: Absolutely. I learned a lot as Lt. Governor. In the four years that I was in office, we went through a pandemic, which was unbelievable for everybody ….I don’t even know what to refer to the pandemic as. We woke up one day, and there was 10 percent unemployment. We also had to navigate the difficult realities of civil unrest and the horrific murder of Ahmaud Arbery, amongst others. And we had to deal with the 2020 election trying to be stolen by a sitting President. I learned a lot about leadership. I learned a lot about myself. I learned a lot about Georgians, and that’s really what’s led me on this journey. I think most Georgians just want somebody to lead their state that stays focused on the issues that matter most.
AV: What are some of those issues?
GD: Being able to allow folks to raise their kids in safe communities, being able to have access to quality education and quality healthcare, the ability to find a high-paying quality job. Those are the things we want to stay focused on. Too often in politics, folks are staying focused on the fringe issues because it’s a hyper-partisan environment.
If Georgians want to elect somebody who’s going to be hyper-partisan and call names, then they are not going to vote for me. If they want a consistent leader who shows up to work every day focused on the issues that matter, I think we have a good shot to win this.
Duncan was clear that he believes current Georgia Governor Brian Kemp has been good for the state. “He is doing a good job of leading our state forward. Our economy continues to grow. I think he handled COVID extremely well, and I was glad to work alongside him and the Legislature on a number of the COVID relief actions. But there’s more work to be done in the state.”
AV: What do you believe you can bring to the governor’s office that the other candidates cannot?
GD: I have been behind the curtain, and I realize how important the job of governor is. You get to write the first draft of the budget. You get to prioritize what is going to be nearly $40 billion, understanding how those agencies work, and understanding what dollars are effective and what dollars don’t seem to be effective. You get to prioritize what’s going on in the Legislature as the chief negotiator between constituencies.
And it’s not just Democrats versus Republicans at the Legislature. There are a lot of constituencies, rural and urban, and others, where you have to broker deals. The governor has to play a significant role. You put all that together, and the job of governor is important, and I feel like I have got a really good head start on understanding how that operates.
AV: Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, State Rep. Jason Esteves, and former DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond are also running to represent the Democratic Party in this race. All have high levels of name recognition with Democratic voters in two of Georgia’s largest counties, Fulton and DeKalb counties, respectively. Do you believe your level of name recognition will help you as well?
GD: I think more important than name recognition is my platform. I think my platform meets the needs, meets those individuals, meets those counties where they are.
AV: Please explain.
GD: I know I keep talking about affordability, but it’s a reality folks are facing. There are folks who are going to read this who are scared about just paying rent next month. They are worried about being able to afford groceries when they go to the store. My platform is laser-focused on meeting folks where they are at.
I think amongst Democrats, my name ID is high because I have been willing to stand up to Donald Trump, even when it wasn’t politically popular.

AV: Was the visit to The Black Coffee Company an attempt to begin reaching out to the Black voter base in Atlanta?
GD: One of my areas of focus has been on the Black community, for sure. Such an important part of the election, but more importantly, part of the state. The importance is to learn perspective, to understand what people need, where people’s hearts are at, and where their concerns are at.
On Sunday, Duncan and his wife attended service at Allen Temple AME Church, one of the city’s oldest Black church communities.
AV: Why do you believe Democratic voters should trust you? Why should they believe you have similar Democratic values now?
GD: Those are great questions. Two parts: One is that I do have a track record of working across the aisle on an overwhelming majority of the issues. Two, some Republicans want to point fingers and call me names, saying ‘Geoff Duncan has lost his mind’. I haven’t lost my mind, I found my heart. I want to love my neighbor, that’s my mission each and every day. I want to look for ways to use the state of Georgia as that vehicle for us to love our neighbors.
Duncan, 50, married and a father of three, admitted that he “got guns and abortion wrong” as a “young Republican legislator.”
“I fell into that trap of thinking the NRA and other groups had people’s best interests at heart. They don’t,” he said.
He added, “I was wrong to think a room full of legislators knew better than millions of women in this state. I have taken the time to talk to them, hear their horrific stories, and tough circumstances in situations. I believe they deserve the right to choose and day one as governor, “I’ll sign an executive order that allows doctors to practice medicine with pregnant women without the fear of prosecution. Secondly, I’ll introduce legislation that repeals the six-week ban and returns us to Roe v Wade.
That’s my promise and I’m sticking to it.”
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Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, spoke Sunday at the memorial service for her husband.
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President Donald Trump made major gains with Black voters in 2024. But Black conservative operatives are warning that Republicans shouldn’t take those voters for granted in the midterms — and fall into the same trap they say has tripped up Democrats.
While most Black voters still support Democrats, Black conservatives argue their community has a strong opportunity in 2026 to build off Trump’s momentum and redefine what conservatism means for an increasingly disgruntled generation of Black voters.
But the effort from the party to lock in the Trump-era gains has not yet materialized.
“Republicans have no desire to pander to the Black community, but do I think they could be doing a little bit better of pandering? For sure,” said Harrison Fields, who was a surrogate on the Trump campaign and recently left the White House.
That means following Trump’s 2024 campaign example, he added, and heading into predominantly Black areas like the Bronx, Chicago and other Black Democratic strongholds.
“I think showing up is going to be something that matters, and not just showing up at election time,” he said, referring to a common critique Democrats face in their attempts to reach Black voters. “We have a lot of good opportunities to just show up now.”
In 2024, Trump won 15 percent of Black voters — according to Pew Research’s widely cited validated voter survey — an increase from the 8 percent he won four years earlier. A pre-election Pew poll found that the economy and health care were the most important issues for the voting bloc, ahead of racial and ethnic inequality as the third most important issue.
Fields argued that the party should zero in on the generational divide in the Black community, suggesting Republicans could have better luck with a younger cohort of voters who haven’t regularly voted Democratic their whole lives.
“Black voters have been conservative their entire lives,” said Fields, who recently joined Republican lobbying and public affairs firm CGCN. “But if you’re told that the system is stacked against you and one party is the only party that can fix the system and somehow level the playing field or really upend the playing field, you weaponize an emotional trigger for Black voters that allows them to be blind to their core values.”
Fields acknowledged that Democrats have long been able to capitalize on older Black voters’ concerns around racial equity and justice, but it was Trump’s messaging on the economy that resonated with younger Black voters in 2024.
In a pre-election survey of young voters of color across battleground states, conducted by Democratic pollster Hart Research, 61 percent of young Black voters identified the economy as their top issue heading into November 2024.
“I think so many people in the Democratic Party think that the 1965 movement is the same thing that can bring people to the party,” said Fields. “While you have a lot of Black Americans that are still harping on issues in the past, many of them have not been afflicted by racism for segregation or the true injustices that our great grandparents were part of.”
But even with the growing generational divide, the Republican Party has long struggled to court and retain Black voters, the consultants said, instead focusing on a white working class base.
“From a historical lens, the approach from the GOP was ‘the Black community is going to go out and vote for Democrats at an alarming rate and we don’t really have a chance, so let’s not even go out there,’” said Quenton Jordan, vice president of the Black Conservative Federation.
But Trump changed that in 2020, Jordan argued, when the president began trying to swing Black voters to his side — something then-candidate Trump made more explicit four years later.
Camilla Moore, chair of the Georgia Black Republican Council, said focusing on young Black men under 45 will be important for Republicans in the midterms because the party’s traditional values often resonate with the demographic.
“Young Black men like the whole idea of feeling manly,” Moore said. “They like the idea of being independent, and they like the idea of being entrepreneurs and controlling their future.”
Republicans, she added, need to emphasize the importance of a traditional two-parent household on the campaign trail and highlight what policies they’ll enact to support Black entrepreneurship.
There are, however, already warning signs for Republicans that Trump’s gains with Black voters won’t be permanent.
In a September poll from Fox News, 77 percent of Black voters said they disapprove of the job Trump is doing as president, and a poll tracker from Decision Desk has Trump’s approval rating among Black Americans hovering at around 70 percent.
Still, Fields said, the numbers don’t mean Black voters will swing back for Democrats next November. And if he had a choice, he said, he’d rather Black voters stay home than vote for the other party.
“We need more points on the board than the other side, and if staying on the couch, not showing up is the best we can do right now — then that’s a win,” said Fields.
Democrats have largely dismissed Republicans’ bravado around Black voters, noting both Trump’s slipping poll numbers and the fact that most Black voters cast their ballots for Democrats.
But even as Trump’s support weakens with Black Americans in recent polls, Democrats can’t assume Black voters will automatically come back to the party, said Democratic strategist Antjuan Seawright.
“We cannot make assumptions about any constituency, in particular, younger Black voters,” said Seawright, who consulted on Hillary Clinton’s 2008 and 2016 campaigns and serves as a senior adviser to the Democratic National Committee.
“Just because folks think that Trump is not doing a good job or not doing the job at all, doesn’t mean that they are squarely sold on the fact that Democrats can do the job,” Seawright added. “There’s still some trust we have to strengthen.”
The same is true for Republicans, the GOP consultants said. If Republicans are serious about capitalizing on the momentum Trump built, they have to start speaking to Black voters now, the Black Conservative Federation’s Jordan said.
And, he added, Trump must stay involved.
“Whether you like him or not, Donald Trump draws attention,” said Jordan. “If we want to see a surge, then the president will have to be just as energized for the midterm elections as he was during his own presidential election.”
Beyond Trump, Fields said, the Republican Party hasn’t put forth a strong messenger who can credibly reach Black voters — though that doesn’t mean the party doesn’t have options. Fields pointed to South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and Reps. Wesley Hunt (Texas) and Byron Donalds (Fla.) — and even himself — as possible surrogates.
Some of the GOP’s rising stars are their Black members of Congress. Scott took the helm of Senate Republicans’ campaign arm for the midterms — a high-profile role that keeps him in the national spotlight and connects him with deep-pocketed donors, both beneficial should he run for president again.
Two other members are running for governor in 2026: Donalds, who is running with Trump’s blessing in the president’s adopted home state, and Rep. John James (R-Mich.) in his battleground state. Hunt is also weighing joining the messy Senate primary in Texas.
But Seawright, the Democratic strategist, was doubtful that the five Black Republicans currently serving in Congress would be enough to pull Black voters away from the Democratic Party or serve as a proxy for Trump’s appeal — even while acknowledging Democrats have a lot of work to do.
“I don’t think any of those people can go into any traditional Black space and advocate with their agenda and be successful,” said Seawright. “But I do think there’s something to be said about people who just feel disconnected from the process and don’t feel like there’s connective tissue to any party, and they find themselves vulnerable.”
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Mikey McCoy, Tyler Bowyer, Justin Streiff and Stacy Sheridan spoke about their slain colleague, Charlie Kirk, Sunday at the conservative activist’s memorial service in Arizona.
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In the aftermath of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination, a debate about political rhetoric and its impact on recent spates of political violence has taken hold on Capitol Hill and across the country.
While both Republicans and Democrats have condemned political violence of all kinds, their views vary on how much inflammatory political rhetoric plays a role. Some Republicans have accused the left’s rhetoric of fostering an “assassination culture” on the left, while Democrats have accused Republicans of attacks on free speech.
One member of Congress, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., attempted to steer the conversation towards gun control as opposed to rhetoric as the cause for the increase in political violence.
“This isn’t just about what happened to Charlie Kirk. At the same time his tragic killing was happening, three kids were getting shot in school, and that was one or two weeks after another couple of kids were getting shot, in church, at mass, at a Catholic school,” Ocasio-Cortez said.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., suggested gun control was more to blame than violent rhetoric when asked about the potentially growing ‘assassination culture’ in the United States. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
But GOP firebrand Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., did not mince words about those who continue to foment hatred for conservatives with inflammatory rhetoric.
“We need to shame these people out of polite society, shame them out of existence. They need to be fired from their jobs. They are putting lives in danger,” Mace said. “They are denying that they’re celebrating the political assassination and murder of Charlie Kirk, but they’re liars. They’re lying through their teeth.”
Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle have called on others to “turn down the heat” in the wake of Kirk’s assassination. Americans from all walks of life have been facing repercussions over their decision to mock, or praise, Kirk’s death, including K-12 education officials, college professors, healthcare professionals, political pundits, writers and a list of other professionals from various sectors and major companies, such as the law firm Perkins Coie, the company behind the New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ, and Office Depot, among others.

Memorials honoring Charlie Kirk have been held across the country and overseas, including in Berlin. Kirk was assassinated on Sept. 10, 2025. ( Ilkin Eskipehlivan /Anadolu via Getty Images)
Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., said that everyone should have “the right to speak freely, otherwise America’s democratic tradition could be threatened.
“Look, there’s a limit to what Congress can do, because, you know, we have the First Amendment, which protects all forms of speech, including hate speech, but we should have a culture of condemning any rhetoric that glorifies violence. I see violence as the downfall of American democracy,” Torres said. “We all should have the right to speak freely, to think freely, without fear of harassment or intimidation or violence. And once we lose the ability to speak freely in the public square then democracy as we know it has come to an end.”

Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., said political violence may become the “downfall of American democracy.” (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., suggested possible remedies Congress could take to help reduce inflammatory rhetoric and its potential impact on violence.
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“You have to look at the role that social media companies play in allowing violent rhetoric to be on their sites. And what more can we do so that law enforcement can see these attacks sooner?” Swalwell asked. “I wait, and stand ready to learn, where there are signs that were missed by law enforcement. Because if that’s the case, we have to do better, because the temperature is only increasing.”
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By the end of 2018, Erika launched her Proclaim Christian streetwear brand—which now sells baby blankets, adult clothing, luggage tags, leather bookmarks, engraved straws, beanies, and socks. Charlie appeared alongside his wife in the marketing photos for some of the merchandise—as well as the promotional art for her podcast—a blurring of their personal and professional lives that was present from the start. Turning Point USA not only backed Trump during his 2020 and 2024 elections; it also sponsored their 2021 wedding reception, according to the AP.
In the days since Kirk’s assassination, the Trump administration has treated him like a national hero—with Vice President JD Vance, his wife, Usha, and Air Force Two deployed to escort the casket to Arizona. Erika, mourning in all black and sunglasses, was photographed clutching the second lady’s hand as she exited the plane.
The visual called to mind a black-and-white photo of Jackie Kennedy after her husband’s 1963 assassination. In shock, with blood on her pink-and-black skirt suit, she clutched the hand of her brother-in-law Robert Kennedy as she watched her husband’s casket being removed from Air Force One. In the days afterward, Jackie Kennedy meticulously planned her husband’s state funeral, drawing on historic symbolism and imagery to begin shaping her husband’s legacy behind the scenes. This immediate period following Kennedy’s death is when the late president’s widow invented the shimmering fairy tale of Camelot.
But this is the social media age, and Erika, a MAGA-first wife turned widow, has grieved on the public platform. She posted a 12-slide Instagram carousel depicting her sitting over her husband’s casket, kissing Charlie’s lifeless hands, Charlie’s casket being transported, and Usha comforting her. “I have no idea what any of this means,” Erika wrote alongside the haunting images and videos. “But baby I know you do and so does our Lord.”
And Erika’s efforts to shape her husband’s legacy thus far have not been as subtle: Speaking last Friday, she said, “Now and for all eternity, he will stand at his savior’s side, wearing the glorious crown of a martyr.” In that address, she served her husband after death as she had during life. “She doesn’t make it about her,” commended a social media user reposted on X by Hugoboom. “It’s all about HIS name and HIS legacy.” The Turning Point USA statement announcing Erika as her husband’s successor made it clear she would be continuing his mission: “We will not surrender or kneel before evil,” board members said. “We will carry on.”
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Michigan Republicans have branded themselves as defenders of free expression, but a recent spate of bills threatens to erode the very First Amendment rights they claim to defend.
A group of GOP lawmakers recently introduced a House bill, called the “Anticorruption of Public Morals Act,” that would ban all online pornography, including depictions or descriptions of transgender people. The bill makes it a felony punishable by up to 25 years in prison to “distribute or make available” prohibited content, including what it describes as “a disconnection between biology and gender.”
“Don’t make it, don’t share it, don’t view it,” lead sponsor Rep. Josh Schriver, R-Oxford, wrote on social media, alongside a call to add porn distributors to the sex offender registry. He said the measure was a tool to “defend children” and “safeguard our communities.”
The bill flies in the face of the U.S. Supreme Court’s long-held position that pornography is protected under the First Amendment unless it meets a narrow definition of obscenity.
Schriver is also among the Republicans who condemned negative remarks about conservative activist Charlie Kirk after he was fatally shot in Utah on Sept. 10. But many of those remarks just pointed out that Kirk stoked divisions and inflamed tensions across the country with racist, misogynistic, and homophobic rhetoric.
“The celebration of this assassination is an encouragement for more,” Schriver said in a newsletter Monday, urging the government to “raid online networks to end pipelines of violence.”
That rhetoric is at odds with his own remarks a year ago, when he declared in a newsletter, “No Michigan resident should fear jail time or criminal charges for exercising their 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech.”
Schriver previously lost his committee assignments after promoting the white nationalist “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory.
On Tuesday, Republicans in the House passed a bill that would criminalize protesting in the street without a permit. Blocking traffic, which is currently a civil infraction, would become a misdemeanor punishable by jail time and fines.
During the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020, Republicans said they were expressing their First Amendment rights when they jammed the streets in Lansing and ignored stay-at-home orders. They claimed Democrats were the enemies of free speech.
After the assassination of a Democratic state lawmaker in Minnesota and the wounding of another, Michigan Republicans were largely quiet, even when it was discovered that the shooting suspect Vance Boelter created a hit list for six Michigan Democrats.
By contrast, when Michigan Republicans claimed President Donald Trump was in danger of political violence, they introduced a bill in May that would criminalize the phrase “8647,” which they claim is a coded call for Trump’s assassination.
In reality, the number “86” is commonly meant to expel or discard, like removing a drunk person from a bar, while “47” is a reference to Trump’s role as the 47th president.
In the case of Rep. Matt Maddock, who co-sponsored both the porn ban and the “8647” bill, the contradictions are even more glaring. He has repeatedly cast himself as a free speech defender and filed a First Amendment lawsuit against Democratic leaders earlier this year for rejecting the use of tax dollars for political mailers.
Just a day before Kirk was shot, Maddock introduced a “free speech bill” aimed at protecting conservative student journalists from censorship.
“Suppression of conservative free speech is under constant attack and ridicule by the left in schools,” he wrote on X. “This protects free speech and allows students to bring civil action against the suppressor.”
Maddock also said Kirk “embodied the best of the 1st Amendment.”
But the Milford Republican has also sponsored proposals that would muzzle others. In 2021, he introduced the “Fact Checker Registration Act,” which would have forced fact-checkers to register with the state and post $1 million bonds. Democrats and others called it an affront to free speech.
At a fundraiser last year for the Trump “fake electors,” who included Maddock’s wife Meshawn Maddock, the lawmaker unleashed his own incendiary rhetoric, warning that the prosecutions of Republicans could lead to bloodshed.
“Someone’s going to get so pissed off, they’re going to shoot someone,” he said after claiming Democrats were communists. “That’s what’s going to happen. Or we’re going to have a civil war or some sort of revolution. That’s where this is going. And when that happens, we’re going to get squashed. The people here are going to be the first ones to go.”
The extent of Republicans’ concerns for speech and violence shift based on the situation. After Kirk’s death, Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist and Sen. Jeremy Moss, both Democrats, faced death threats and bomb scares. GOP voices were largely silent.
But when people said Kirk’s hateful rhetoric helped fuel the violence that claimed his life, Republicans sought to silence their free speech, either through legislation or calling for their firings.
Their self-described loyalty to the U.S. Constitution also oscillates. Rep. Joseph Fox, another Republican sponsor of the porn ban, pushed a bill in 2023 requiring schools to teach that America was founded on “Christian ethics,” a measure Democrats said clearly violates the separation of church and state.
Rep. Jennifer Wortz, also a co-sponsor of the anti-porn bill, was called “a staunch free speech advocate” when she was endorsed last year by Americans for Prosperity, a group founded by political activist David Koch.
Republicans also have a pattern of dismissing gun violence until one of their own is killed. It’s usually “thoughts and prayers” when children are gunned down in schools. But after Kirk was killed, Republicans demanded new laws to crack down on speech they dislike and turned their ire on liberals, instead of the man who pulled the trigger.
The national party is no different. Seizing on the fear, anger, and division, Trump said Wednesday he plans to designate the anti-facism group Antifa “a terrorist organization,” even though he pardoned about 1,500 people convicted for their role in the violent Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Two of the most violent groups that day were the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys, far-right extremist organizations that have long histories of violence and intimidation. Their leaders were convicted of trying to overthrow the government through force.
Trump’s attorney general Pam Bondi recently said the administration would “go after” so-called hate speech, only to backtrack when pressed about First Amendment limits. Outside the White House on Tuesday, Trump was asked by ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl about Bondi’s plan to “go after hate speech.”
Trump responded, “We’ll probably go after people like you because you treat me so unfairly. It’s hate. You have a lot of hate in your heart. Maybe they’ll come after ABC.”
Speaking of ABC, the network on Wednesday indefinitely suspended Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show following comments he made about Kirk’s killing, including that “many in MAGA land are working very hard to capitalize on the murder of Charlie Kirk.”
He’s not wrong.
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Twenty members of the Kansas Legislature absorbed public comment on redistricting and the evils of gerrymandering during an August 2021 town hall in Lawrence. Similar town halls were held throughout the state. (Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector)
Just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should.
Just because the law allows something doesn’t mean you should eagerly try it.
And just because Kansas Republicans want to redistrict the state to hand their party another seat in the U.S. House doesn’t mean that our best interests will be served in the process.
Let’s get this out the way first. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that states can enact partisan gerrymanders without running afoul of the Constitution. State lawmakers from coast to coast can slice and dice maps however they like to extract the last bit of blue or red juice. That’s usually done once a decade, after the U.S. Census, but Texas decided to go for broke this summer and pass a new set of maps to benefit Republicans. California lawmakers then passed a referendum that would allow similar redistricting there to benefit Democrats.
With the 2026 midterm elections looking like a tough test for the governing party, Republicans see an acute threat. So they’re bringing Kansans along for the ride. Never mind that we have only one seat to offer — the one held by U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, a Democrat — GOP officials want it anyway.
They have a right to do so. If Republicans stick together and call a special session, they can override any veto from Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.
They can have their way.
But it won’t be good for the state. It won’t be good for our representation in Washington, D.C. And it won’t be good for those hundreds of thousands of Kansans who want to elect a politician from the party of their choice.
Kansas Reflector reporter Tim Carpenter collected comments from leading Republicans early this month, and a quick scan should show you which way the winds are blowing.
Former Gov. Jeff Colyer: “National Democrats have gerrymandered Congress to make it more liberal than the real America. Kansas needs to lead the way in restoring sanity to our federal government.”
Senate President Ty Masterson said a special session was under consideration: “I am actively engaged in the battle for the heart and soul of America, helping the president to Make America Great Again.”
U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall: “Most of the blue states are gerrymandered to the point that … I don’t know what else they could do to change the ratio. The Democrats have always led in this gerrymandering.”
Both Colyer and Masterson are running for governor next year. That fact perhaps explains their eagerness to curry favor with President Donald Trump, who has encouraged such mid-decade redistricting. Again, however, that doesn’t make redrawing maps a good idea. It strikes me as a nakedly partisan exercise. The comments listed above support that.
Kansans do not overwhelmingly support the Republican Party or Trump. Looking at registered voters in the state, 898,429 are Republican, 497,801 are Democrat and 573,048 are unaffiliated. Taken as a whole, only 41% have declared themselves members of the GOP. In the 2024 presidential election, more than a half-million Kansans voted for Kamala Harris.
Kansans have repeatedly elected Democratic governors — John Carlin, Joan Finney, Kathleen Sebelius and Kelly in my lifetime alone. We have regularly elected Democratic U.S. representatives, such as Dan Glickman, Jim Slattery, Dennis Moore and Davids.
Republicans have tried to defeat Davids through gerrymandering before. Former Senate President Susan Wagle gave the game away in 2020, telling a Wichita audience: “So redistricting, it’s right around the corner. And if Governor Kelly can veto a Republican bill that gives us four Republican congressmen, that takes out Sharice Davids up in the 3rd — we can do that. I guarantee you we can draw four Republican congressional maps. But we can’t do it unless we have a two-thirds majority in the Senate and House.”
The party eventually secured those supermajorities and redrew maps. Surprise of surprises, it didn’t work. Davids hung on to her 3rd District seat. Will she survive next year’s election? It depends on how willing lawmakers are to touch the blazing-hot stove of partisanship.
Kansans have elected Democrats at the federal, state and local levels. State Republicans have the right to enact more obstacles in their path to doing so. But preventing the people you purport to represent the right to elect their chosen candidate?
We’ll see how that works out for them.
Clay Wirestone is Kansas Reflector opinion editor. Through its opinion section, Kansas Reflector works to amplify the voices of people who are affected by public policies or excluded from public debate. Find information, including how to submit your own commentary, here.
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“The yeas are 48. The nays are 47, and the nomination is approved.”
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When Alex Clark, the podcaster and one of Charlie Kirk’s top deputies at Turning Point USA, found out Kirk had been murdered September 10, the nonstop poster was left with only a few words. On Thursday morning, she shared her memories of Kirk, but added that it was “tempting to want to close up shop.” By Friday, she was making plans for the future. “Yesterday I woke up wanting to die,” she wrote. “Today I woke up ready for war. We can do this. TPUSA will be bigger and bolder than anyone could ever imagine. We cannot and will not stop.”
She continued by sharing what she thought Kirk would want his followers to do next: “Go to church this Sunday. A solid, Bible teaching church. Keep going,” she added. “Buy the biggest American flag. Put it in your front yard. We will not let him die in vain.”
This summer, Kirk made headlines for telling young women at TPUSA’s Young Women’s Leadership Summit to put their families first instead of focusing on their careers. Perhaps ironically, he had spent much of the previous decade supporting the careers of female influencers through his organization. Dozens of prominent right-wing influencers got their start at Kirk’s organization, including Clark, Candace Owens, and Representative Anna Paulina Luna. The contrast between Kirk’s public persona as a combative, occasionally insulting podcaster and his private reputation as a good friend to fellow conservatives helps explain the reactions to his death on both sides of the aisle.
James Meyer of Meriden puts together a poster outside the venue prior to a vigil for Charlie Kirk on Sunday, September 14, 2025.Jim Michaud/Connecticut Post/Getty Images.
The religious nature of Clark’s response reflects Kirk’s own pivot towards emphasizing Christianity in his public life. In the early years of TPUSA, which Kirk founded in 2012, his message was primarily secular. But in 2019, Kirk began working with megachurch pastor Rob McCoy. Two years later, they founded Turning Point Faith, which brought Kirk in contact with some of the country’s most prominent fundamentalist and charismatic pastors.
Isabel Brown, another social media personality whose career was supported by Kirk, returned to her YouTube show with a tearful remembrance of her friend. She praised Kirk as a mentor: He “personally handwrote my recommendation letter on my job application for my first job at the White House in 2018,” Brown said. By Friday, she was back to a more regular format, presenting clips of vigils for Kirk on college campuses across the country. Brown also shared a video of a child expressing his sadness about Kirk’s murder before beginning a reading from the Book of Matthew. She also reacted to an Instagram Reel from podcaster and missionary Bryce Crawford, who said that Kirk’s death was a sign that the “devil has overplayed his hand” and would start a religious revival in America. (By September 15, Crawford’s video had more than 8.4 million views.)
Brown added that she hopes Kirk’s death will inspire more members of Gen Z to embrace Christianity. “What I’ve seen more of—than support for America, support for the conservative movement, support for free speech and conservative politics—is a generational revival of faith, where young people everywhere are picking up our crosses. To bear the weight of this sorrow, but to move forward, to bring God into every fiber of our society again moving forward,” she said. On Monday, Brown continued in the same vein, with an episode titled “Charlie Kirk Was Right: America Is a Christian Nation.”
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Senate Republicans are still not done with their effort to alter Senate procedure to expedite the confirmation of blocs of President Trump’s non-cabinet and judicial nominees all at once. But if all goes according to plan, Senate Republicans should be able to confirm the nominees in question by the end of the week.
GOP TRIGGERS NUCLEAR OPTION IN SENATE TO BREAK DEM BLOCKADE OF TRUMP NOMINEES
The Senate votes tonight to adopt the new “executive” resolution which Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) engineered to make it easier to approve batches of lower-level nominees in one fell swoop.
U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.), joined by Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.V.), speaks to the media following a Senate policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol on September 09, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Thune will likely “file cloture” (which is the method to cut off debate in the Senate) on the actual bloc of 48 nominees which he hopes to confirm as a slate later today.
SENATE GOP HURTLES TOWARD NUCLEAR OPTION AFTER DEAL WITH DEMS FALLS APART
By rule, there must be a day before the Senate can vote to break a filibuster on the slate of nominees. That will ripen for a vote on Wednesday with Tuesday serving as the “intervening day.”
So Wednesday is the day to watch.

The U.S. Capitol Building is seen at dusk on a clear, spring day on May 31, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Kevin Carter/Getty Images)
That bloc of nominees will NOT score the 60 votes necessary to break a filibuster.
TRUMP NOMINEES PILE UP AS GOP WEIGHS RULE SHIFT ONCE FLOATED BY DEMOCRATS
But Thune will switch his vote to be on the prevailing side (in this case, the noes), and order a re-vote. Senate rules allow a senator on the “winning” side of an issue to call for a new vote.
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Thune will then make a point of order that the precedent of the Senate should be a simple majority to break a filibuster on a bloc of lower-level nominees like these. The chair will rule against Thune. But that’s what Thune wants. He will then appeal the ruling of the chair that is in fact a simple majority to break a filibuster on a batch of nominees like that. If the Senate then secures a simple majority to overrule the chair, Thune will have established a new precedent for this type of slate for nominees. Thune will then ask that the Senate re-vote the failed vote to break a filibuster. That is Thune’s right since he changed his vote earlier. But rather than 60 votes to break a filibuster, it will only take a simple majority.
That is the new “precedent” for breaking a filibuster for low-level nominees. After the Senate burns off its “post cloture” time on Thursday, the Senate will finally vote to confirm this batch of 48 nominees.
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Another week, another accusation of deceitful campaigning in New Jersey’s escalating governor’s race. This time, it’s Democrats saying Republicans are lying, over comments Democratic nominee Mikie Sherrill made (or didn’t make) about ballooning energy bills — a touchy topic these days.
National Republicans released a TV ad Friday with a video clip of Sherrill appearing to say Democrats know that pushing for greener energy — a la wind turbines — would cost you “an arm and a leg” but you should accept it to be “good” people. Her Republican opponent, Jack Ciattarelli, jumped on that, arguing Sherrill was “caught on tape” endorsing higher rates.
Brent Johnson
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Steve Bannon has called for an investigation into Utah Governor Spencer Cox following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
Newsweek reached out to Cox’s office for comment via email.
Kirk, 31, was assassinated during a speech at Utah Valley University on September 10 during his “American Comeback Tour.” A suspect, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, is in custody. Kirk was a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump and played a key role in organizing young Republican voters.
Cox has earned bipartisan praise for his response to the assassination, but some more MAGA-aligned conservatives, such as Bannon, have been more critical. During an episode of his War Room podcast, the former White House chief strategist called on Cox to be investigated over the state’s mental health initiatives.
No law enforcement has suggested Cox has done any wrongdoing to warrant an investigation.
During an interview with Sheila Matthews, a co-founder of a conservative parental rights group, Bannon raised concerns about Intermountain Support Coordination Services, a company that is contracted by the state to provide services for individuals who have disabilities. Robinson’s mother, Amber Robinson, is a social worker who has reportedly worked for the company.
“Cox should be investigated. Why the White House—and they’re saying we had nothing to do with this guy, but even the first time, when [FBI Director Kash Patel] flew out there, why was he allowed to have a speaking role? Who made that decision? He needs to be investigated. [Robinson’s] mother needs to be investigated,” Bannon said.
Bannon also raised concerns about Cox’s stance on LGBTQ+ rights, as the governor has been viewed as more moderate on the matter. He has previously declined to sign some anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, leaving him at odds with more conservative Republicans.
Robinson lived with a transgender roommate and romantic partner who is helping police in the investigation. Cox said the roommate “had no idea that this was happening.”
Kirk was previously critical of Cox, calling on him to be “expelled from the Republican Party” after he declined to sign into law a bill to ban transgender girls from participating in girls’ sports.
Utah Governor Spencer Cox, during a press conference last week: “Social media is a cancer on our society right now, and I would encourage people to log off, turn off, touch grass, hug a family member. Go out and do good in the community.”
Journalist Chris Cillizza, on X: “The country (and the world) now know the Utah governor’s name — due to the assassination of Charlie Kirk in the Beehive State on Wednesday. And what they’ve seen is a politician less interested in blame than in soothing. An elected official focused on empathy rather than political point-scoring.
“At the moment, we have a politics perfectly suited to our modern the attention economy. People who yell or bully or say vile things or ignore norms are rewarded — more fundraising dollars, more TV time, more ‘fame.’ It has created a downward spiral where our politicians seem to value trolling the other side more than actually engaging with them.
“But, Spencer Cox deserves credit — whether or not he is going to be a major player for Republicans in 2028 (or ever). Because he is doing the hardest thing in politics: Refusing to take the easy road.”
Governor Josh Shapiro, a Pennsylvania Democrat, on CBS News: “We are at a pivotal moment in this country, and we need leaders to step up and speak and act with moral clarity, not to use the rhetoric of vengeance, but to use words of healing. That’s exactly what Spencer has been doing over the past few years. Actually, he’s been doing it over the last number of years.”
Charges against Robinson are expected to be filed this week.
Turning Point USA is set to hold a memorial for Kirk at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on September 21.
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House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has announced there will be a vigil in Statuary Hall of the Capitol tonight at 6:15 pm et to honor Charlie Kirk.
While it is expected to be respectful, Capitol Hill is a tinderbox right now. Democrats and Republicans are still trading barbs at one another. Both sides are accusing the other of contributing to the hyper-toxic rhetoric. There are calls to “lower the temperature.” But remember, Congress is a thermometer — not a thermostat.
We could have verbal jousting in and around the solemn ceremony tonight. Members could again unload on another when they filter back into the Capitol tonight. The complex is rife with tension.
Members are concerned about personal security and how to safeguard themselves and their families — but there’s no concrete plan on what to do to protect lawmakers.
THUNE’S SUITCASE NUKE- AND THE FILIBUSTER’S LATEST BLAST INJURY
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., speaks during a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
This brings us to government funding – and why security of lawmakers is a key part of that fight.
Government funding expires at 11:59:59pm ET on Sept. 30. The House is scheduled to be out of session next week. Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown on September 23. So there is limited bandwidth for Congress before a shutdown.
There is chatter that the House may try to advance a clean interim spending bill this week (a “CR”), which would run through Nov. 21.
The bill would renew all funding from last year at current levels. But it would approve three “new” bills for the entire fiscal year covering agriculture, military construction/VA and the legislative branch.
REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK: MILITARY WHISTLE-BLOWERS TESTIFY TO CONGRESS ABOUT UNEXPLAINED UFO ENCOUNTERS

Fox has learned that the White House wants an extra $58 million for security for the administration and the courts in light of Charlie Kirk’s assassination. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
The latter is where there’s a problem.
Fox is told that the White House wants an additional $58 million extra for security for the administration and the courts in light of the Kirk murder. They would match that with similar money to secure Congress. But some lawmakers may balk, saying that the matching $58 million is too low – similarly, because there are so many members of Congress and threats are off the charts. Fox is told that Congress will approve whatever security funding is necessary, but lawmakers must first determine what they want.
“Figure out what you want and put it in the bill. It’s not something we are going to disagree on,” said one senior House source.
That brings us to the Democrats’ quest for a “victory” in this spending round, especially since it is believed that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) caved and received nothing in the spring funding round.

Democrats are requesting a renewal of the Obamacare subsidies, which are set to expire at the year-end. (Pete Kiehart/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The big request from Democrats is a renewal of Obamacare subsidies, which expire at the end of the year. If Congress fails to act, healthcare for tens of millions of Americans will rise sharply.
Some Republicans are pushing for an extension of those subsidies, too. But Congressional Republicans are reluctant to attach the Obamacare subsidy renewal to a seven-week interim spending bill.
In short, Republicans are waiting for Democrats to say what they want — and Democrats can’t figure that out. But rank-and-file Republicans are also waiting for their leadership to make a play call.
One play call could be getting the House to vote on that clean CR, coupled with the three other spending bills, later this week.
However, the House has the “three-day rule.” That requires legislation be posted for three days before the House votes. If the House is going to vote before its scheduled recess, then that would be Thursday. And that also means the House must vote to post the bill on Monday.

The House currently has 432 members — 219 Republicans and 213 Democrats. (Chip Somodevilla)
But exactly what the House may post is unclear.
Moreover, it’s unclear if the House could even approve a stopgap spending package.
It’s about the math.
The House currently has 432 members: 219 Republicans and 213 Democrats. That means Republicans can only lose two on their side and pass the bill. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) – and perhaps others – are likely to oppose a Band-Aid spending bill. And Democrats may not vote yes because of all the reasons above. Plus, they are in the minority. They will expect the majority to “figure it out.”
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Such a scenario could only amplify tensions on Capitol Hill – which are already sky-high because of Kirk.
Expect a lot more verbal jeering and disagreements from Congress before this is resolved.
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Among all the troublemaking members House Republican leaders have to deal with, Rep. Jen Kiggans isn’t on their list of problem children. That might be changing.
A former Navy helicopter pilot, nurse practitioner and mother of four, the 54-year-old Virginian is seen in the Republican Conference as something of a model member, hailing from one of the toughest swing districts in the country. She is viewed by her peers as personable and a team player. Of all the places Mike Johnson might have gone on the eve of the 2024 elections, the speaker chose to spend time with Kiggans — a strong show of leadership support for a freshman.
But Kiggans, now in her second term, has decided to stick her neck out on what’s shaping up to be one of the most politically explosive policy fights of the fall: the battle over extending boosted Affordable Care Act insurance subsidies that are due to expire on Dec. 31. Congressional budget forecasters are predicting major premium hikes if the subsidies sunset, which would force millions of people to drop health insurance coverage.
Twelve Republicans and seven Democrats are backing legislation that would enact a one-year extension of the subsidies, which are implemented in the form of enhanced tax credits. Kiggans is the lead sponsor and the GOP face of the effort.
In an interview, she called an extension good politics — and good for her constituents.
“In six weeks or so, people will get a notice that their health care premiums are going to go up by thousands of dollars,” said Kiggans. “And at the end of the year … for people that either have this type of insurance and work in small businesses, are self-employed, you know, I worry about their access to health care.”
The latest Capitol Hill clash over preserving health care policies enacted by Democrats, however, is shaping up to be a central battle in government funding negotiations ahead of a Sept. 30 shutdown deadline — and driving a rift inside the GOP in ways that echo party infighting over scaling back Medicaid in President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.” The dispute is also now pitting centrists like Kiggans against conservatives who have fought for years to undo the Affordable Care Act. And it carries major political stakes for Republicans as they gear up for their fight to keep control of the House next year.
The Democrats’ 2010 health law first provided for tax credits to help make premiums more affordable under the new insurance plans. But the 2021 Covid relief package supercharged those credits, making them more generous for people with lower incomes but also accessible to individuals making up to $600,000 a year. It’s that “enhanced” version of the credits that will expire at the end of the 2025 without congressional action.
One senior House Republican, granted anonymity to share their private view of Kiggans’ support for the subsidies, suggested she’ll be given latitude by her colleagues and leadership to follow her instincts on the credits’ fate: “Kiggans does her homework, and she understands her base or constituency and what needs to be done.”
Still, she’s finding herself caught in the middle of warring factions that could test the positive relationships she’s built during her short time in office, while also putting her political future at risk.
She’s going up against a swath of hard-liners who in the coming days plan to ramp up their coordinated campaign against any extension, in part by arguing that the subsidies are used to cover abortions. Conservatives also say the tax credits are too expensive, and they are generally loath to support any policy tied to the Affordable Care Act.
Rep. Eric Burlison (R-Mo.), a member of the House Freedom Caucus, said in an interview Thursday it would be “awful” if Johnson capitulates to demands from moderates like Kiggans to extend the enhanced ACA credits. Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.), chair of the hard-line contingent, called the subsidies “free giveaways to insurance companies.”
Mindful of the intraparty fissures around this issue, Johnson has so far been careful not to say whether he endorses an extension, and certainly isn’t tying it to a government funding package needed to avert a shutdown before Oct. 1. Republicans who support Kiggans’ crusade privately believe their best bet for victory is securing the extension in a second funding measure at the end of the year, but Democrats are making this linkage a condition of their support for the immediate stopgap spending measure.
“There’s a range of opinion on it,” Johnson said in a brief interview earlier this month. “It doesn’t expire until the end of the year, so we have time to figure it out.”
Kiggans has a track record of breaking with her party on some big issues but not tanking legislation to gain leverage. For instance, she was among the most vocal critics of the GOP megabill’s targeting of clean energy tax credits that are benefitting her district, but she still voted for the new law. She said this past week she didn’t plan to shut down the government to get her way on the ACA tax credits, either.
“I represent a big military district,” she explained, “and people who rely on those federal paychecks.”
But Democrats, who see Kiggans’ seat as a prime pick-up opportunity in 2026, accuse her of being duplicitous.
“Jen Kiggans cast a decisive vote to rip away health care from 350,000 Virginians, and just this week three health care clinics in the Commonwealth were forced to shutter as a direct result of her vote,” said Eli Cousin, a spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, in a statement that referred to Kiggans’ vote for the GOP megabill.
“Kiggans wants to trick voters before she is up for reelection, then sell them out right after,” Cousin added. “She is everything wrong with Washington politicians.”
Kiggans is working to thread the needle. She said she agrees with fellow Republicans that the credits are expensive and need to expire eventually. But she also made the case that her party needs to create “a longer runway” to discuss how to soften the blow of phasing out the enhanced credits completely.
“It’s time to end these tax credits, but when it comes to health care, it’s not quite as easy as letting them expire, especially when it’s something at the end of the calendar year,” Kiggans said. “And I’m not alone. There’s people on both sides of the aisle that feel the same way. And these are common-sense members of Congress that care about health care.”
Democratic co-sponsors of her bill include Reps. Jared Golden of Maine and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington, the co-chairs of the fiscally conservative Blue Dog Coalition. Among the Republican supporters are Reps. David Valadao of California, Juan Ciscomani of Arizona and Mike Lawler of New York — some of the most endangered incumbents of the election cycle.
But senior House Republicans have questioned the strategy Kiggans and her group is pursuing, according to three people granted anonymity to speak candidly about private conversations. These Republicans are, in particular, critical of the rollout of her bill, which did not include any of the reforms Kiggans acknowledged are needed to the larger program.
This “clean” extension, many in the GOP feel, could put Republicans in a tough spot, including Kiggans’ fellow frontliners who have not signed onto her effort.
“Full credits with high wage earners is too far for most Republicans,” said one of the senior House GOP Republicans, referring to how Kiggans’ bill would fully extend the premium tax credit for one year rather than to put new income limits on an extension, as some Republicans have suggested doing.
Some vulnerable GOP incumbents who haven’t yet signed onto Kiggans’ bill also acknowledged an income cap and other reforms will likely be part of any compromise.
“We want to make sure that affordability is maintained as best as possible for people,” Rep. Ryan Mackenzie (R-Pa.) said in an interview, while adding, “I know there are some concerns that some have expressed about high-income individuals being eligible.”
Kiggans said the value of her one-year extension bill is that it would, indeed, force a discussion about how to either continue the subsidies responsibly or wind them down in a thoughtful way. She advocated for a scenario where members could come to the table and hash out a long-term solution, recalling the consensus-building exercise that took place around making changes to Medicaid as part of the megabill.
“That took a lot of meetings, a lot of late nights, a lot of discussions with people who happen to have skin in the game,” said Kiggans.
There are plenty of Republicans who believe Kiggans should stay the course and leadership should follow, warning an expiration of the premium tax credits could cost the GOP dearly in the midterms.
A July poll by veteran GOP pollster Tony Fabrizio found that Republicans have an “opportunity to overcome a current generic ballot deficit” in 2026 if they allow an extension. Letting them expire, according to that same survey, would cause an expected three-point deficit for a generic Republican to plunge to 15.
Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina, the chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee, said that “everybody’s voice is being heard” on whether to extend the ACA subsidies.
“I think we’re having internal discussions now about, kind of, where we are as a conference and what’s feasible and what’s not feasible,” Hudson said in a brief interview last week. “I’ll wait and see how that develops before I say anything publicly.”
Kiggans insisted her party can’t afford to wait.
“Republicans need to lead on this issue,” she said. “And we can.”
Cassandra Dumay and Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.
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President Donald Trump announced on Saturday that the controversial new White House ballroom, currently under construction, will be significantly larger than originally planned, with a capacity of 900 people—nearly 40 percent more than the initial 650-person design.
The expansion comes as construction has just begun on the $200 million project, which Trump discussed in a telephone interview with NBC News while heavy machinery and trucks were visible at the construction site.
The ballroom represents the biggest change to the White House exterior since the East Wing was expanded under Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1942, marking a historic alteration to America’s most iconic residence.
As a legacy project intended to serve future administrations, the ballroom will fundamentally change how the White House hosts large diplomatic events and state functions, eliminating the need for temporary tents on the South Lawn that Trump has criticized as undignified for hosting foreign leaders and dignitaries.
Q: My condolences on the loss of your friend Charlie Kirk. How are you holding up?
TRUMP: I think very good. And by the way, right there you see all the trucks. They just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they’ve been trying to get… pic.twitter.com/Jrw4j2fnVZ
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) September 12, 2025
The 90,000-square-foot ballroom is being constructed at the East Wing location, which has traditionally served as office space for the first lady and her staff.
These offices will be temporarily relocated during construction, with the East Wing set to be modernized and renovated as part of the project. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt emphasized that “nothing will be torn down” during the construction process.
When asked by reporters how he was “holding up” after the murder of his friend and ally Charlie Kirk just days prior, Trump replied, “I think very good, and by the way, right there, you see all the trucks? They’ve just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they’ve been trying to get, as you know, for about 150 years.”
The former real estate developer has taken personal interest in the project’s details, selecting McCrery Architects as lead architect, Clark Construction for building, and AECOM for engineering, according to a White House statement.
The expanded capacity from 650 to 900 people addresses Trump’s long-standing complaint about the White House’s limited event space. Currently, the East Room—the mansion’s largest room—accommodates only about 200 people. Trump emphasized the ballroom’s separation from the historic mansion itself, stating it will be “near it but not touching it” and will pay “total respect to the existing building.”
President Donald Trump told NBC News: “We’re making it a little bigger. It will be top of the line, as good as it can get anywhere in the world.”
White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles: “President Trump is a builder at heart and has an extraordinary eye for detail. The President and the Trump White House are fully committed to working with the appropriate organizations to preserving the special history of the White House while building a beautiful ballroom that can be enjoyed by future Administrations and generations of Americans to come.”
McCrery Architects CEO Jim McCrery: “Presidents in the modern era have faced challenges hosting major events at the White House because it has been untouched since President Harry Truman. I am honored that President Trump has entrusted me to help bring this beautiful and necessary renovation to The People’s House, while preserving the elegance of its classical design and historical importance.”
With construction now underway, the project faces a four-year timeline to meet its early 2029 completion goal.
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